Title: VTPBiS%20Targeted
1- VTPBiS Targeted
- Training
- Presented by
- The VTPBiS Trainers
2(No Transcript)
3Opening Activity
- As a Team, identify your top PBIS accomplishments
and challenges since rolling out PBIS. - Designate someone to introduce your team and name
one top accomplishment and challenge.
4Agenda
- Sustaining the Universal Effort
- Overview of Targeted Level
- Developing Systems at the Targeted Level
- Selecting Targeted Practices/Interventions
- Check-In/Check-Out and Teacher Check, Connect and
Expect - Function of Behavior and FBA
- Other Targeted Interventions
- Exploring Universal Screening
- Using Data to assess student need, targeted
practices and to monitor fidelity of
implementation
5BEST ExpectationsTargeted Training Teaching
Matrix
BEST Expectation Training Setting
Be Present Be On Time Silent cell phones Eyes and ears in focus
Engage Take a Team role Ask questions Follow along with the Power Point and Activity Sheets.
Support Each Other Bring snacks to share Seek clarification Use positive statements and re-statements
Team Solutions Establish and follow team roles and norms Contribute ideas to Team Planning
6Training Supports
- Training format presentation, team work,
questions and processing - Materials power point, flash drives, Targeted
Level Implementation Workbook, web site - Tools Benchmarks of Advanced Tiers, CICO
Assessment/Action Plan - Team roles (facilitator, recorder, reporter,
other) - Team Norms
- Role of Coordinator and Coach
- Support from Trainers (Cups)
7VTPBiS Signal for Help Help Us Help You
- Were all set. No help needed.
- We need help, but can continue with our work.
- HELP! We cant continue with our work.
8Differentiate based on your experience
Foundations Think about how you plan to
accomplish the work.
Full Implementation Think about how to make it
easy, better, more effective.
Sustainability Think about how to continue the
practice and ensure sustainability.
9Emphasis on Prevention!
- School-wide/Primary
- Prevent problem behaviors
- Secondary/Targeted
- Reduce current problem behaviors
- Intensive/Tertiary
- Reduce complications, intensity, severity of
problem behaviors
10Social Competence Academic Achievement
OUTCOMES
Supporting Decision Making
DATA
Supporting Staff Behavior
SYSTEMS
PRACTICES
Supporting Student Behavior
11Why is PBIS an Example of Response to
Intervention (RtI)?
- Investment in prevention
- Universal Screening
- Multi-tiered, prevention-based intervention
approach - Progress monitoring
- Use of problem-solving process at all 3-tiers
- Active use of data for decision-making at all
3-tiers - Research-based practices expected at all 3-tiers
- Individual and group interventions commensurate
with assessed level of need
12Designing School-Wide Systems for Student Success
Integrated Response to Intervention
Academic Support
Support
Behavioral
- Intensive, Individual Interventions
- Individual Students
- Assessment-based
- Intense, durable procedures
1-5
1-5
- Targeted Group Interventions
- Some students
- High efficiency
- Rapid response
- Targeted Group Interventions
- Some students
- High efficiency
- Rapid response
5-10
5-10
- Universal Interventions
- All settings, all students
- Preventive, proactive
100
100
13Comprehensive Supports
Function-based Support
Tier III
Group Interventions w/function-based
modifications
Lunch buddies
- Group Interventions
- CICO
- Skills groups
Tier II
Anger Mgmt group
Social Skills Groups
Peer Tutors
Homework Club
School Mentors
Study Skills
14 When to Consider Targeted Interventions?
- When universal systems are not sufficient to
impact behavior - When students display chronic patterns of
disruptive behavior - When concerns arise regarding students academic
or social behavior
15Using data to determine when to consider targeted
interventions
16Using the Referrals by Student report as a
Universal Screening Tool
17Activity 1
- Discuss Now
- If up to 15 of Your Students need something
more, how many students would that be in your
school? - Review your ODR data. (If SWIS, look at
referrals by student graph.) What percentage
of your students receive 3-5 ODRs. Calculate
based on your school enrollment?
18Plan to sustain the Universal LevelSystems, Data
and Practices
- Whos missing from the team?
- How can you increase your teams visibility?
- How will you use data to plan?
- What competing initiatives (ie., school
improvement activities) do you need to align with
PBIS? - Who will plan Universal roll-out for next year?
- What will roll-out be for staff, students, and
families?
19Activity 2Planning to Sustain Universal PBIS
- As a Team, answer the questions above and
complete the following - Review your schools SET and answer questions 1-3
in Benchmarks for Advanced Tiers (BAT) - Complete the VTPBiS Universal Action Plan for
Sustainability.
20Universal Systems Check
21What is a Targeted Intervention?
