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BULLYPROOFING AND PBIS: PART I Teri Lewis Oregon State University.

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Presentation on theme: "BULLYPROOFING AND PBIS: PART I Teri Lewis Oregon State University."— Presentation transcript:

1 BULLYPROOFING AND PBIS: PART I Teri Lewis Oregon State University

2 Agenda 9:00-9:30 Welcome and Introductions 9:30-10:45 Bullyproofing I: Prevention 10:45-11:00 Break 11:00-12:00 Bullyproofing II: Intervention 12:00-1:00 Lunch 1:00-2:15 Intervening with Individual Students 2:15-2:30 Break 2:30-3:30 Responding to Escalations 3:30-4:00 Summary, Q&A, Next Steps

3 Goal Discuss features of bullies and victims Present information on prevention Link bullyprofing and PBIS

4 Bullying  The National School Safety Center (NSSC) called bullying the most enduring and underrated problem in U.S. schools. (Beale, 2001)  Victims and bullies are at-risk for academic problems and work related issues (e.g., low performance). (Carney & Merrell, 2001; NSSC, 1995)  Victims and bullies are more likely to skip and/or drop out of school. (Berthold & Hoover, 2000; Neary & Joseph, 1994) BP-PBS, Scott Ross 4

5 Bullying Defined Behavior that is either physically or emotionally harmful (Fowler, 2004) That is repeated and occurs over time (Hoover and Oliver, 1996) Examples… taunting, name calling, threatening, hitting and other aggressive behavior

6 Related Behaviors Self-destructive (alcohol, tobacco) Fighting and carrying weapons Cheating and academic failure Stealing, vandalism Problems with school adjustment Early dating & with likelihood of social/physical aggression toward partner

7 Typical Victims Different either because of: Size and shape Race Ethnicity Disability (physical and/or learning) Sexual orientation

8 Impact on Victims Victimization correlated with loneliness and low self- esteem Increased anxiety However… don’t know if bullying caused traits of if having traits increased likelihood of being bullied

9 Prevalence 30% of students either bully, are bullied or both 15% of students severely traumatized 8% report being bullied at least weekly 14% of 8th-12th and 22% of 4th-7th report that bullying impacts their ability to learn

10 160,000 students miss school because of bullying (Fried & Fried, 1996) 7% of 8th graders stay home weekly to avoid bully (Banks, 2000) About 2/3 of school shooters report feeling bullied (Bowman, 2000)

11 However…. (e,g., Skiba) Most bullying occurs away from adults Students report that often teachers appear uninterested or that teachers do not take them seriously

12 Peer Involvement (e.g., Rigby & Bagshaw) 40% of students believed that teacher were uninterested and Were opposed to or unsure about collaborating with adults

13 Peer Role (Hawkins et al, 2001) 88% of bullying episodes observed by peer 19% of time peer intervene 47% of intervention are aggressive 57% of interventions are effective Boys intervene more often than girls Tend to intervene with same sex bully

14 Limited Peer Interaction (Hawkins et al, 2001) Unsure what to do Fear retaliation Concern that they will create bigger problem by intervening incorrectly

15 Factors contributing to antisocial behaviors School Community Home

16 Home (e.g., Dishion & Patterson) Inconsistent management Reactive discipline Lack of monitoring

17 Community (e.g., Biglan) Antisocial network of peers Lack of prosocial engagements

18 School (e.g., Mayer) Reactive/punishing discipline approach Lack of agreement about rules, expectations, & consequences Lack of staff support Failure to consider & accommodate individual differences Academic failure

19 Activity Get together and complete a quick assessment of where your school is at with bullying Behavior data/office discipline referrals Do you feel you have a good assessment of your school and bullying Yes - move to planning No - what information do you need?

