1 / 37

Prevention Through Planning and Assessment

Prevention Through Planning and Assessment. Kerry Duersteler Kelleah Lewis Kelley Stendler Melissa Myers July 21, 2009. Knosler’s Change Process. Vision confusion Incentives resistance Skills anxiety

ekuehn
Télécharger la présentation

Prevention Through Planning and Assessment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Prevention Through Planning and Assessment Kerry Duersteler Kelleah Lewis Kelley Stendler Melissa Myers July 21, 2009

  2. Knosler’s Change Process • Vision confusion • Incentives resistance • Skills anxiety • Resources frustration • Action plan treadmill • = CHANGE

  3. Functional Behavior Assessments • An FBA is a process, not a form (the form is used to document the process) • The purpose of conducting an FBA is to help the team collaboratively develop an effective Behavior Plan that meets a student’s individual needs • The goal is not to suppress inappropriate behavior; it is to increase positive prosocial behaviors –Eric Hartwig

  4. FBA: Setting Factors • Time of day • Day of the week • Class / subject • Period • Teacher • Structured v. unstructured times (classroom v. halls)

  5. Data Collection To determine triggers, setting factors & functions: • Conduct observations • Interview the student • Interview parents, teachers or other staff • Use questionnaires, checklists or rating scales • Review previous records • Track & review other behavioral data

  6. FBA: Function of Behavior When kids misbehave, they are communicating in the only way that they know how. They are telling us a need is unfilled or trying to meet the need themselves Common Functions Include: • Avoidance (can’t do or won’t do) • Power & Control (including revenge, perceived justice) • Attention (adult, peer or both) • Self –regulation, coping

  7. FBA sample • New group of 3-Discuss the following • What was the problem? • What was the function? • What do you think is the most powerful component, why?? • What impressed/surprised you?

  8. Now you can do the BIP! Now that the team has conducted an FBA, you can begin to identify possible interventions. As you construct the BIP, remember: • The FBA is the basis or backbone of the BIP • The team must identify a realistic, practical replacement behavior that meets the same need or function • Consider this: Old way-We used to spend time on consequences, New Way-It is FAR more effective to identify preventative strategies and Positive Behavior Interventions based on functions

  9. Implementation of BIP • Even the most effective BIP will not change the behavior dramatically in a short period • Often, with an effective plan, the behavior gets worse before it gets better • Many experts say it takes 6 weeks for real behavior change to take place • It’s crucial for the team to implement the plan consistently & with integrity for several weeks

  10. Fact Sheets • BIPs and IEPs must be individualized • EBD is not OHI is not Autism is not TBI • Tools include, fact sheets, Blueprints for Success, EBD evaluation guide, Melissa’s website, maroon book

  11. Fact Sheet activity • Count off by 8 • Jigsaw topics • Read in group • Discuss who should have these • When should they be used • How are they helpful?

  12. Strategies for Effective IEP Meetings (Maintaining a Focus on the Child)

  13. PL94-142 / IDEA • IEP Meetings • Held at Least Annually • Required Team Members • Parent(s) of the Student • General Ed Teacher • Special Ed Teacher • Administrator or Administrator Designee (LEA) • Student, as appropriate

  14. Getting your Ducks in a RowBefore the IEP Meeting Implement a Uniform System • School-wide Process • Master Calendar • IEP Meeting Scheduling • Administrator Designees • Bring Documentation • Behavioral Data: behavioral reports, detentions, attendance, referrals, anecdotal notes, suspensions. • Academic Data: Formal and Informal Assessments: student work samples, academic assessments, MAPs, rubrics.

  15. During the IEP Meetingsee handout on IEP agenda

  16. IEP Team Taboos • Blaming individuals • Making excuses for shortcomings or problems • Lack of participation • Arguing • Defensiveness • Offensiveness • Self Advocacy • Excessive Talking • Non Participation • Side Bars • Individual Dissent

  17. During the IEP Meeting • Strategies for Dealing with Challenging Behaviors • Remain calm & pleasant • Refrain from raising voice • Avoid arguing • Actively listen • Avoid words with negative connotations • Question rather than state • Look for areas of agreement

  18. During the IEP Meeting How Does Consensus Look? Each participant: • understands the decision; • has the opportunity to state position regarding the decision; • consents to the decision and agrees to support it.