- An intervention (or set of interventions) known
by all staff and available for students during
the school day. - Interventions provide additional student support
in academic, organizational, and/ or social
support areas.
22Targeted interventions are
- Best for low level problem behavior (e.g.
talk-outs, minor disruption, task completion) - Efficient because they use the same or similar
practices for groups of students that do not need
to be individualized for each student. - Effective because they focus on decreasing
problem behavior thereby increasing academic
engagement and decreasing office discipline
referrals.
23Critical Features
- Meets the needs of groups of students
- Does not require individualizing for each student
- Uses positive approach
- Everyone knows about it
- Lets students opt out
- Involves parents
- Based on function of behavior (get or avoid)
- Has some clear evidence that it works
- Has system resources (team and administrator
support)
24Which students might need Targeted Level
supports?
- Possible Categories of Risk
- Multiple disciplinary referrals
- Attendance/late to school
- Frequent nurse visits
- Homework not completed
- Behavior concerns not addressed through
discipline system (e.g. social withdrawal,
internalizing) - Other
25OUTCOMES
26Necessary Conversations within a Multi-Tiered
Framework
- Tier II
- Targeted Systems Planning
- Procedures for Referral Evaluation
- Communicate with Staff Families
- Targeted Student Planning
- Place in targeted interventions
- Evaluate Monitor Student Progress
- Tier III
- Intensive SU Level
- Secure resources
- Focus on student outcomes
- Focus on Fidelity of Implementation measures
across the district - Intensive Student Planning
- Completes FBA/BIP
- Facilitates Wraparound
- Evaluate Monitor Student Progress
- Tier I
- Universal Level
- Plans School-Wide Supports (6 components of PBIS)
Could responsibilities of an existing team
(EST/SST/etc.) be shifted?
Sept. 1, 2009
27Targeted Planning has Two Purposes
- Systems level design and accountability (this is
often an additional function of the Universal
Team) - Individual student intervention planning and
monitoring
28Targeted Planning - System
- Creates procedures for all targeted interventions
(not individual students). - Communicates to staff and families.
- Links between Targeted and Universal systems
29Targeted Planning -for student planning and
referral
- Meets weekly or bi-weekly to review student
referrals and place student on CICO (unless
otherwise specified) - Communicates with staff and parents about student
- Evaluates student progress, needed plan change
and exit from intervention - Members include a coordinator, individual skilled
in function-based behavior support planning,
administrator.
30Targeted System for Behavior and EST
Considerations
- EST and PBIS Targeted student planning team may
be a separate or combined team but should not be
duplicative. - Develop your PBIS targeted system to fit within
your schools context. -
- Goal Work smarter, not harder!
31Role of Administrator
- Administrator needs to.
- Know what the practices look like when
implemented with fidelity - Be aware of data using tracking tools help
decide what needs to change - Be active/visible on teams
- Troubleshoot systems level issues.
32Role of School-based Behavior Coordinator
- Facilitates weekly targeted student meetings
- Active member of implementation team and student
planning team - Attend regional coordinator meetings and
trainings - Prioritizes students for Team meeting
- Prioritizes requests for service
- Creates graphs for meetings
- Facilitates meetings
- Maintains records
33Role of Supervisory Union/District Coordinator
- Builds capacity to implement effective practices
- Focus on student outcomes
- Focus on fidelity of implementation of effective
practices across District/Supervisory Union. - Align SU/district systems, data and practices.
34Activity 3 What is your Team Structure?
- Review Team Norms and Roles.
- Complete the Team Profile. Determine the most
effective and efficient team structure for
Targeted Level supports at the system level and
at the individual student level. - Complete the questions 4-6 in Benchmarks for
Advanced Tiers
35Targeted Behavior Purpose Statement
- Example
- To effectively and efficiently match children who
have not responded to universal interventions
with targeted strategies more likely to produce
successful outcomes.
36Activity 4
- Write your Targeted Behavior Purpose Statement.
- How will people know it?
