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Connecting SW-PBIS to the Classroom: Designing Classroom Supports

Connecting SW-PBIS to the Classroom: Designing Classroom Supports . Patti Hershfeldt, Ed.D. Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health Center for Prevention of Youth Violence phershfe@jhsph.edu. Objective.

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Connecting SW-PBIS to the Classroom: Designing Classroom Supports

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  1. Connecting SW-PBIS to the Classroom: Designing Classroom Supports Patti Hershfeldt, Ed.D. Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health Center for Prevention of Youth Violence phershfe@jhsph.edu

  2. Objective • Identify actions for a school-wide team to improve the quality of classroom management throughout their school

  3. Big Idea • We often assume green zone is in place everywhere • But what about the classroom? • How is PBIS being used in the classroom to prevent yellow zone behaviors? • By fortifying the green zone, we can reduce need for yellow zone

  4. Today’s Questions • How important is classroom management? • How can teachers ‘grow the green’? How can we identify areas of strengths using the Classroom Management Self Assessment? • Classroom behavior support practices blend with school-wide systems • As a team, how will you work to make all classrooms effective settings?

  5. What the Research Says about Classroom Management • Linked with positive student outcomes (academic and behavior) • Increased risk of preventing more serious problems among at-risk kids • Supports all students in the prevention of possible current and future behavior problems. • Strong management signals to kids that the class is a safe place to learn. • Well managed classrooms are rated as having more positive climates. (Aber et al., 1998; Mitchell, Bradshaw & Leaf, 2009)

  6. What the Research says about Classroom Management • Greater student engagement (Morrison, 1979) • Friendlier peer interactions and helpful behaviors, more attentive, less aggression (Susman, Husten-Stein & Friedrich-Coffer, 1980). • Teachers experience greater efficacy (Woolfolk, 2002) • Increased student achievement • Creative and flexible instructional delivery • Teacher longevity

  7. In a Well-Managed Classroom • Students are actively involved in their work • Students know what is expected of them and are generally successful • There is relatively little wasted time, confusion, or disruption • The climate of the classroom is work-oriented, but relaxed and pleasant

  8. In Classrooms that were IneffectiveWehby, Symons, & Shores (1995) • Less than half of student’s hand raises or correct academic responses were acknowledged by teachers • Less than 2 praise statements per hour • Most academic work consisted of independent seatwork • Inconsistent distribution of teacher attention • Compliance to a command generally resulted in the delivery of another command

  9. 5 Key Features of Classroom Management • Review each feature • Consider a system for taking this information to the whole faculty • Build a “measure” of school-wide classroom management • Use this measure for action planning and continuous improvement

  10. Evidence Based Practices in Classroom Management 1. Maximize structure in your classroom. 2. Establish, teach, prompt, monitor, and evaluate a small number of positively stated expectations. 3. Maximize academic engaged time 4. Establish a continuum of strategies to acknowledge appropriate behavior. 5. Establish a continuum of strategies to respond to inappropriate behavior. (Simonsen, Fairbanks, Briesch, Myers, & Sugai, 2008)

  11. 1. Maximize Structure • Develop Predictable Routines • Teacher routines • Student routines • Design an environment that.. • elicits appropriate behavior • minimizes crowding and distraction

  12. Design a Functional Physical Layout for the Classroom • Different areas of the classroom designed for different purposes • Traffic Patterns • Visual access • Teacher access to students at all times • Student access to instruction • Density • Teacher desk

  13. Questions for Planning Physical Space • How many students will you have in the room at one time? • How should your pupil’s seats be grouped? • What kinds of activities will be taking place in your classroom? • Do any students need to be isolated? If so, is it for certain activities or for most of the day? • How is movement in the classroom to be regulated? • What can you do to create a sense of well-being and safety for your students in your classroom?

  14. 2. Establish, teach, prompt, monitor, and evaluate a small number of positively statedexpectations

  15. Establish Behavioral Expectations/Rules • A small number (i.e., 3-5) of positively stated rules. Tell students what we want them to do, rather than telling them what we do not want them to do. • Publicly post the rules. • Should match SW Expectations

  16. Teach rules in the context of routines • Teach expectations explicitly. • Define rule in operational terms—tell students what the rule looks like within routine. • Provide students with examples and non-examples of rule-following. • Actively involve students in lesson—game, roleplay, etc. to check for their understanding. • Provide opportunities to practice rule following behavior in the natural setting.

  17. Teach the rules • Define and teach classroom routines • How to enter class and begin to work • How to predict the schedule for the day • What to do if you do not have materials • What to do if you need help • What to do if you need to go to the bathroom • What to do if you are handing in late material • What to do if someone is bothering you. • Signals for moving through different activities. • “Show me you are listening” • How to determine if you are doing well in class • Establish a signal for obtaining class attention • Teach effective transitions.

  18. Prompt or remind students of the rules • Provide students with visual prompts (e.g., posters, illustrations, etc). • Use pre-corrections, which include “verbal reminders, behavioral rehearsals, or demonstrations of rule-following or socially appropriate behaviors that are presented in or before settings where problem behavior is likely” (Colvin, Sugai, Good, Lee, 1997).

