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NORTH CENTRAL COLLEGE JUNIOR/SENIOR SCHOLARS Presentation on Response to Intervention (RtI) and Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports (PBIS)

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North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars. Presentation on Response to Intervention (RtI) and Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports (PBIS). What is RtI ?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

NORTH CENTRAL COLLEGE JUNIOR/SENIOR SCHOLARS

Presentation on Response to Intervention (RtI) and Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports (PBIS)

Page 2: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

WHAT IS RTI?

A general education initiative that incorporates best practices in education informed by data to impact student achievement and growth.

Federal Mandate now included in NCLB and IDEA.

A continuum of support for all students.

Page 3: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

THE 3 TIERED MODEL

Page 4: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

WHAT’S THIS ALL ABOUT?

Evidence-Based Practices!

Data used to “move students through the tiers.”

Universal tier: Curriculum/Instructional Practices.

Secondary tier: Small Group Interventions.

Tier 3 : Individualized support.

Students continue to receive the support from the “lower” tiers while increasing interventions/support to meet their needs.

If the student continues not to respond to the increased support, a referral for Special Education is considered.

Page 5: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

HOW CAN WE PUT THIS INTO PLACE THIS SUMMER?

Use your pre-assessment data (Assessments on academic skills should be done during Drop- In week, and at the very latest the first day of camp).

Build your curriculum around where your students are at, but….

Use Benchmark data from ISAT/PSAE scores! Utilize your high school interns to support

with small group instruction/individualized support for your students with more intensive needs.

Page 6: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

A LOOK AT THE BEHAVIORAL SIDE…

PBIS!!!!

Page 7: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

UNDERSTANDING THE CONNECTION: ACADEMIC AND

BEHAVIORRtI and PBIS are linked because each requires

the:

Establishment of effective teaching strategies and core curriculum with general education

population.

Universal screening of ALL students.

Use of research-based interventions in general education.

Measurement of student responses to interventions.

Use of student data to change intensity or design new interventions.

Page 8: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

FOUR ELEMENTS OF PBIS

Systems ~ Practices ~ Data ~ Outcomes

Page 9: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

PBIS PRINCIPLES

Increase consistent use of positive teaching and reinforcement strategies among all school staff at school-wide,

classroom and individual student levels.

Reduce use of reactive discipline measures in schools (i.e., office discipline referrals, detentions, suspensions, expulsions) for all students.

Increase data-based decision-making about behavior and academic instruction and reinforcement across all school settings.

Implement effective comprehensive supports/services/interventions for students with the most intensive behavioral/emotional needs through wraparound plans that address home, school, and community settings.

Page 10: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

AT NCC JR/SR SCHOLARS

Token Economy System

Cooperative Learning

Consistent Procedures

Consistent Routines

FLEXIBILITY!

POSITIVITY!

Page 11: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

PBIS GOAL 1: SUPPORTING STAFF BEHAVIOR

Support with creating safe and effective Learning

Environments

Creating Support Systems

Page 12: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

SAFE AND EFFECTIVE LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS

Picture a place where you feel safe. (Visualization with sensory integration)

How can you apply what you visualized to your classroom?

Page 13: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

CREATING SUPPORT SYSTEMS

Support from many places….

1. Each Other2. Coaches3. Camp Directors/Administrators4. Parents5. Your students (remember…let their voices be

heard!)6. Outside resources (what have you learned from the

sessions/institutes?)

Page 14: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

PBIS GOAL 2: SUPPORTING SOCIAL COMPETENCE

Social Skills Development

Social/Emotional Needs

Page 15: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

SOCIAL SKILLS DEVELOPMENT

Do not assume the “They should know better” mentality.

Teach students how to behave in various situations…You are America’s Next Top Model!

Teach conflict resolution: I PICC and PBIS (different acronym…)

Aligned with the Social Emotional Learning (SEL) Goals!

Page 16: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

SOCIAL/EMOTIONAL NEEDS

Students and families do not exist in a vacuum.