37OUTCOMES
38Problems at Schools
- Struggling readers
- Cant read at all
- Letter/word reversal
- Comprehension difficulties
- Memorization difficulties
- Retention problems
- English language learners
- Lack of number recognition
- Math fact deficits
- Homework completion
- Sloppy work
- Test anxiety
- Oral reading fluency
- Poor writing skills
- Fights
- Property destruction
- Weapons violation
- Violence toward teachers
- Tobacco use
- Drug use
- Alcohol use
- Insubordination
- Noncompliance
- Late to class
- Truancy
- Inappropriate language
- Harassment
- Trespassing
- Vandalism
- Verbal abuse
and on and on and on and on and on
and on and on
39Interventions with an Evidence Base
- Advance organizers
- Anger Management Skills Training
- Behavioral Interventions
- Choice
- Class Wide Peer Tutoring
- Cognitive organizers
- Cognitive Restructuring
- Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
- Computer-Assisted Instruction
- Contingency Management
- Daily Behavior Report Cards
- Exposure-Based Techniques
- Family Therapy
- Functional Assessment
- Functional Communication Training
- Integrated Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
- Interdependent Group-Oriented Contingency
Management - Interpersonal Therapy for Adolescents
- Milieu Language Teaching
40Examples Targeted Group Interventions Based on
Functions of Behavior
- Access Adult Attention/Support
- Check-In/Check-Out
- Adult Mentoring Programs
- Access Peer Attention/Support
- Social Skills Instruction
- Peer Mentoring
- Self-Monitoring with Peer Support (function
academic task escape) - Academic Skills Support
- Organization/Homework planning support
- Homework completion club
- Tutoring
41Social Skills Instruction
- Matching Interventions to Deficit Types
- most social skills studies deliver a treatment to
children with an almost complete disregard for
the types of social skills deficits children may
have (Gresham, 1998) - consider acquisition vs. performance deficits
42Programming for Successful Social Skills
Instruction
- Interventions should be implemented as planned or
intended - Plan to adequately program for generalization
maintenance - Match instructional procedures to specific types
of deficits - Target socially valid behaviors
43Cautions regarding Social Skills Instruction
- Address Generalization Maintenance Issues
- Functional approach is needed to program for
generalization maintenance (Horner
Billingsley, 1998) - one reason so many socially skilled behaviors
fail to generalize is the newly taught skill is
masked or overpowered by older and stronger
competing behaviors
44Social Skills Basics
- Social skills curriculum must match the specific
need. - An ideal curriculum does not exist.
- Basic set of Preferred Teaching Practices
exists. - Initially, learning how to teach social skills
takes time and energy.
45Characteristics of all Targeted Interventions
- explicitly teaching expected behavior to the
student - structured prompts for appropriate behavior
- opportunities to practice skills
- opportunities for positive feedback
- strategies for fading support as the student
gains new skills - system for communicating with parents
- regular Data for Monitoring student progress
Keys to Changing Behavior
46Self-Management
- Teach self-monitoring targeted social skills
simultaneously - Practice self-monitoring until students
accurately self-monitor at 80 or better - Periodic checks on accuracy
- It is not simply giving students a
self-evaluation check-list, we must teach and
practice to fluency and reinforce both accurate
self-evaluation and appropriate behavior
47Mentoring
- Focus on connections at school
- Not monitoring work
- Not to nag regarding behavior
- Staff volunteer
- Not in classroom
- No administrators
- Match student to volunteer
- 10 minutes minimum per week
- Emphasize the importance of being ready to meet
with student on a regular, predictable, and
consistent basis. Goal is not to become a
friend, but a positive adult role model who
expresses sincere and genuine care for the student
48Peer Tutoring
- Tutors must be taught how to teach
- Tutors must be taught what to do if tutee does
not comply - Tutors must be given the option to drop out at
any time without penalty - Initially, peer tutoring should be undertaken
only with close and on-going teacher supervision
to ensure success
49Academic Support
- Homework
- If data indicate it doesnt come back, build
in-school homework support - Supplemental Instruction
- Direct additional instruction along with current
classroom teaching - Differentiated Instruction
- Strategies to engage diverse learners
- Accommodation
- Within instruction
- Emphasize the need to identify and intervene
early before students fall behind routine
screening using curriculum based measures to
identify students early
50Check-In/Check-Outor Teacher Check Connect and
Expect
- Daily positive adult contact
- Daily progress report provides increased
attention to behavioral goals - Collaborative team-based process
- Home-school partnership
- Must have system in place for referral, behavior
monitoring, and coordination.
51Important to Note!
- Common misperception is that these strategies
- will fix the student and the classroom teacher
- does not need to be an active participant since
- specialists or outside staff are often involved
- in the intervention Important to stress that
- these interventions will require involvement of
ALL staff within the school building.
52So Tell Us.
- What are you currently implementing for Targeted
interventions?
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54(No Transcript)
55Activity 5
- With your Team, complete the Inventory of
informal and formal targeted supports or systems
for students who do not respond to School-Wide
PBIS.
56Targeted Behavior Training Status Check. Have
you
- Reviewed your school data to identify student
population eligible for targeted interventions? - Answered BAT questions 1-3?
- Completed your PBIS Universal Action Plan for
Sustainability? - Completed your School Profile and answered BAT
questions 4-6? - Finished your Targeted Behavior Purpose
Statement? - Completed Inventory of Targeted Practices?