Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byKristopher Cunningham Modified over 9 years ago
2
The Power of Data in Developing Positive Behavior Laurel Woods Elementary School Rosanne Wilson, Principal Meryl Sirmans, School Psychologist
3
LWES 2000-2002 5 rules LOTS of students sitting in the office High expectations but no plan for teaching the students how to meet behavioral expectations Classroom behavior management strategies varied Little school-wide emphasis on positive consequences Changing demographics Minimal focus on “knowing our learners”
4
Time to Make a Change Introduced to PBIS Ready for greater coordination of intervention strategies Staff ready for a change and opportunity to improve school climate
5
Key Components for Effective Behavior Intervention (PBIS) School-wide and Classroom Systems Effective Classroom Management Non-classroom Systems Individual Student Systems
6
Some but not all components in place… School-wide/classroom system implemented negative consequences, lacked the positive Management strategies varied significantly Limited plan for hallway, bathroom, cafeteria behavior Systems in place for individual students (Alternative Education, Consultation Team)
7
If we wanted students to meet our expectations and improve our school climate, we’d have to ensure coordination of all systems and all components.
8
Planning 1. Created a team to oversee operations 2. Needs assessment completed with staff 3. Set goals/objectives (SIP, Action Plan) 4. Developed prevention and intervention strategies 5. Streamlined committees to ensure coordination school-wide 6. Planned for monitoring progress
9
Our School-wide Behavior Plan Purpose Rules/Expectations Teaching what’s expected (matrix) Lighthouse Dolphin Days/Dolphin Club Understanding our students: Importance of relationships Understanding the cultures represented (African American, Immigrant, impoverished, etc.) Acknowledging effect of transient population Staff and Parent/Guardian Involvement
10
Student Behavior Patterns 80-90% Students Who Respond To School- wide Approach (No Significant Behavior Challenges) 5-15% Students At-Risk for Behavior Problems 1-7% Students with Chronic, Intense Behavior Problems
11
6 Points of Data for Making Decisions By Grade and School-wide: Referrals by Problem Behavior Referrals by Location Referrals per Month Students per Number of Referrals Students Participating in Monthly Dolphin Club School-wide: Referrals by Student Ethnicity
12
Data Informs our Decisions Each month, all 6 points of data are reviewed by the Social Behavior Committee then shared with grade-level and other teams throughout the school. Quarterly, the School Improvement Team reviews the data in relation to the School Improvement Plan milestones. This information is also shared school-wide. Current data are compared to data from previous school years.
13
Targeted Student Groups and Data Trends African American Males made up largest student group with office referrals. A 15% reduction in office referrals was expected when compared to last school year. A large group of students, predominantly African American, were not participating in Dolphin Club because of office referrals and/or “clip moves.”
14
Strategies for Intervention Positive reinforcement Book studies Small groups (social skills, goal setting, self-management) Consultation
15
Number of Students Earning Dolphin Club Each Month On-going comparison of the number of participants from month to month On-going review and revision of interventions and their results On-going consideration of ways to encourage students, maintain expectations, make Dolphin Club more desirable
16
More “Yellow and Red Zone” students earn Dolphin Club with secondary and/or individualized interventions. Few Students NEVER in Dolphin Club
17
Data Shows the Power of PBIS
18
Questions? LWES 410-880-5960 rosanne_wilson@hcpss.org meryl_sirmans@hcpss.org
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.