Analyze stress factors….what are your own? Are you letting them show?

Parent engagement is KEY!

Empathic approach, non-judgmental.

Page 17: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

In situations with students, we tend to

become more focused on the behavior than

on the child.

Page 18: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

SOCIAL/EMOTIONAL: EXPRESSING NEED

Children express need in 3 ways:

1. Attitude2. Feelings3. Behavior

Page 19: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

Knowing that humans express their need through their behaviors (whether positively or negatively) can help us understand just how important our interactions with one

another are.

Reflect upon each day. Examine your own stress level.

Page 20: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

SOCIAL/EMOTIONAL

Listen to what the child is “saying” through their behavior and respond by being:

Supportive Encouraging Passionate

Empowering Love-based

Listen to what your behavior is “saying” and respond.

Page 21: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

CREATING CHANGE

1. Positive repetition in the environment.

2. Positive repetition in relationships.

3. Emotional impact:

Set limits with your students. Think from the child’s perspective.

Give your students attention without them having to earn it.

Page 22: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

PBIS GOAL 3: SUPPORTING STUDENT BEHAVIOR

Teaching Expected Behaviors

Reinforcing Student’s Demonstration of expected behaviors

Correcting Problem Behaviors

Celebrating Success

Page 23: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

TEACHING EXPECTATIONS

Step One: Guideline in Selecting Expectations

Explicitly state rules & expectations aligned with school-wide expectations.

i.e., BE COLLEGE BOUND!!!!

Select positively stated functional rules. i.e., Use hands/feet appropriately!

Establish behavioral expectations immediately.

Rehearse & review the behavioral expectations.

Page 24: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

TEACHING EXPECTATIONS

Step One: Guideline in Selecting Expectations

Practice frequently broken behavioral expectations.

Individualize expectations.

Schedule time for teaching classroom behavioral expectations.

Page 25: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

TEACHING EXPECTATIONS

Step Two: Systematically teach the expectations

Students require a great deal of instruction and practice in classroom

rules and procedures.

Effective management needs to be more about instruction than about discipline.

Page 26: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

TEACHING EXPECTED BEHAVIORS (EXPECTATIONS)

Three steps to follow up teaching classroom expectations:

1. Remind/Pre-correct

2. Supervise

3. Provide positive feedback

Page 27: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

REINFORCING POSITIVE STUDENT BEHAVIOR

Token Economy System (see teacher handbook).

Individualize reinforcement (verbal rewards, tangible rewards, provide attention – peer or adult).

Utilize your high school intern!

Page 28: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

PRE-CORRECTING PROBLEM BEHAVIOR

Key Points:

“Pre-” means before; “-Correct” means after.

“Pre-Correction” means anticipating problem behavior and

intervening beforehand. Problem behavior is prevented. Expected behavior replaces problem

behavior.

Page 29: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

PRE-CORRECTING: ANTICIPATING PROBLEMS

Step One: Identify the context (trigger) and the

predictable problem behavior. Are the behaviors occurring at set times?BreakfastLunchTransitionsLine Up For Bathroom

Page 30: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

PRE-CORRECTING: ANTICIPATING PROBLEMS

Step Two:

Specifying Expected Behaviors:

Eliminate or significantly reduce problem.

Establish an expected behavior to replace the problem.

Page 31: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

PRE-CORRECTING: ANTICIPATING PROBLEMS

Describe the expected behavior in observable terms (raise hand) or

Select behaviors that are incompatible with potential problem behavior (go to desk-start assignment) or

Select an expected behavior to replace the problem behavior (remember to use inside voices)

Page 32: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

PRE-CORRECTING: ANTICIPATING PROBLEMS

Step Three:

Modify the context beforehand.

Minimize the changes (simplest change for biggest impact).

Systematically plan changes.

Page 33: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

PRE-CORRECTING: ANTICIPATING PROBLEMS

Step Four: Strong new reinforcement provided.

Step Five: Provide reminders in class directions. Use gestures to prompt expected behavior. Provide choices for repeated infractions.

