teacher developed supports for at-risk students tim lewis, ph.d. barbara mitchell university of...

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Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

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Page 1: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students      

Tim Lewis, Ph.D.

Barbara Mitchell

University of Missouri

pbis.org

Page 2: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Starting Point

• We can’t “make” students learn or behave

• We can create environments to increase the likelihood students learn and behave

• Environments that increase the likelihood are guided by a core curriculum and implemented with consistency and fidelity

Page 3: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Big Ideas

• Using data at each step of the process

• Intervention selected based on presenting behavior pattern

• Modify environment (classroom) to promote practice opportunities & meet “function”

Page 4: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Essential Features

Understand interaction between behavior and the teaching environment

Behavior is functionally related to the teaching environment

• Build Positive Behavior Support Plans that teach pro-social “replacement” behaviors

• Create environments to support the use of pro-social behaviors (practice, practice, practice)– Around individual student need / self-management– Classroom – School-wide

Page 5: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Basic Steps in FBA-BIP Process

1. Conduct functional behavioral assessment

2. Create plan based on functional assessment outcome

1. Develop infra-structure to support behavior change (system change)

Page 6: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Positive Behavior Support Plan Teach replacement behavior(s) that result in

same/similar outcome

Environment should not allow problem behavior to result in previous outcomes

Ideally replacement behavior should be more efficient than problem behavior

Page 7: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

How do schools get there?

Build parallel systemic processes • Provide school/district teams with a process

to address the presenting challenge

• Develop a parallel process for districts/states to support school implementation and continue to expand with integrity

Page 8: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Are School Teams Ready?

• 80% or better on SET• Action plan to maintain Universals• Use data in team meetings• Create a decision rule to identify students in need• Assessment to identify what supports students

need• Strategy to implement classroom-based supports• Equal emphasis on systems, data and practice

supports

Page 9: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Classroom Systems of Support within SW-PBS:

Universals & Targeted

Page 10: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Classroom Challenges

• Students spend majority of their school day in the classroom

• Majority of “discipline problems” originate in the classroom and often result in removal from instruction

• Remaining engaged in instruction essential to student academic and social success

• “Culture” of education often reinforces ineffective practices and creates barriers to implementing effective practices

Page 11: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Universals: Classroom

• Behavior management– Teaching routines– Positive student-adult interactions

• Instructional management– Curriculum & Instructional design

• Environmental management• Student Self-Management

Page 12: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Universals: Classroom

1. Classroom expectations/rules defined and taught

2. Classroom routines defined and taught

3. “4:1” positive feedback

4. Active supervision

5. Students actively engaged

6. Multiple opportunities to respond

7. Minors addressed quickly and quietly/privately

8. School wide procedures for majors are followed

Page 13: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Connecting Classrooms to SW-PBS Efforts

• Tie academic and social behavior prevention efforts

• Maximize time student spends in instruction & learning (i.e., keeping in class vs. sending them out)

• Build expertise within the school via the PBS team

• Focused professional development– Brief in-service, multiple practice opportunities, structured feedback

• Move to collaborative problem solving– Peer coaching, model/demonstrations

Page 14: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Structural Analysis Setting Factors Assessment Tool

• Level 1: Classroom Set-up and Structure

• Level 2: Context Specific Activities

• Level 3: Instructional Delivery and Tasks

• Level 4: Student Behavior

Stichter, J. P., Lewis, T. J., Johnson, N., & Trussell, R. (2004). Toward a structural assessment: Analyzing the merits of an assessment tool for a student with E/BD. Assessment for Effective Intervention, 30, 25-40.

Page 15: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

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Baseline Level 1 Level 1 & 2 Level 1, 2 & 3 Follow-Up

Mea

n Pe

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High Structure Materials Accessiblity Rules Visible Assistance Consistent Answering Consistent

Page 16: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org
Page 17: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Applied Work in Progress

A Systematic Process to Implement Individual Plans

Page 18: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Background and Context

• PBS in Columbia Public Schools– 18 elementary buildings– 3 middle schools– 3 junior highs– 3 high school programs– 17,000 students

Page 19: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Gentry Middle School

• Three core teams per grade level– Five general education teachers– One special education

• Elective team

• Literacy support center

• Self-contained/Special education

• Administrative team

Page 20: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

PBS at Gentry Year 1-6

• Universal Features– PBS team– Building wide expectations (RRKS) & Matrix– Lesson plans and teaching schedule– Track discipline data– System for acknowledging (RRKS Ribbon)– Continuum of response– Document minors (RRKS TOC)

Page 21: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org
Page 22: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org
Page 23: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Building a System to Implement Individual Plans

