Applying The PBIS Triangle To The Classroom with Pom-Poms ... PBIS 2014 - Red Applyin… · To The...

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Applying The PBIS Triangle To The Classroom with Pom-

Poms And Fanny Packs

Kaler Elementary, South Portland

Beth Bell, Behavior Strategist, SPSD

Debbie Chapman, Classroom Teacher, SPSD

Pat Red, University of Southern Maine

NEPBIS, November 21, 2014

James Otis Kaler Elementary School of Exploration and Inquiry

School Statistics

O James Otis Kaler School Elementary School

of Inquiry and Exploration

O 63% students receive free and reduced

lunch, the lowest in the district

O Special education population 26%, one of

the highest in the system

O Ethnic diversity is 10% of the school

population, 12 different countries are

represented with eight different languages

School Statistics

O Kaler has experienced high teacher turnover, a

growing percentage of students who are

economically disadvantaged, or require special

education, or English language learning services.

O In 2013-14

O Over half of the students missed no more than 5

days of school and 12 students had perfect

attendance

O 93 students (almost 40%) missed 10 or more days of

school

O Of those 93, 15 students were significantly truant

with 18 or more absences

School Statistics

O 2013 it was ranked worse than 98.7% for

math and reading for Elementary schools in

the state of Maine

O 2014 Kaler is the recipient of a SIG grant

due to 38.5% of students meeting math

proficiency and 44.4% meeting reading

proficiency

Debbie’s Classroom 2013-14

O 1st grade classroom comprised of 17

students

O 2 English language learners

O 2 identified as requiring special education

services

O 13 (76%) free and reduced lunch

O 10 (59%) receiving Title 1 literacy

intervention support.

Debbie’s Classroom 2013-14 O During a 6 week period (9/24 to 11/6) students

demonstrated

O physical aggression at a rate of .11/wk, of which 50%

required an evacuation (classroom or student)

O defiance occurred at a rate of .02/wk, one resulted in

a evacuation

O disruption at a rate of .03/wk, 50% required an

evacuation

O three other isolated incidents of lying, theft and

property damage were also logged

O Overall 17 (rate of .07/wk) events resulted in an

evacuation

0

0.02

0.04

0.06

0.08

0.1

0.12

phy agg defiance disruption evacuations

Ra

te p

er

we

ek

9/24-11/6

Debbie’s Classroom before

O The classroom had posted expectations

O Teacher used Responsive Classroom and Second Step Social Skills

O The school counselor did a guidance lesson one time per week.

O School social worker provided support for Second Step Social Skills

O However, due to the rate of problem behaviors it was clear that the classroom required extra supports.

Interventions increased

O Sensory tools

O Sticker charts

O Preferential seating

O Rearranged classroom

O Incentives (tangibles)

O Group smiley face to earn group rewards daily

O Individual behavior charts

O School social worker and guidance counselor increased to two days a week to teach Michelle Garcia Winner Social Thinking Skills

Still Not Enough- The Request for Assistance

3:51

Beth and Pat

O observe, 2 times

O Beth and Pat collaborate

O Debbie, Beth and Pat collaborate

O Debbie was open, ready and prepared to make the needed changes

O Already highly skilled as a teacher

O Post observations

Primary Prevention:

Classroom-

For All Students: 3-5 PSE,

Procedures/structure,

Acknowledgement system,

System to address minor

problem behavior,

Instructional strategies that

actively engage students in

instruction.

Secondary

Prevention:

Specialized group

Interventions for

students not

responding to T1-

Check in systems to

provide more

opportunity for

teacher attention and

positive feedback.

Tertiary Prevention:

Specialized

individualized

interventions for

students not

responding to T1 & 2-

Individual function-

based plans

65%

18%

18%

CONTINUUM OF

CLASSROOM

POSITIVE BEHAVIOR

SUPPORT

Debbie Chapman

Pre-PBIS classroom

Evidence-based practices in classroom management

1. Maximize structure in the classroom.

2. Post, teach, review, monitor, and reinforce a small number of positively stated expectations.

3. Actively engage students in observable ways.

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)

Posted Expectations

Line-up Floor Markers

Whole Body Listening Clustering

Procedure Tents

Procedures for Academics

Attention Signal

Brain Rules

Debbie applied:

Rule #4 – Attention

Rule #5 - Repeat to

remember

Rule #10 – Vision trumps

all other senses

Pom-Poms

“Will work for pom-poms!”

Video clip of classroom

15:00 but only show first 2:20

Explanation

The students moved

65%

29%

6%

CONTINUUM OF

CLASSROOM

POSITIVE BEHAVIOR

SUPPORT

Debbie Chapman

Post-PBIS classroom

General Findings

O The changes made a profound impact in overall behavior.

O From November to June (27 weeks)

O student/classroom evacuations decreased to five (rate of .005/wk –BL .07/wk)

O physical aggressions occurred at a rate of .003/wk (BL- .11/wk), 5 resulted in evacuations (22%)

O disruptions occurred at a rate of .008/wk (BL-.03/wk)

O 2 isolated incidents of lying and theft (BL-3 in 6 wk)

0

0.02

0.04

0.06

0.08

0.1

0.12

phy agg defiance disruption evacuations

rate

pe

r w

ee

k

9/24-11/6 11/7-6/16

Sit-spots

Thank you!

Questions?

pred@usm.maine.edu

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