Classroom Management: Identifying - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Classroom Management: Identifying

Description:

Title: PowerPoint Presentation Author: Mimi Mark Last modified by: Jim Created Date: 1/15/2006 6:20:54 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:284
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 80
Provided by: MimiM163
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Classroom Management: Identifying


1
Classroom Management Identifying Teaching
Student Replacement Behaviors Jim
Wrightwww.interventioncentral.org
2
Workshop Agenda
3
Resources from this workshop can be downloaded
from
  • http//www.interventioncentral.org/RCSD.php

4
This workshop will build on the material
presented this summer, with the focus on positive
behavioral intervention strategies and the
teaching of replacement behaviors.  Your team
will bring a BIP for one student, along with the
assessment data collected for that BIP.
Source Linda Blankenhorn, Executive Director of
Specialized Services, Rochester City School
District. 12 Nov 2009 Principals Letter
5
RTI Listening to the Teachers Voice
6
What is the Logic of the Functional Behavior
Assessment (FBA) That Can Help to Solve Student
Problem Behaviors?
7
Essential Elements of the Functional Behavioral
Assessment (FBA)
  • Functional assessment is a collection of
    methods for obtaining information about
    antecedents, behaviors, and consequences The
    purpose is to identify the reason for the
    behavior and to use that information to develop
    strategies that will support positive student
    performance while reducing the behaviors that
    interfere with the childs successful
    functioning.

Source Witt, J. C., Daly, E. M., Moell, G.
(2000). Functional assessments A step-by-step
guide to solving academic and behavior problems.
Longmont, CO Sopris West..pp. 3-4.
8
Essential Elements of the Functional Behavioral
Assessment (FBA) (Cont.)
  • From this definition, several things are
    clear. First, functional assessment is not a
    single test or observation. It is a collection of
    methods involving a variety of assessment
    techniques, including observations, interviews,
    and review of records, that are conducted to
    acquire an understanding of a childs behavior.
  • Second, the definition clarifies exactly what is
    assessedthat is, the childs behavior as well as
    what happens just before the behavior occurs and
    what happens as a result of the behavior.
  • Third, the definition states clearly the goal of
    functional assessment, which is to identify
    strategies and interventions to help the child.

Source Witt, J. C., Daly, E. M., Moell, G.
(2000). Functional assessments A step-by-step
guide to solving academic and behavior problems.
Longmont, CO Sopris West..pp. 3-4.
9
Factors Influencing the Decision to Classify as
BD (Gresham, 1992)
  • Four factors strongly influence the likelihood
    that a student will be classified as Behaviorally
    Disordered
  • Severity Frequency and intensity of the problem
    behavior(s).
  • Chronicity Length of time that the problem
    behavior(s) have been displayed.
  • Generalization Degree to which the student
    displays the problem behavior(s) across settings
    or situations.
  • Tolerance Degree to which the students problem
    behavior(s) are accepted in that students
    current social setting.

Source Gresham, F. M. (1992). Conceptualizing
behavior disorders in terms of resistance to
intervention. School Psychology Review, 20, 23-37.
10
Big Ideas in Student Behavior Management
11
Big Ideas Similar Behaviors May Stem from Very
Different Root Causes (Kratochwill, Elliott,
Carrington Rotto, 1990)
  • Behavior is not random but follows purposeful
    patterns.Students who present with the same
    apparent surface behaviors may have very
    different drivers (underlying reasons) that
    explain why those behaviors occur.A students
    problem behaviors must be carefully identified
    and analyzed to determine the drivers that
    support them.

