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Addressing Bullying Behavior W/in a PBIS Framework George Sugai OSEP Center on PBIS Center for Behavioral Education & Research University of Connecticut October 6, 2011 www.pbis.org www.cber.org
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PURPOSE To improve our understanding of & responding to bullying behavior from perspective of school-wide positive behavior support.
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Suggestions
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Bullying Program Component Review Purpose Maggin & Sugai, 2011
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Search Methodology (Independent Coders)
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Inclusion Criteria
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Main Program Questions
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Program Materials Primary Source Typen% Book Chapter1125.00 Dissertation24.55% Journal Article2250.00% Program Manual920.45% Total44100.00% Total programs identified = 51 Total programs reviewed = 44 –Program materials non-English = 6 –Manual for purchase only = 1
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Preliminary Results – Key Groups Key Group Component Present Definition of Group Observable Focus Skills Observable Skills Initiator27 (61.36%) 19 (43.18%) 8 (18.18%) Accept responsibility; Recruit attention positively Target31 (70.45%) 13 (29.55%) 20 (45.45%) Ignore; Seek help; Verbally confront initiator; Walk away Bystander27 (61.36%) 12 (27.27%) 19 (43.18%) Model appropriate behavior; Report incidents; Verbally confront initiator Staff*21 (47.73%) 8 (18.18%) 21 (47.73%) Develop clear consequences; Develop protocol for intervening on incidents; Public posting of expectations * 33 (75%) of programs required curriculum implementation
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Examples of Nonobservable Behaviors for Initiators
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Preliminary Results – Systems Logic Systems Feature n% Notes Faculty Team Developed 1329.55% Use of Initiator Data 1022.72% School staff referral; parent referral; Needs assessment of aggression, anger management; self-assessment Use of Target Data 613.63% School staff referral; parent referral; Needs assessment Use of Bystander Data 24.54% Self-assessment; Incidence reporting Staff Training Provided 2353.49% LEA Endorsement 49.09% LEA Coordinator 613.63%
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Preliminary Results -- RTI RTI Featuresn%Notes Identification Screening 36.82% Data Referenced 1227.27% Data Specified 920.45% School-wide survey of bullying needs; Student incident reports; Teacher incident reports; Referrals Initiator Continuum 1431.81% Group counseling sessions Target Continuum 1329.55% Group counseling sessions Bystander Continuum 818.18% Staff Continuum 24.54% No formal strategies described. Fidelity Checks 36.82%
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Preliminary Conclusions
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SWPBS: Basics
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SWPBS is
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RtI Reducing Bullying
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All Some Few Continuum of Support for ALL Dec 7, 2007
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~80% of Students ~5% ESTABLISHING CONTINUUM of SWPBS SECONDARY PREVENTION Check in/out Targeted social skills instruction Peer-based supports Social skills club TERTIARY PREVENTION Function-based support Wraparound Person-centered planning PRIMARY PREVENTION Teach SW expectations Proactive SW discipline Positive reinforcement Effective instruction Parent engagement SECONDARY PREVENTION TERTIARY PREVENTION PRIMARY PREVENTION ~15%
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All Some Few RTI Continuum of Support for ALL Dec 7, 2007
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Continuum of Support for “Manuella” Dec 7, 2007 Harassment Computer Lab Social Studies Physical Intimidation Adult Relations. Attendance Literacy Label behavior…not people
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SYSTEMS “BULLY BEHAVIOR” PRACTICES DATA Supporting Staff Behavior Supporting Student Behavior OUTCOMES Supporting Social Competence & Academic Achievement Supporting Decision Making Integrated Elements
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SWPBS look at bullying behavior
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Our Starting Point
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Victim attention Bystander attention Self-delivered praise Tangible access
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PREVENTION De-emphasis on adding consequence for problem behavior
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Context or Setting Context or Setting Initiator Target Bystander Staff Continuum of Behavior Fluency
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Is Behavior an Issue?
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Reconceptualizing Bullying from Behavior Analytic Perspective for SWPBS
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SWIS Definition of Bullying Behavior
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Three basic strategies….if you do nuthin’ else….
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Label student Exclude student Blame family Punish student Assign restitution Ask for apology Teach targeted social skills Reward social skills Teach all Individualize for non-responsive behavior Invest in positive school-wide culture Doesn’t WorkWorks
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MUST….. Be easy & do-able by all Be contextually relevant Result in early disengagement Increase predictability Be pre-emptive Be teachable Be brief
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www.pbis.org
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Scott Ross, University of Oregon 39 BaselineAcquisitionFull BP-PBS Implementation Number of Incidents of Bullying Behavior School Days School 1 Rob Bruce Cindy Scott Anne Ken School 2 School 3 3.14 1.88.88 72%
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Scott Ross, University of Oregon BP-PBS, Scott Ross40 21% increase 22% decrease
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Allday & Pakurar (2007)
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Name______________________________Date_____________ Setting □ Hallway □ Entrance □ Cafeteria □ Playground □ Other_______________ Time Start_________ Time End _________ Tally each Positive Student ContactsTotal # Ratio of Positives to Negatives: _____: 1 Tally each Negative Student ContactsTotal # Non-Classroom Management: Self-Assessment
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1.Did I have at least 4 positive for 1 negative student contacts? Yes No 2. Did I move throughout the area I was supervising? Yes No 3. Did I frequently scan the area I was supervising? Yes No 4. Did I positively interact with most of the students in the area? Yes No 5. Did I handle most minor rule violations quickly and quietly? Yes No 6. Did I follow school procedures for handling major rule violations? Yes No 7. Do I know our school-wide expectations (positively stated rules)? Yes No 8. Did I positively acknowledge at least 5 different students for displaying our school-wide expectations? Yes No Overall active supervision score: 7-8 “yes” = “Super Supervision” 5-6 “yes” = “So-So Supervision” <5 “yes” = “Improvement Needed” # Yes______
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Big idea: Use PBIS framework to address bully behavior prevention
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