SAT-STAT-RRKS

Page 24: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

RRKS Team

STAT Team

Core Team RepresentativeDistrict PBS Support

Building Administrator and Counselors

* Meets Monthly

Core Team Facilitator,

SAT Partner, &Core Team Teachers

* Meets Weekly

SAT TeamCounselors,

Administrators,

School Psych, &

Behavior Specialist

* Meets Weekly

Method for Communicating Practice

SAT Process•Teacher Assistance and Support•Targeted/Small Group Interventions•Individual Student Plans

Core Team/Classrooms•Implement AIS•Monitor Progress•Evaluate Outcomes

School-Wide Systems•Matrix•Lesson Plans•School-Wide Data•Acknowledgement•Communication

Page 25: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Provide Ongoing Support

• Periodic, intensive, with follow-up• Classroom/team universals

• AIS process

• Follow-up AIS

• Feedback and systems maintenance

• Weekly, skills-based, with modeling and feedback

Page 26: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Designing a Process for Implementing Individual Plans

Gentry AIS and FBA Matrix

Page 27: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Intervention Strategy Process

Page 28: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Intervention Strategy Process

Page 29: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Intervention Strategy Process

Page 30: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Problem Behavior Function Replacement

Behavior Intervention Outcome for Replacement

Behavior Off-task, Non-disruptive

Peer Attention On-task, work completion

RRKS lesson – “on-task” Pre-correct @ start of class Self-monitor: on-task Periodic praise by teacher

for on-task Quick de-brief at end of

class on self-monitoring

Earn time with peers for meeting self-management goals

Off-task, Disruptive Peer Attention On-task, respectful responses, work completion

RRKS lesson – “on-task” RRKS lesson – “conflict

management/respect” Pre-correct @ start of class Self-monitor: on-task &

RRKS Periodic praise by teacher

for on-task Quick de-brief at end of

class on self-monitoring

Earn time with peers for meeting self-management goals

Off-task, Non-disruptive, work completion

Escape (avoids teacher and peers during instruction)

On-task, work completion

RRKS lesson – “on-task” Pre-correct @ start of class Self-monitor: on-task +

work completion Quick de-brief at end of

class on self-monitoring

Earn a ‘skip a homework’ pass Earn other preferred activity for meeting self-management and work completion goals

Off-task, Non-disruptive, work completion

Attention (responds to teacher directions, engages peers)

On-task, work completion

RRKS lesson – “on-task” Pre-correct @ start of class Self-monitor: on-task +

work completion Periodic praise by teacher

for on-task +work completion

Quick de-brief at end of class on self-monitoring

Earn “a work with peer” activity Earn other preferred activity for meeting self-management and work completion goals

Gentry FBA Matrix

Lewis, 2008

Page 31: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Outcomes and Results

Student Data

ODR-RRKS TOC-Attendance-Grades

Page 32: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Intervention Strategies Implemented

• Targeted Classroom Intervention– Increase precorrects & feedback

• Small Group Intervention– Check-in/Check-out

• Individualized Intervention– CICO with modified course schedule

Page 33: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Monitor Progress

KK

0

1020

30

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5060

70

8090

100

3/3/2008 3/4/2008 3/5/2008 3/6/2008 3/7/2008

Pe

rce

nta

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Week 9 3/3/08 3/4/08 3/5/08 3/6/08 3/7/08 Weekly Average

Student 1 94% 94% 95% 97% No School 95%

Student 1

Page 34: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Evaluate Outcomes

• Questions to Consider…– Is intervention being implemented with

integrity?– Does intervention match the function of student

behavior?– Does the student need more intensive,

individualized support?

Page 35: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org
Page 36: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org
Page 37: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org
Page 38: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org
Page 39: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Lessons Learned

Use data

Select intervention

Modify environment

Page 40: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Build Buy-In

• Start small• Training on function based intervention• Same things we do for students…

– Teach expected behavior– Provide support– Reinforce reasonable approximation– Acknowledge success

• Outcome data

Page 41: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Big Ideas

• Using data at each step of the process

• Intervention selected based on presenting behavior pattern

• Modify environment (classroom) to promote practice opportunities & meet “function”

Page 42: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students      

Tim Lewis, Ph.D.

Barbara Mitchell

University of Missouri

Page 43: Teacher Developed Supports for At-risk Students Tim Lewis, Ph.D. Barbara Mitchell University of Missouri pbis.org

RRKS Team

STAT Team

Core Team RepresentativeDistrict PBS Support

Building Administrator and Counselors

* Meets Monthly

Core Team Facilitator,

SAT Partner, &Core Team Teachers

* Meets Weekly

SAT TeamCounselors,

Administrators,

School Psych, &

Behavior Specialist

* Meets Weekly

Method for Communicating Practice

SAT Process•Teacher Assistance and Support•Targeted/Small Group Interventions•Individual Student Plans

Core Team/Classrooms•Implement AIS•Monitor Progress•Evaluate Outcomes

School-Wide Systems•Matrix•Lesson Plans•School-Wide Data•Acknowledgement•Communication