Source Kratochwill, T. R., Elliott, S. N.,
Carrington Rotto, P. (1990). Best practices in
behavioral consultation. In A. Thomas and J.
Grimes (Eds.). Best practices in school
psychology-II (pp. 147169). Silver Spring, MD
National Association of School Psychologists..
12
Common Root Causes or Drivers for Behaviors
Include
  • Power/Control
  • Protection/Escape/Avoidance
  • Attention
  • Acceptance/Affiliation
  • Expression of Self
  • Gratification
  • Justice/Revenge

Source Witt, J. C., Daly, E. M., Moell, G.
(2000). Functional assessments A step-by-step
guide to solving academic and behavior problems.
Longmont, CO Sopris West..pp. 3-4.
13
Showed disrespect towards me when she yelled
inappropriately regarding an instruction sheet.
I then asked her to leave the room. She also
showed disrespect when I called her twice earlier
in the class to see her report card grade.
Teacher Referral Example
14
I gave out a test. After a few minutes, he
crunched it and threw it on the floor. If he
were not prepared, he could have talked to me and
I would have allowed him to take it on a
different date, as I usually do.
Teacher Referral Example
15
Big Ideas Attend to the Triggers and
Consequences of Problem Behaviors (Martens
Meller, 1990)
  • Intervening before a student misbehaves or when
    the misbehavior has not yet escalated increases
    the likelihood of keeping the student on task and
    engaged in learning. Consequences of behaviors
    that are reinforcing to the student will increase
    the occurrence of that behavior.

ABC Timeline
A
Source Martens, B.K., Meller, P.J. (1990). The
application of behavioral principles to
educational settings. In T.B. Gutkin
C.R.Reynolds (Eds.), The handbook of school
psychology (2nd ed.) (pp. 612-634). New York
John Wiley Sons.
16
Big Ideas Behavior is a Continuous Stream
(Schoenfeld Farmer, 1970)
  • Individuals are always performing SOME type of
    behavior watching the instructor, sleeping,
    talking to a neighbor, completing a worksheet
    (behavior stream).
  • When students are fully engaged in academic
    behaviors, they are less likely to get off-task
    and display problem behaviors.
  • Academic tasks that are clearly understood,
    elicit student interest, provide a high rate of
    student success, and include teacher
    encouragement and feedback are most likely to
    effectively capture the students behavior
    stream.

Source Schoenfeld, W. N., Farmer, J. (1970).
Reinforcement schedules and the behavior
stream. In W. N. Schoenfeld (Ed.), The theory
of reinforcement schedules (pp. 215245). New
York Appleton-Century-Crofts.
17
Big Ideas Academic Delays Can Be a Potent Cause
of Behavior Problems (Witt, Daly, Noell, 2000)
  • Student academic problems cause many school
    behavior problems.
  • Whether a students problem is a behavior
    problem or an academic one, we recommend starting
    with a functional academic assessment, since
    often behavior problems occur when students
    cannot or will not do required academic work.

Source Witt, J. C., Daly, E. M., Moell, G.
(2000). Functional assessments A step-by-step
guide to solving academic and behavior problems.
Longmont, CO Sopris West, p. 13
18
Direct Instruction Behaviors
19
Applying RTI Logic to Social Behavior Support
(Fairbanks, Sugai, Guardino, Lathrop, 2007)
  • Tier I (Universal System) for behavioral
    support
  • Is implemented schoolwide for all students
  • Requires that the school "identify and explicitly
    teach schoolwide expectations
  • Includes a system to "acknowledge
    expectation-compliant behavior"
  • Defines inappropriate behaviors and applies
    consequences for those behaviors with consistency
  • Reviews group progress toward schoolwide goals
    (data collection and feedback)

Source Fairbanks, S., Sugai, G., Guardino, S.,
Lathrop, M. (2007). Response to intervention
Examining classroom behavior support in second
grade. Exceptional Children, 73, p. 289.
20
Using a Direct Instruction Approach to Teaching
Replacement Behaviors
  • Describe to the student the expected replacement
    behavior that the student is to engage in.
  • Provide a series of examples of the replacement
    behavior.
  • Provide immediate positive feedback to the
    student for appropriate demonstration of the
    replacement behavior.
  • Ensure that the instructional environment
    supports and rewards expected behaviors.

21
Common Reasons Why Behavior Plans Fail
  1. Student problems are defined in vague rather than
    specific terms, making it more difficult to
    select the right intervention(s) to support the
    student.
  2. The problem behavior is viewed as residing
    primarily within the student, causing schools to
    overlook the important positive impact that they
    can have on students by changing instruction,
    work (curriculum) demands, and the learning
    environment.
  3. The school selects an incorrect hypothesis about
    what is supporting the students problem
    behavior, so the strategies to promote the
    positive, replacement behavior dont work.

