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Behavior Intervention Plans

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Title: Behavior Intervention Plans


1
Behavior Intervention Plans
  • Susanne Okey
  • Winthrop University

2
Purpose of FBAs and BIPs
  • To gather the necessary information so that we
    can develop effective strategies to address
    those behaviors that interfere with learning and
    threaten safety.

3
FBAs and BIPs
  • A team effort

4
FBAs
  • Function of behavior
  • To gain something
  • To escape/avoid something
  • FBA determines the function of the target
    behavior

5
  • FBA determines the context of the behavior
  • Settings
  • Conditions
  • Types of activities

6
  • FBA results in an hypothesis regarding the
    function of the behavior
  • When Adam is asked to complete word problems
    during math, he curses and throws his book on the
    floor.

7
  • After completing a FBA the team determined that
    the function of Adams behavior was to avoid the
    task by being sent to ISS.
  • The team also learned that Adam had difficulty
    with the language used in the math text book.

8
Positive Behavior Support
  • Interventions based on teaching rather than
    controlling
  • Suppressing inappropriate behavior results in
    further attempts by student to meet his/her
    needs, usually in inappropriate ways
  • Teaching new, appropriate behaviors addresses the
    source and the problem

9
BIPs include strategies to
  • Teach student more acceptable ways to get what
    he/she wants, e.g. Replacement behaviors
  • Decrease future occurrences of the misbehavior
  • Address repeated episodes of the misbehavior

10
Replacement behaviors
  • Behaviors that serve the same function as the
    inappropriate behavior
  • Asking to be left alone
  • Using conflict resolution skills
  • Using instructional strategies
  • Tolerating delay
  • Using self-management techniques

11
Decrease future occurrences
  • Setting events that make behavior more likely to
    occur
  • Physical arrangement of classroom
  • Management strategies
  • Seating arrangements
  • Sequence of academic instruction

12
Decrease future occurrences
  • Manipulate antecedents
  • Teacher instructions
  • Instructional materials

13
Decrease future occurrences
  • Manipulate consequences
  • Precise praise/feedback
  • Principles of reinforcement
  • DRO
  • Shaping (successive approximations)
  • Student contracts
  • Group motivational strategies

14
Components of a BIP
  • Identify the function of the behavior
  • Select a replacement behavior
  • Design a teaching plan
  • Arrange the environment
  • Develop consequences for desired and undesired
    behavior
  • Write behavioral objectives

15
Replacement behaviors
  • Make problem behavior
  • Irrelevant
  • Inefficient
  • Ineffective

16
Selecting replacement behaviors
  • Problem Attention seeking behavior
  • Effective interventions
  • Keep student from engaging in inappropriate
    behavior
  • Teach replacement behavior
  • Practice new behavior
  • Reinforce new behavior

17
  • Behavior
  • Anne pushes other girls on the playground.
  • Function of behavior
  • She wants to play with them.
  • Replacement behavior??

18
Selecting replacement behaviors
  • Problem Escape/avoidance behaviors
  • Teach socially acceptable replacement behavior
    such as, asking for help, signals
  • Provide more appropriate assignments (curricular
    accommodations)

19
  • Provide strategies and/or supports (instructional
    modifications)
  • Pair undesired activity with desired activity

20
  • Behavior
  • Sarah ignores teacher requests to participate in
    group discussions
  • Function of behavior
  • Sarah does not want to look dumb in front of her
    friends
  • Replacement behavior?

21
Positive interventions must
  • Be aligned with assessment information
  • There is no one size fits all when it comes to
    replacement behaviors
  • Learning outcomes must be complemented by
  • Teacher actions
  • Instructional materials
  • Monitoring systems

22
  • Skill deficits
  • Performance deficits
  • Motivation
  • Discrimination

23
Which intervention
  • Aligns with function of behavior
  • Is most appropriate given student needs and
    present levels of performance
  • Directly teaches target behavior
  • Is least intrusive, least complex
  • Will change behavior quickly and easily
  • Unlikely to produce negative side effects

24
Which intervention
  • Has evidence of effectiveness with targeted
    behavior
  • Is most acceptable to person responsible for
    implementation
  • Is most acceptable to student
  • Is most likely to promote replacement behavior
    that occurs and will be reinforced in natural
    environment
  • Has most system-wide support
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