Page 34: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

PRE-CORRECTING: ANTICIPATING PROBLEMS

Step Six: Monitoring the Plan

Design simple system to gather data.

Analyze data andmodify plan as necessary.

Page 35: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

PRE-CORRECTING INTO CORRECTING

If we can predict it, . . .we can

prevent it.

Page 36: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

CORRECTING PROBLEM BEHAVIOR

Remove attention from student displaying inappropriate behavior.

AND

Focus on student(s) nearby exhibiting the expected behavior.

Page 37: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

CORRECTING PROBLEM BEHAVIOR

Secure student’s attention. Inform him/her of expected behavior. Redirect the student to expected

behavior (gesture/verbal prompt). Provide immediate opportunities for

practice. Acknowledge the changed behavior

when it occurs.

Page 38: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

CORRECTING PROBLEM BEHAVIOR

If expected behavior still does not occur…

Deliver a brief warning by providing for the student to choose between:

Displaying the expected behavior. OR Experiencing a penalty or loss of privilege.

Page 39: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

CORRECTING PROBLEM BEHAVIOR

Deliver the penalty or loss of privilege in a matter-of-fact manner.

Do not argue with the student about the details of the penalty.

(NO POWER STRUGGLES!)

WALK AWAY…WALK AWAY…WALK AWAY!!!!!

Page 40: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

CELEBRATING SUCCESS!

Praise, Praise, Praise!

Positive phone call or note home.

Providing student with an award.

Good job!

Page 41: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

PBIS GOAL 4: SUPPORT DECISION-MAKING

One Word………..

………………………………………………..

DATA

Page 42: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

DATA

What are the various sources of data to use?

How to interpret data?

What do you do with it once you get it?

Page 43: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

DATA: SOURCES?

ACADEMIC Classroom based

assessments. Curriculum Based

Measures (CBM).

Standardized test scores.

Informal assessments.

BEHAVIORAL Discipline referrals. Observational

information. Anecdotal records. Student/Parent

surveys.

Page 44: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

DATA: INTERPRETATION

Take into consideration the multiple data sources.

Look at themes, patterns, outliers.

Reflection: at which tier is the data showing a need for change?

Page 45: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

DATA: WHAT TO DO WITH IT

Determine if changes need to be made at the Universal level (i.e., classroom

management and direct instruction). Determine students who may require

additional support at the Secondary level (i.e., small groups, in-class tutoring).

Determine students who may need individualized support (i.e., one-on-one instruction, use of high school intern).

Page 46: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

DATA: DESIGNING INTERVENTIONS/STRATEGIES

Academic

Increase instruction in skill deficit areas.

Re-teach skills for reinforcement of understanding.

Engagement = Achievement!

Incorporate mini-lessons/extra practice on specific skills needing to be addressed further along with a new topic being taught.

Small group instruction for students

presenting with similar concerns.

Social/Emotional/Behavioral

Engage parental support. Token Economy. Classroom-wide incentives

and behavior plans. Use of “cool tools” to teach

expected behaviors.

Classroom Meetings to address student concerns/needs.

Explain to the student what the expected

behavior is and teach them how to show it!

Page 47: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

TRYING TO PREVENT THIS FROM HAPPENINGTRYING TO PREVENT THIS FROM HAPPENING

Page 48: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

LINKS FOR ACADEMIC/SOCIAL/EMOTIONAL/BEHAVIORAL

CLASSROOM STRATEGIES

www.pbisillinois.org (cool tool lesson plans!) www.behavioradvisor.com (AMAZING!) http://www.freeprintablebehaviorcharts.com

(free printable materials! Send home to parents!)

www.interventioncentral.org (academic) http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/ (What Works

Clearinghouse) http://www.bestevidence.org/ (academic)

Page 49: North Central College Junior/Senior Scholars

FINAL THOUGHTS

“If you can predict it, you can prevent it.”

Listen to what students are saying through their behavior....and respond!

We are all in this together!!!!!

Remember to stay Flexible and Positive!