22
Common Reasons Why Behavior Plans Fail
  1. The students problem behavior continues, even
    after the replacement behavior has been taught--
    because antecedents (triggers) and / or
    consequences that support the problem behavior
    still remain in place.
  2. The students problem behavior continues, even
    after the replacement behavior has been taught--
    because the new, desired behavior is not being
    adequately reinforced.
  3. Educators working with the student are
    inconsistent in supporting the new replacement
    behaviors.

23
Data Collection Defining Terms
Evaluation. the process of using information
collected through assessment to make decisions or
reach conclusions. (Hosp, 2008 p. 364).
Example A student can be evaluated for ability
to comply with teacher requests by collecting
information using various sources (e.g., direct
observation, teacher and student interview,
teacher behavior log, Daily Behavior Report Card,
etc.), comparing those results to peer norms or
developmental expectations and making a decision
about whether the students current performance
is acceptable.
Assessment. the process of collecting
information about the characteristics of persons
or objects by measuring them. (Hosp, 2008 p.
364). Example The construct complying with
teacher requests can be assessed using various
measurements, including direct observation,
teacher and student interview, teacher behavior
log, Daily Behavior Report Card, etc.
Measurement. the process of applying numbers to
the characteristics of objects or people in a
systematic way (Hosp, 2008 p. 364). Example
Frequency counts can be used to measure the rate
of student behaviors that are brief in duration
and have a clear onset and end point.
24
RIOT/ICEL Framework Organizing Information to
Better Identify Student Behavioral Academic
Problems
25
(No Transcript)
26
RIOT/ICEL Framework
  • Sources of Information
  • Review (of records)
  • Interview
  • Observation
  • Test
  • Focus of Assessment
  • Instruction
  • Curriculum
  • Environment
  • Learner

27
RIOT/ICEL Definition
  • The RIOT/ICEL matrix is an assessment guide to
    help schools efficiently to decide what relevant
    information to collect on student academic
    performance and behaviorand also how to organize
    that information to identify probable reasons why
    the student is not experiencing academic or
    behavioral success.  
  • The RIOT/ICEL matrix is not itself a data
    collection instrument. Instead, it is an
    organizing framework, or heuristic, that
    increases schools confidence both in the quality
    of the data that they collect and the findings
    that emerge from the data.

28
RIOT Sources of Information
  • Select Multiple Sources of Information RIOT
    (Review, Interview, Observation, Test). The top
    horizontal row of the RIOT/ICEL table includes
    four potential sources of student information
    Review, Interview, Observation, and Test (RIOT).
    Schools should attempt to collect information
    from a range of sources to control for potential
    bias from any one source.

29
  • Select Multiple Sources of Information RIOT
    (Review, Interview, Observation, Test)
  • Review. This category consists of past or present
    records collected on the student. Obvious
    examples include report cards, office
    disciplinary referral data, state test results,
    and attendance records. Less obvious examples
    include student work samples, physical products
    of teacher interventions (e.g., a sticker chart
    used to reward positive student behaviors), and
    emails sent by a teacher to a parent detailing
    concerns about a students study and
    organizational skills.

30
  • Select Multiple Sources of Information RIOT
    (Review, Interview, Observation, Test)
  • Interview. Interviews can be conducted
    face-to-face, via telephone, or even through
    email correspondence. Interviews can also be
    structured (that is, using a pre-determined
    series of questions) or follow an open-ended
    format, with questions guided by information
    supplied by the respondent. Interview targets can
    include those teachers, paraprofessionals,
    administrators, and support staff in the school
    setting who have worked with or had interactions
    with the student in the present or past.
    Prospective interview candidates can also consist
    of parents and other relatives of the student as
    well as the student himself or herself.

