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Building Faculty Involvement

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Building Faculty Involvement Objectives Understand why staff need to be committed to decreasing problem behaviors and increasing academic behaviors Identify four ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Building Faculty Involvement


1
Building Faculty Involvement
2
Objectives
  • Understand why staff need to be committed to
    decreasing problem behaviors and increasing
    academic behaviors
  • Identify four approaches to gain faculty buy-in
    to the school-wide PBS process
  • Develop a plan to get buy-in and build ownership
    across faculty

3
Decreasing Problem Behaviors
  • Staff commitment is essential
  • Faculty and staff are critical stakeholders
  • 80 buy-in/consensus must be secured
  • 3-5 year process

4
What does 80 buy in mean?
  • Consensus means that I agree to
  • provide input in determining what our schools
    problems are and what our goals should be
  • make decisions about rules, expectations, and
    procedures in the commons areas of the school as
    a school community
  • Follow through with all school-wide decisions,
    regardless of my feelings for any particular
    decision
  • Commit to positive behavior support systems for a
    full year - allowing performance toward our goal
    to determine future plans

5
Faculty Are Familiar withthe Behavior Problems
  • Communication is essential in this process
  • Open communication will allow faculty to feel as
    though they are part of the change process
  • Faculty will begin to understand what is
    happening across campus
  • Frequent communication opens dialogue for
    problem-solving across campus

6
Strategies
  • Use the existing database
  • Use a team planning process
  • Conduct staff surveys
  • Develop an election process for the completed
    plan

7
Use the Existing Database
  • Where behaviors are occurring (i.e., setting)
  • What types of behaviors are occurring
  • What types of consequence was delivered to
    discipline students
  • When problems behaviors occur most frequently
  • How many discipline referrals, suspensions,
    and/or expulsions occurred last school year
  • How many faculty are absent daily
  • Other (loss of instruction time, student
    absences, etc.)

8
Time Cost of aDiscipline Referral(Avg. 45
minutes per incident)
1000 Referrals/yr 2000 Referrals/yr
Administrator Time 500 Hours 1000 Hours
Teacher Time 250 Hours 500 Hours
Student Time 750 Hours 1500 Hours
Totals 1500 Hours 3000 Hours
9
Instructional Days Lost (August-March)
10
Instructional Days Lost Per 100 Students
11
How to Use the Data to Get Faculty Buy-in
  • Share visuals (graphs) with faculty on a regular
    basis
  • The visuals are a powerful tool
  • To let staff know the extra work they are doing
    is paying off
  • To show specific areas that may need a more
    intense focus
  • Emphasize the Team process

12
Average Referrals Per Day Per Month
13
Multi Year Office Referrals per Day Per Month
14
Conduct Staff Surveys
  • Staff surveys are an efficient way to
  • Obtain staff feedback
  • Create involvement without holding more meetings
  • Generate new ideas
  • Build a sense of faculty ownership

15
Sample Staff Survey Item
  • Check the OUTCOMES below that you would like to
    achieve at our school
  • Increase in attendance
  • Improvement in academic performance
  • Increase in the number of appropriate student
    behaviors
  • Students and teachers report a more positive and
    calm environment
  • Reduction in the number of behavioral
    disruptions, referrals, and incident reports

16
What Other Schools Have Found to Be Effective
  • Faculty Retreat day before official
    pre-planning
  • After the overview at a faculty meeting staff
    signs on chart paper labeled Yes/No/Need More
    Information
  • Show sections of the school-wide video

17
Supporting Systemic Change
  • Those involved in the school must share
  • a common dissatisfaction with the processes and
    outcomes of the current system
  • a vision of what they would like to see replace
    it
  • Problems occur when the system lacks the
    knowledge of how to initiate change or when there
    is disagreement about how change should take place

18
Challenges
  • Reasons for making changes are not perceived as
    compelling enough
  • Staff feel a lack of ownership in the process
  • Insufficient modeling from leadership
  • Staff lack a clear vision of how the changes will
    impact them personally
  • Insufficient system of support

19
Solutions
  • Develop a common understanding
  • Enlist leaders with integrity, authority,
    resources and willingness to assist
  • Expect, respect and respond to resistance
    (encourage questions and discussion)
  • Clarify how changes align with other initiatives
  • Emphasize clear and imminent consequences for not
    changing
  • Emphasize benefits
  • Conservation of time/effort
  • Alignment of processes/goals
  • Greater professional accountability
  • Stay in touch with peer leaders during the change
    process

20
Remember
  • PBIS involves all of us
  • we decide what our focus will be
  • we decide how we will monitor
  • we decide what our goals are
  • we decide what well do to get there
  • we evaluate our progress
  • we decide whether to keep going or change
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