20 Bullyproofing Options Prevent bullying - Universal Reduce bullying - Individual

21 General Suggestions (e.g., DeRosier, 2004) Whole school approach Team based Social skills Peer involvement

22 Typical Responses First Steps - works well with K-lower el. Zero Tolerance - no evidence that these policies increase school safety (e.g., Skiba) Packaged Programs - mixed results

23 Limitations of Packages Lack of support for teachers Limited involvement of teachers in development and implementation Seen as “add-on” to already full schedule Not tailored to school environment

24 What Works (e.g., Orpinas ) Change environment so that bullying is unacceptable Acknowledge positive behaviors Develop/revise policy Gain commitment from all Establish team that represents school Identify values, rules & consequences Teach student rules Train and support teachers

25 Review PBIS SW Model 1. Common purpose & approach to discipline 2. Clear set of positive expectations & behaviors 3. Procedures for teaching expected behavior 4. Continuum of procedures for encouraging expected behavior 5. Continuum of procedures for discouraging inappropriate behavior 6. Procedures for on-going monitoring & evaluation

26 Available at www.pbis.org

27 Core Features of an Effective Bully Prevention Effort. Five Student SkillsFor Faculty/Staff School-wide behavioral expectations (respect) Stop routine when faced with disrespectful behavior Bystander stop routine when observing disrespectful behavior Stopping routine if someone tells you to “stop” A recruit help routine to recruit adult help if you feel unsafe. Agreement on logic for bully prevention effort. Strategy for teaching students core skills Strategy for follow-up and consistency in responding Clear data collection and data use process Advanced support options 27

28 PBIS Review Expectations Defined Purpose Means of communication Consistent communication For all students, staff, and settings Matrix Guidelines Keep to five or fewer State positively Use common and few words

29 Review: Teaching guidelines Behavior management problems are instructional problems. Process for teaching social behaviors & academic skills is fundamentally same. Emphasis is on teaching functional & prosocial replacement behaviors. Instructional supports are important.

30 An Approach to Embedding Bully-proofing Strategies What does not work Identifying “Bullies” and excluding them from school Pretending that Bully Behavior is the “fault” of the student/family What does work Define, teach and acknowledge school-wide behavior Teach all children to identify & label behavior. Teach all students a “stop signal” to give when they experience problem behavior. What to do if you experience problem behavior What to do if you see someone else in a problem situation Teach all students what to do if someone delivers the “stop signal ”

31 Do not focus on “Bully” Focus on appropriate behavior What is the behavior you want E,g., “Responsible”

32 Teaching Social Responsibility Teach school-wide expectations first Be respectful Be responsible Be safe Focus on “non-structured” settings Cafeteria, Gym, Playground, Hallway, Bus Area Use same teaching format If someone directs problem behavior toward you. If you see others receive problem behavior If someone tells you to “stop”

33 Teach students to identify problem behavior The key is to focus on what is appropriate: Teach school-wide expectations, and teach that all problem behaviors are an example of NOT being appropriate. Define most common problem behaviors - Use these behaviors as non-examples of school-wide expectations

34 Why as well as what (Ross, Horner & Stiller) Discuss why students behave disrespectfully Peer attention comes in many forms: Arguing with someone that teases you Laughing at someone being picked on Watching problem behavior and doing nothing Goal is to stop rewarding behavior that is disrespectful.

35 Teaching Social Responsibility: “Bully Proofing” Teach desired behavior. Teach a verbal signal for unacceptable behavior: “stop” Teach four key skills for social responsibility: Learn the difference between expected behavior and problem behavior If you “receive” problem behavior: Label the behavior and say “stop”; walk; squawk If you “see others” receive problem behavior” Label the behavior and say “stop” If someone tells you to “stop” stop

36

37 Social Responsibility Matrix Location 1Location 2Location 3Location 4 Desired behaviors vs Unacceptabl e behaviors “Stop” signal Walk skill Reporting Skill

38 Teaching a “Stopping Routine” Eventually, every student will be told to stop. When this happens, they should do the following things Stop what they are doing Take a deep breath Go about their day (no big deal) These steps should be followed even when they don’t agree with the “stop” message.

39 How Adults Respond (Ross, Horner & Stiller) When any problem behavior is reported, adults follow a specific response sequence: Reinforce the student for reporting the problem behavior (i.e. "I'm glad you told me.") Ask who, what, when and where. Ensure the student’s safety.  Is the bullying still happening?  Is the reporting child at risk?  Fear of revenge?  What does the student need to feel safe?  What is the severity of the situation

40 "Did you tell the student to stop?" (If yes, praise the student for using an appropriate response. If no, practice) "Did you walk away from the problem behavior?" (If yes, praise student for using appropriate response. If no, practice.)

41 Activity Build a Social Responsibility Matrix Task 1: Identify 3-4 specific settings Define appropriate behavior for each setting (at least two examples) Identify the three “bullyproofing skills” for each setting Is there a generic set of skills? Are there settings that require unique skills?


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