31
  • Select Multiple Sources of Information RIOT
    (Review, Interview, Observation, Test)
  • Observation. Direct observation of the students
    academic skills, study and organizational
    strategies, degree of attentional focus, and
    general conduct can be a useful channel of
    information. Observations can be more structured
    (e.g., tallying the frequency of call-outs or
    calculating the percentage of on-task intervals
    during a class period) or less structured (e.g.,
    observing a student and writing a running
    narrative of the observed events).

32
  • Select Multiple Sources of Information RIOT
    (Review, Interview, Observation, Test)
  • Test. Testing can be thought of as a structured
    and standardized observation of the student that
    is intended to test certain hypotheses about why
    the student might be struggling and what school
    supports would logically benefit the student
    (Christ, 2008). An example of testing may be a
    student being administered a math computation CBM
    probe or an Early Math Fluency probe.

33
Formal Tests Only One Source of Student
Assessment Information
  • Tests are often overused and misunderstood in
    and out of the field of school psychology. When
    necessary, analog i.e., test observations can
    be used to test relevant hypotheses within
    controlled conditions. Testing is a highly
    standardized form of observation. .The only
    reason to administer a test is to answer
    well-specified questions and examine
    well-specified hypotheses. It is best practice to
    identify and make explicit the most relevant
    questions before assessment begins. The process
    of assessment should follow these questions. The
    questions should not follow assessment. p.170

Source Christ, T. (2008). Best practices in
problem analysis. In A. Thomas J. Grimes
(Eds.), Best practices in school psychology V
(pp. 159-176). Bethesda, MD National Association
of School Psychologists.
34
ICEL Factors Impacting Student Learning
  • Investigate Multiple Factors Affecting Student
    Learning ICEL (Instruction, Curriculum,
    Environment, Learner). The leftmost vertical
    column of the RIO/ICEL table includes four key
    domains of learning to be assessed Instruction,
    Curriculum, Environment, and Learner (ICEL). A
    common mistake that schools often make is to
    assume that student learning problems exist
    primarily in the learner and to underestimate the
    degree to which teacher instructional strategies,
    curriculum demands, and environmental influences
    impact the learners academic performance. The
    ICEL elements ensure that a full range of
    relevant explanations for student problems are
    examined.

35
  • Investigate Multiple Factors Affecting Student
    Learning ICEL (Instruction, Curriculum,
    Environment, Learner)
  • Instruction. The purpose of investigating the
    instruction domain is to uncover any
    instructional practices that either help the
    student to learn more effectively or interfere
    with that students learning. More obvious
    instructional questions to investigate would be
    whether specific teaching strategies for
    activating prior knowledge better prepare the
    student to master new information or whether a
    student benefits optimally from the large-group
    lecture format that is often used in a classroom.
    A less obvious example of an instructional
    question would be whether a particular student
    learns better through teacher-delivered or
    self-directed, computer-administered instruction.

36
  • Investigate Multiple Factors Affecting Student
    Learning ICEL (Instruction, Curriculum,
    Environment, Learner)
  • Curriculum. Curriculum represents the full set
    of academic skills that a student is expected to
    have mastered in a specific academic area at a
    given point in time. To adequately evaluate a
    students acquisition of academic skills, of
    course, the educator must (1) know the schools
    curriculum (and related state academic
    performance standards), (2) be able to inventory
    the specific academic skills that the student
    currently possesses, and then (3) identify gaps
    between curriculum expectations and actual
    student skills. (This process of uncovering
    student academic skill gaps is sometimes referred
    to as instructional or analytic assessment.)

37
  • Investigate Multiple Factors Affecting Student
    Learning ICEL (Instruction, Curriculum,
    Environment, Learner)
  • Environment. The environment includes any
    factors in the students school, community, or
    home surroundings that can directly enable their
    academic success or hinder that success. Obvious
    questions about environmental factors that impact
    learning include whether a students educational
    performance is better or worse in the presence of
    certain peers and whether having additional adult
    supervision during a study hall results in higher
    student work productivity. Less obvious questions
    about the learning environment include whether a
    student has a setting at home that is conducive
    to completing homework or whether chaotic hallway
    conditions are delaying that students
    transitioning between classes and therefore
    reducing available learning time.