  19. After the IEP Meeting • Confirm Follow Up Actions • Parents should walk out with a draft in hand • Expect final IEP is due within 2 weeks

  20. Guiding Questions:continuum of EBD services • Read pages 31-33 in the Evaluation Guide • With your table group, compose 5 to 10 questions that should be considered when determining Least Restrictive Environment ( self-contained to inclusive continuum)

  21. Burning Issues

  22. Removal from class • Does every teacher know which behaviors warrant removal from class? • Is there a form or procedure for when students are removed? • Who is involved? • Who should be? Who shouldn’t? • What is the teacher’s responsibility in providing continuing services when the student is in crisis? • What is the administrator’s role? Expectations? • What is expected of students? Process, reflect?

  23. District guidelines/expectations IN GENERAL • Students are expected to be serviced by their teachers • Removal is typically not effective and only used in instances of imminent threat to the safety of self and others • Principals and other administrators should be used for positive reinforcement • Principals et al. , should be aware of Crisis Intervention Plan, which may or may not directly involve them

  24. Philosophy of ProACT • Using Crisis Intervention plans and BIPs consistently • Modify if ineffective • Reflection is Crucial • The underlying principle is that the ADULTS need to debrief with the student and reflect upon what they could have done differently to help de-escalate the situation • We never restrain for noncompliance, including leaving the room • STOP and come up with some ideas

  25. A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, …Seclusion and restraint were commonNow, Not so much • All staff working with students must be ProACT trained • Remove others, make environment safe first • If not trained, never restrain • Must be part of IEP • Must document, the School Board reads and reviews every month • Always a team of 2 or more using ProAct approved restraints • Never face down • DPI directives are included, review if unfamiliar

  26. A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, …Seclusion and restraint were commonNow, Not so much • All staff working with students must be ProACT trained • Remove others, make environment safe first • If not trained, never restrain • Must be part of IEP • Must document, the School Board reads and reviews every month • Always a team of 2 or more using ProAct approved restraints • Never face down • DPI directives are included, review if unfamiliar

  27. Top 10 reasons to Avoid restraints • Personal danger • Student danger • Student dignity and relationships • Parents, other students reactions, fear etc. • Lawsuits-DPI DIRECTIVES • Death and serious injury • Risking professional career • Not effective, research is for self regulation • Message is we control you, response is likely to escalate • The plan has failed if it gets that far

  28. suspensions • List behaviors that have resulted in suspension-brainstorm with group • How effective was it in reducing behaviors? • Mark those that are a danger to self or others • If not, can you think of actions that may be more effective?

  29. Manifestation determination • Any time a special education student is sent home, it is a suspension • It must be documented on a form and Infinite Campus • Hours add up, half days and full days • EVERYTHING counts • If it gets to 10 days, a manifestation IEP must be held • The question that must be answered is: Is the behavior a result of, or directly related to their disability

  30. Burning Questions • What has happened that got us to 10 days? • Is it individuals, environment? • Is it school wide? • What are the patterns? • Bullying, cultural responsiveness?

  31. WHAT WORKS

  32. Modify environment, don’t try to change the studentRealistically, what can we control???? • Change our response- build rapport-research says number one factor • Change and arrange physical environment- desks, seating-consider light, sound, distractions • Too much or too little sensory stimulation, opportunities to self regulate-engine rooms, quiet corner, self selected seclusion, safe alternatives • Engaging and appropriate curriculum • Good lesson planning is the second most important behavior management factor • Choices are HUGE, for motivation and control • TEACH social skills, replacement behavior

  33. Building Effective programs • Use Effective Programs for Students with EBD as a guide • Consider the questions that were addressed today, scheduling IEPs, school wide discipline, referrals, suspensions, roles, responsibilities • Assess and proactively plan

  34. Big Idea of the Day • Assessment drives effective instruction As ______________________________________________________________ Drives effective behavior management

  35. Additional Resources Student Services Instructional Support Website: http://www.wawm.k12.wi.us/District%20Information/Pupil%20Services/support/index.htm

  36. 3-2-1 • 3 concerns you would like more information or help with • 2 AHAs • 1 commitment from today’s workshop that you will implement

  37. Thank you for your time and attention !!!!!!

More Related