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Behavior Basics: Supporting the Child with Challenging Behaviors

Behavior Basics: Supporting the Child with Challenging Behaviors. Presented by…. Joanne Nelson, Inclusion Coordinator Kevin Carraro, Family Resources Administrator. Presentation Objectives. Operationally define behavior Importance of Environment Functions ABC’s Data Collection

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Behavior Basics: Supporting the Child with Challenging Behaviors

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  1. Behavior Basics: Supporting the Child with Challenging Behaviors

  2. Presented by… Joanne Nelson, Inclusion Coordinator Kevin Carraro, Family Resources Administrator

  3. Presentation Objectives • Operationally define behavior • Importance of Environment • Functions • ABC’s • Data Collection • Proactive vs. reactive strategies

  4. Things not to do in your classroom….

  5. Things not to do in your classroom

  6. Family Relationships

  7. Examining Our Attitudes About Challenging Behaviors • How do they make you feel? • How does this impact your relationship with a child and his family?

  8. Building Positive Relationships • Be prepared to support family and staff from the first day of enrollment • Keep lines of communication open between program and families • Support and encourage parental involvement in activities • Learn from family members about their culture, and home and family life

  9. Mean Age Expectations in Months for Milestone Attainment Caucasian Puerto Rican Filipino Eat Solid Food 8.2 10.1 6.7 Training Cup 12.0 17.1 21.9 Utensils 17.7 26.5 32.4 Finger Foods 8.9 9.4 9.5 Wean 16.8 18.2 36.2 Sleep by Self 13.8 14.6 38.8 Sleep all Night 11.4 14.5 32.4 Choose Clothes 31.1 44.2 33.1 Dress Self 38.2 44.2 39.2 Play Alone 25.0 24.8 12.3 Toilet Trained Day 31.6 29.0 20.4 Toilet Trained Night 33.2 31.8 34.2

  10. Building Positive Relationships • Share resources with parents about how to support the child’s development • Share positive things the child did at the program • Conduct meetings with parents in an environment and time convenient for them • Assure parents about confidentiality and privacy rights

  11. Supportive Classroom Environment • Minimize large open spaces • Minimize obstacles • Have clear boundaries so that children know where a center begins/ends • Have enough centers for the number of children and enough materials so that children are engaged and not continually arguing over materials • Consider the size and location of centers

  12. Schedules, Routines and Transitions • Develop a schedule that promotes child engagement and success • Balance activities: active and quiet, small and large group, teacher directed and child directed • Teach and post a visual schedule • Establish a routine and follow it consistently • When a change is necessary prepare children ahead of time

  13. Schedules, Routines and Transitions Minimize the number of transitions Give a warning before a transition occurs Post and teach class rules with visuals

  14. Pyramid Model

  15. What is behavior… • ANYTHING we SAY or DO: • Focus on what is observable rather than intentions • HOW WE REACT to our environment • Behaviors are LEARNED and continue because they serve a PURPOSE or FUNCTION • We engage in behaviors because we have learned that a DESIRED OUTCOME occurs

  16. Examples of Behavior

  17. Operationally Define… • Thorough and specific description of behavior • Highly Objective • Measurable • Answer questions… • Who • When • Where • How long • How often

  18. Behavior has a function/purpose • The 4 A’s • Attention • Access • Avoidance/Escape • Automatic/Sensory Stimulation

  19. The 4 A’s

  20. ABC Behavior Sequences Are Critical. Simple as ABC! Antecedent: what’s going on before a person engages in a targeted behavior Behavior: what exactly the person does Consequence: what happens following an occurrence of a targeted behavior

  21. Example of ABC Sequence • Antecedent: Teacher tells Stewie to clean up his centers • Behavior: Stewie punches Meg • Consequence: Teacher gives Stewie a cookie

  22. Why Look at the ABCs? • Antecedents and consequences that immediately precede and follow behavior are, ultimately, what affect behavior (and whether or not the behavior is likely to occur again) • Antecedents and consequences are things we can change and things we control

  23. Example of ABC/Sequence Analysis

  24. Positive Strategies…Positive Teachers Get Positive Results • Most Ethical • Antecedent-based interventions are ways to prevent/or reduce behavior from occurring. • Examples: • Pre-assignment attention • Moving seats, line order, environmental manipulations • Frequent breaks and positive attention • Teaching and prompting alternative/incompatible behaviors • Rehearsal and teaching of Replacement Behaviors

  25. Positive Strategies…Positive Teachers Get Positive Results • Change what you do in order to change what they do. • Be careful of exclusion • Self esteem may become problematic if always criticized, tell what to do in a positive way. • Get buy in whenever possible • Establish consistent limits and boundaries • Establish enforceable, relevant rules

  26. Interventions for Inappropriate Attention-Seeking Behavior • Reduce or eliminate attention directed to the inappropriate behavior, maximize attention given to the replacement behavior. • Sprick Ratio: 4 positive statements to 1 redirection • hand raising – talk to the student when they raise a quiet hand • Use Pivot Praise – ignore junk behavior, praise students doing the right thing • consider using “chat breaks” • Pre-Assignment Attention • Give the student a helper job • Remember: Attention is your most valuable reinforcer… Praise is a limitless, inexpensive and powerful positive consequence for attention-seeking behavior

  27. Interventions for Avoidance/Escape Behaviors • Match the instructional level to the student’s ability level. • Premack Principle – do the least preferred before the more preferred activity is accessed • Break tasks into smaller steps • Follow through with your directions, Be the Broken Record! • Use “choice” language • Remind the student to ask for a break upon completion of some portion of work • Remind the student to ask for help • Intersperse hard tasks with easy ones • Establish consistent routines • Remember, timeout for task escape behavior could result in a continuation of the inappropriate behaviors!

  28. Interventions for Access • Follow the Premack Principle • Allow students to earn things they want, contingent on following classroom rules. • Star chart, sticker chart or other token systems. • Use “if…then” or “when…then” statements

  29. Automatic/Sensory Stimulation • Teach alternative behaviors: • Use fidget toys in replacement of hand flapping • Reinforce student for keeping hands in pockets • Build in times for movement • Enriched environment: high levels of access to preferred items or activities, lots of attention • Antecedent-Based Intervention

  30. In Conclusion…

  31. Behavior Basics… • Must know why behavior is occurring to develop an effective intervention plan • When you understand what is happening at your center and why it is happening, your team will be able to change how things work (the system) to increase appropriate behavior and decrease inappropriate behavior

  32. When in Doubt…? • Think • Function • ABC’s • Premack Principle- use the most preferred to get the least preferred accomplished • Sprick Ratio- 4 positive comments for every 1 negative comment

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