38
  • Investigate Multiple Factors Affecting Student
    Learning ICEL (Instruction, Curriculum,
    Environment, Learner)
  • Learner. While the student is at the center of
    any questions of instruction, curriculum, and
    learning environment, the learner domain
    includes those qualities of the student that
    represent their unique capacities and traits.
    More obvious examples of questions that relate to
    the learner include investigating whether a
    student has stable and high rates of inattention
    across different classrooms or evaluating the
    efficiency of a students study habits and
    test-taking skills. A less obvious example of a
    question that relates to the learner is whether a
    student harbors a low sense of self-efficacy in
    mathematics that is interfering with that
    learners willingness to put appropriate effort
    into math courses.

39
(No Transcript)
40
  • The teacher collects several student math
    computation worksheet samples to document work
    completion and accuracy.

41
  • The students parent tells the teacher that her
    sons reading grades and attitude toward reading
    dropped suddenly in Gr 4.

42
  • An observer monitors the students attention on
    an independent writing assignmentand later
    analyzes the works quality and completeness.

43
  • A student is given a timed math worksheet to
    complete. She is then given another timed
    worksheet offered a reward if she improves.

44
  • Comments from several past report cards describe
    the student as preferring to socialize rather
    than work during small-group activities.

45
  • The teacher tallies the number of redirects for
    an off-task student during discussion. She
    designs a high-interest lesson, still tracks
    off-task behavior.

46
Activity Use the RIOT/ICEL Framework
  • Review the RIOT/ICEL matrix. Take the student
    data that you brought to the workshop and
    organize it using the matrix.
  • Identify any areas in the matrix that have only
    limited information and should be investigated
    more fully.

47
Defining Student Problem Behaviors A Key to
Identifying Effective Interventions Jim
Wrightwww.interventioncentral.org
48
Defining Problem Student Behaviors
  • Define the problem behavior in clear, observable,
    measurable terms (Batsche et al., 2008 Upah,
    2008). Write a clear description of the problem
    behavior. Avoid vague problem identification
    statements such as The student is disruptive.
  • A well-written problem definition should include
    three parts
  • Conditions. The condition(s) under which the
    problem is likely to occur
  • Problem Description. A specific description of
    the problem behavior
  • Contextual information. Information about the
    frequency, intensity, duration, or other
    dimension(s) of the behavior that provide a
    context for estimating the degree to which the
    behavior presents a problem in the setting(s) in
    which it occurs.

49
(No Transcript)
50
Defining Student Problem Behaviors Team Activity
  • As a team
  • Using the data brought on your student
  • Step 1 Define the problem behavior in clear,
    observable, measurable terms.
  • Five Steps in Understanding Addressing Problem
    Behaviors
  • Define the problem behavior in clear, observable,
    measurable terms.
  • Develop examples and non-examples of the problem
    behavior.
  • Write a behavior hypothesis statement.
  • Select a replacement behavior.
  • Write a prediction statement.

51
Defining Problem Student Behaviors
  1. Develop examples and non-examples of the problem
    behavior (Upah, 2008). Writing both examples and
    non-examples of the problem behavior helps to
    resolve uncertainty about when the students
    conduct should be classified as a problem
    behavior. Examples should include the most
    frequent or typical instances of the student
    problem behavior. Non-examples should include any
    behaviors that are acceptable conduct but might
    possibly be confused with the problem behavior.

52
(No Transcript)
53
Defining Student Problem Behaviors Team Activity
  • As a team
  • Using the data brought on your student
  • Step 2 Develop examples and non-examples of the
    problem behavior.
  • Five Steps in Understanding Addressing Problem
    Behaviors
  • Define the problem behavior in clear, observable,
    measurable terms.
  • Develop examples and non-examples of the problem
    behavior.
  • Write a behavior hypothesis statement.
  • Select a replacement behavior.
  • Write a prediction statement.