  19. Monitor students’ behavior • Active supervision • Move around • Look around • Interact with students • Reinforce • Correct

  20. Evaluate the effect of instruction • Collect data • Are rules being followed? • If not ask.. • who is making them? • where are the errors occurring? • what kind of errors are being made? • when are they being made? • Summarize data (look for patterns) • Use data to make decisions

  21. Establish, Teach, Review, Monitor, and Reinforce a small number of positively statedexpectations.

  22. 3. Maximize academic engaged time The Effective Teacher Teaches students not a subject or a grade level Maximizes academic learning time Has students earning their own achievement Keeps the students actively engaged in learning - Wong, 1998

  23. Wong: The 4 kinds of time at school • Allocated Time 100% • Total time kids are in class • Instructional Time 90% • Total time you can observe a teacher teaching • Engaged Time 75% • Total time a student is involved in the learning • Academic learning time 35% • Time during which a student can demonstrate their learning.

  24. Maximize Academic Engaged Time: Instruction Influences Behavior • Pacing • Opportunities for student responses • Acquisition vs Practice • Student feedback from teacher • Student choice • Sequence activities so preferred activities follow more demanding activities • Re-package it

  25. 4. Establish a continuum of strategies to acknowledge appropriate behavior. • Five instances of praise for every correction. • Begin each class period with a celebration. • Provide multiple paths to success/praise. • Group contingencies, personal contingencies, etc

  26. Increasing Positive Interactions • Use individual conferences to provide specific praise • “Search” for reinforceable behaviors • Reduce attention to misbehavior and increase time rewarding positive behaviors • Praise should be… – contingent: occur immediately following desired behavior – specific: tell learner exactly what they are doing correctly and continue to do in the future

  27. Activity: Classroom Acknowledgements

  28. 5. Establish a continuum of strategies to respond to inappropriate behavior. • Apply consistently • Immediate feedback (when possible) • Plan consistent with school-wide plan • Define the school-wide “rule” for what is managed in the classroom and what is sent to the office • Consequence linked to context • Establish predictable consequences • Establish individual consequences AND group consequences

  29. Alpha vs. Beta COMMANDS • Alphacommands are short and clear; neutral tone (e.g., “Stay on topic -- Columbus Day”) • Beta commands are wordy, vague and often convey a feeling of frustration (e.g., If you won’t listen, you won’t learn a darn thing. You aren’t trying. Pay attention and keep up”) (Annemieke Golly)

  30. Reasonable and Logical Strategies

  31. Reasonable and Logical Strategies

  32. Reasonable and Logical Strategies

  33. Reasonable and Logical Strategies

  34. Use Data to Examine Classroom System: Tools to help

  35. Resources on Classroom Management • CHAMPs: A proactive and positive approach to classroom management • Sprick, R. Garrison, M., & Howard, L. (1998). Pacific Northwest Publishing. • Coaching Classroom Management: Strategies and Tolls for Administrators and Coaches • Sprick, R., Knight, J., Reinke, W.M., & McKale, T. (2006). Pacific Northwest Publishing.

  36. Classroom Check-up • A consultation model designed to increase behavior management • Conduct observations • Assess critical classroom variables • Provide feedback • Collaboratively design individualized intervention plan • Teachers self-monitor/ and are receive ongoing feedback and support (Reinke et al., 2008)

  37. Classroom Check-Up Observation Form Step 1 • Opportunities to respond • Correct academic responses • Disruptions • Ratio of Interactions • Specific praise • General praise • Reprimands

  38. Classroom Check-Up Observation Form Step 2 For the next 5 minutes, focus on a different student every 5 seconds. Record a “+” symbol to indicate on-task or engaged behavior and a “–” symbol to indicate off-task behavior. When each student has been observed, begin the progression again. Continue until 5 minutes has elapsed.

  39. Divide the number of on-task (+) marks by the total number of marks (60). Time on task (academic engagement) =__________ percent. 44 /60 = 73%

  40. Sample

  41. CCU Feedback Form • Calculate your data/tallies • Fill into the feedback columns (by looking at the benchmarks) • Choose ONE goal! • Watch your students succeed! • A few notes • These are determined by ideal research conditions • Special education considerations

  42. ClassroomManagement: Self Assessment Simonsen, Sugai, Fairbanks, & Briesch, 2006 http://www.pbis.org/pbis_resource_detail_page.aspx?Type=4&PBIS_ResourceID=174

  43. Resources • Coaching Classroom Management: Strategies and Tolls for Administrators and Coaches • Sprick, R., Knight, J., Reinke, W.M., & McKale, T. (2006). Pacific Northwest Publishing. • CHAMPs: A proactive and positive approach to classroom management • Sprick, R. Garrison, M., & Howard, L. (1998). Pacific Northwest Publishing. • Function Based Thinking: A systematic way of thinking about function and its impact on classroom behavior. Beyond Behavior (in press) • Hershfeldt, P.A., Rosenberg, M.S., & Bradshaw, C.P. • Good Behavior Game Implementation & Procedures Manual • Anderson, C,M. & Rodriguez, B.J.

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