54
Defining Problem Student Behaviors
  1. Write a behavior hypothesis statement (Batsche et
    al., 2008 Upah, 2008). The next step in
    problem-solving is to develop a hypothesis about
    why the student is engaging in an undesirable
    behavior or not engaging in a desired behavior.
    Teachers can gain information to develop a
    hypothesis through direct observation, student
    interview, review of student work products, and
    other sources. The behavior hypothesis statement
    is important because (a) it can be tested, and
    (b) it provides guidance on the type(s) of
    interventions that might benefit the student.

55
(No Transcript)
56
Defining Student Problem Behaviors Team Activity
  • As a team
  • Using the data brought on your student
  • Step 3 Write a behavior hypothesis statement.
  • Five Steps in Understanding Addressing Problem
    Behaviors
  • Define the problem behavior in clear, observable,
    measurable terms.
  • Develop examples and non-examples of the problem
    behavior.
  • Write a behavior hypothesis statement.
  • Select a replacement behavior.
  • Write a prediction statement.

57
Defining Problem Student Behaviors
  1. Select a replacement behavior (Batsche et al.,
    2008). Behavioral interventions should be focused
    on increasing student skills and capacities, not
    simply on suppressing problem behaviors. By
    selecting a positive behavioral goal that is an
    appropriate replacement for the students
    original problem behavior, the teacher reframes
    the student concern in a manner that allows for
    more effective intervention planning.

58
(No Transcript)
59
Defining Student Problem Behaviors Team Activity
  • As a team
  • Using the data brought on your student
  • Step 4 Select a replacement behavior.
  • Five Steps in Understanding Addressing Problem
    Behaviors
  • Define the problem behavior in clear, observable,
    measurable terms.
  • Develop examples and non-examples of the problem
    behavior.
  • Write a behavior hypothesis statement.
  • Select a replacement behavior.
  • Write a prediction statement.

60
Defining Problem Student Behaviors
  1. Write a prediction statement (Batsche et al.,
    2008 Upah, 2008). The prediction statement
    proposes a strategy (intervention) that is
    predicted to improve the problem behavior. The
    importance of the prediction statement is that it
    spells out specifically the expected outcome if
    the strategy is successful. The formula for
    writing a prediction statement is to state that
    if the proposed strategy (Specific Action) is
    adopted, then the rate of problem behavior is
    expected to decrease or increase in the desired
    direction.

61
(No Transcript)
62
Defining Student Problem Behaviors Team Activity
  • As a team
  • Using the data brought on your student
  • Step 5 Write a prediction statement.
  • Five Steps in Understanding Addressing Problem
    Behaviors
  • Define the problem behavior in clear, observable,
    measurable terms.
  • Develop examples and non-examples of the problem
    behavior.
  • Write a behavior hypothesis statement.
  • Select a replacement behavior.
  • Write a prediction statement.

63
(No Transcript)
64
Using a Direct Instruction Approach to Teaching
Replacement Behaviors
  • Describe to the student the expected replacement
    behavior that the student is to engage in.
  • Provide examples of the replacement behavior.
  • Provide immediate positive feedback to the
    student for appropriate demonstration of the
    replacement behavior.
  • Ensure that the instructional environment
    supports and rewards expected behaviors.

65
Defining Academic Problems Get It Right and
Interventions Are More Likely to Be
EffectiveJim Wrightwww.interventioncentral.org
66
Defining Academic Problems Recommended Steps
  1. Be knowledgeable of the school academic
    curriculum and key student academic skills that
    are taught. The teacher should have a good
    survey-level knowledge of the key academic skills
    outlined in the schools curriculumfor the grade
    level of their classroom as well as earlier grade
    levels. If the curriculum alone is not adequate
    for describing a students academic deficit, the
    instructor can make use of research-based
    definitions or complete a task analysis to
    further define the academic problem area. Here
    are guidelines for consulting curriculum and
    research-based definitions and for conducting a
    task analysis for more global skills.

67
Defining Academic Problems Recommended Steps
  • Curriculum. The teacher can review the schools
    curriculum and related documents (e.g.,
    score-and-sequence charts curriculum maps) to
    select specific academic skill or performance
    goals. First, determine the approximate grade or
    level in the curriculum that matches the
    students skills. Then, review the curriculum at
    that alternate grade level to find appropriate
    descriptions of the students relevant academic
    deficit. For example, a second-grade student
    had limited phonemic awareness. The student was
    not able accurately to deconstruct a spoken word
    into its component sound-units, or phonemes. In
    the schools curriculum, children were expected
    to attain proficiency in phonemic awareness by
    the close of grade 1. The teacher went off
    level to review the grade 1 curriculum and found
    a specific description of phonemic awareness that
    she could use as a starting point in defining the
    students skill deficit.

68
Defining Academic Problems Recommended Steps
  • Research-Based Skill Definitions. Even when a
    schools curriculum identifies key skills,
    schools may find it useful to corroborate or
    elaborate those skill definitions by reviewing
    alternative definitions published in research
    journals or other trusted sources. For example,
    a student had delays in solving quadratic
    equations. The math instructor found that the
    schools math curriculum did not provide a
    detailed description of the skills required to
    successfully complete quadratic equations. So the
    teacher reviewed the National Mathematics
    Advisory Panel report (Fennell et al., 2008) and
    found a detailed description of component skills
    for solving quadratic equations. By combining the
    skill definitions from the school curriculum with
    the more detailed descriptions taken from the
    research-based document, the teacher could better
    pinpoint the students academic deficit in
    specific terms.

69
Defining Academic Problems Recommended Steps
  • Task Analysis. Students may possess deficits in
    more global academic enabling skills that are
    essential for academic success. Teachers can
    complete an task analysis of the relevant skill
    by breaking it down into a checklist of
    constituent subskills. An instructor can use the
    resulting checklist to verify that the student
    can or cannot perform each of the subskills that
    make up the global academic enabling
    skill.For example, teachers at a middle school
    noted that many of their students seemed to have
    poor organization skills. Those instructors
    conducted a task analysis and determined that--in
    their classrooms--the essential subskills of
    student organization included (a) arriving to
    class on time (b) bringing work materials to
    class (c) following teacher directions in a
    timely manner (d) knowing how to request teacher
    assistance when needed and (e) having an
    uncluttered desk with only essential work
    materials.

70
Defining Academic Problems Recommended Steps
  • Describe the academic problem in specific,
    skill-based terms (Batsche et al., 2008 Upah,
    2008). Write a clear, brief description of the
    academic skill or performance deficit that
    focuses on a specific skill or performance area.
    Here are sample problem-identification
    statements
  • John reads aloud from grade-appropriate text much
    more slowly than his classmates.
  • Ann lacks proficiency with multiplication math
    problems (double-digit times double-digit with no
    regrouping).
  • Tye does not turn in homework assignments.
  • Angela produces limited text on in-class writing
    assignments.

71
Defining Academic Problems Recommended Steps
  • Develop a fuller description of the academic
    problem to provide a meaningful instructional
    context. When the teacher has described the
    students academic problem, the next step is to
    expand the problem definition to put it into a
    meaningful context. This expanded definition
    includes information about the conditions under
    which the academic problem is observed and
    typical or expected level of performance.
  • Conditions. Describe the environmental conditions
    or task demands in place when the academic
    problem is observed.
  • Problem Description. Describe the actual
    observable academic behavior in which the student
    is engaged. Include rate, accuracy, or other
    quantitative information of student performance.
  • Typical or Expected Level of Performance. Provide
    a typical or expected performance criterion for
    this skill or behavior. Typical or expected
    academic performance can be calculated using a
    variety of sources,

72
(No Transcript)
73
Defining Academic Problems Recommended Steps
  1. Develop a hypothesis statement to explain the
    academic skill or performance problem. The
    hypothesis states the assumed reason(s) or
    cause(s) for the students academic problems.
    Once it has been developed, the hypothesis
    statement acts as a compass needle, pointing
    toward interventions that most logically address
    the student academic problems.

74
(No Transcript)
75
Breaking Down Complex Academic Goals into Simpler
Sub-Tasks Discrete Categorization
76
Identifying and Measuring Complex Academic
Problems
  • Students can present with a range of concerns
    that interfere with academic success.
  • Often, teachers realize that the replacement
    behavior that a student needs to be taught
    actually is a complex strategy that must be
    broken down into several steps or elements before
    it can be taught.
  • One frequent challenge for these students is the
    need to reduce complex global academic goals into
    discrete sub-skills that can be individually
    measured and tracked over time.

77
Discrete Categorization A Strategy for Assessing
Complex, Multi-Step Student Academic Tasks
  • Definition of Discrete Categorization Listing
    a number of behaviors and checking off whether
    they were performed. (Kazdin, 1989, p. 59).
  • Approach allows educators to define a larger
    behavioral goal for a student and to break that
    goal down into sub-tasks. (Each sub-task should
    be defined in such a way that it can be scored as
    successfully accomplished or not
    accomplished.)
  • The constituent behaviors that make up the larger
    behavioral goal need not be directly related to
    each other. For example, completed homework may
    include as sub-tasks wrote down homework
    assignment correctly and created a work plan
    before starting homework

Source Kazdin, A. E. (1989). Behavior
modification in applied settings (4th ed.).
Pacific Gove, CA Brooks/Cole..
78
Discrete Categorization Example Math Study Skills
  • General Academic Goal Improve Tinas Math Study
    Skills
  • Tina was non-compliant and uncooperative in her
    math course. Based on a RIOT/ICEL analysis, the
    teaching team hypothesized that Tina misbehaved
    as a means to escape academic demands. The
    teaching team predicted that if Tinas math study
    skills improved, she could better understand
    course content, would find math to be less
    aversive, and would more fully cooperate with
    adult requests. The teaching team defined math
    study skills as the student
  • Checking math notes daily for completeness.
  • Reviewing math notes daily.
  • Starting math homework in a structured school
    setting.
  • Using a highlighter and margin notes to mark
    questions or areas of confusion in notes or on
    the daily assignment.
  • Spending sufficient seat time at home each day
    completing homework.
  • Regularly asking math questions of the teacher.

79
Discrete Categorization Example Math Study Skills
  • General Academic Goal Improve Tinas Math Study
    Skills
  • The teaching teamwith student inputcreated the
    following intervention plan. The student Tina
    will
  • Approach the teacher at the end of class for a
    copy of class notes.
  • Check her daily math notes for completeness
    against a set of teacher notes in 5th period
    study hall.
  • Review her math notes in 5th period study hall.
  • Start her math homework in 5th period study hall.
  • Use a highlighter and margin notes to mark
    questions or areas of confusion in her notes or
    on the daily assignment.
  • Enter into her homework log the amount of time
    spent that evening doing homework and noted any
    questions or areas of confusion.
  • Stop by the math teachers classroom during help
    periods (T Th only) to ask highlighted
    questions (or to verify that Tina understood that
    weeks instructional content) and to review the
    homework log.

80
Discrete Categorization Example Math Study Skills
  • Academic Goal Improve Tinas Math Study Skills
  • General measures of the success of this
    intervention include (1) rate of homework
    completion and (2) quiz test grades.
  • To measure treatment fidelity (Tinas
    follow-through with sub-tasks of the checklist),
    the following strategies are used
  • Approached the teacher for copy of class notes.
    Teacher observation.
  • Checked her daily math notes for completeness
    reviewed math notes, started math homework in 5th
    period study hall. Student work products random
    spot check by study hall supervisor.
  • Used a highlighter and margin notes to mark
    questions or areas of confusion in her notes or
    on the daily assignment. Review of notes by
    teacher during T/Th drop-in period.
  • Entered into her homework log the amount of
    time spent that evening doing homework and noted
    any questions or areas of confusion. Log reviewed
    by teacher during T/Th drop-in period.
  • Stopped by the math teachers classroom during
    help periods (T Th only) to ask highlighted
    questions (or to verify that Tina understood that
    weeks instructional content). Teacher
    observation student sign-in.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com