Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJason Ferguson Modified over 9 years ago
1
Can PBIS Effectively Address Trends in Bullying? Applying Evidence Based Practice Working Smarter, Not Harder Susan Barrett sbarrett@pbismaryland.org
2
Big Ideas Anchored in Three Tiered Logic- back up plan for non responders Linked to school improvement plan- clear outcomes, clear operating procedures Based on School-wide foundation –Common language, common approach Data/tools that makes it easy to get key information- System created before students are identified with access to support within 72 hours NOT a gateway to special ed Constant feedback loop to stakeholders All staff, students, parents know how to access support, process and expectations Modify as necessary Continuously change, adapt to fit school needs
3
Memo To: School Administrators From: District Administrators In keeping with the new state initiative, this fall we will be implementing an exciting new district initiative of SNI in place of LYI. All in-service days previously scheduled for LYI will be rescheduled as staff development for SNI. The $500 for release time and materials for LYI will be discontinued and provided instead for SNI. By the way, you will need to create local SNI teams that meet weekly. The former members of your LYI team would be perfect for this new team. Your new SNI binders will be coming next week. Have a great year!!!
4
14 Initiatives School Counseling Services Second Step FBA/BIP’s School Health Social Skills Bully proofing Anger Management Student Intervention Plans Behavioral Contracting Character Education 504 Plans/IEP CICO Responsive Classroom Expanded School Mental Health
5
Competing or Coordinated Need for a framework, the anchor, for all school improvement efforts Common language, Common logic
6
School counseling servicesSecond StepFBAs/BIPsResponsive ClassroomSocial skills, bully proofing, and/or anger management groups Special Educaton/IEPs UNIVERSAL TARGETED INTENSIVE School-wide PBS Check-in/Check-out Section 504 Plans Conflict Resolution Behavioral contracting Alternative programs Character Education School mental health servicesBullying Prevention
7
School counseling servicesSecond StepFBAs/BIPsResponsive ClassroomSocial skills, bully proofing, and/or anger management groups Special Educaton/IEPs Bullying UNIVERSAL TARGETED INTENSIVE School-wide PBS Check-in/Check-out Section 504 Plans Conflict Resolution Behavioral contracting Alternative programs Character Education School mental health servicesBullying Prevention
8
System: Few Students-Individual Student Team Data: Individual Progress Monitoring Tool Practice: establish personal goal sheet, personal strategies, parent and community involvement System: Some Students-Student Support Team Data: General Point Card-Track Individual Report- Progress Monitoring Practice: More frequent opportunities for teaching, modeling and feedback System: All Students, All Staff, All Areas-Leadership Team Data: Office Referrals, Staff/Student/Parent Report Practice: Embed in Teaching Matrix, Expectations, Teach Student and Staff What to do!! UNIVERSAL TARGETED INTENSIVE Leadership Team Student Services Team Family ESMH Wrap Team Non-negotiable: Natural extension of SW expectations- create decision rules, team approach, strength based, student and family voice, operating procedures
9
Who will provide the support? What will be the operating procedures? School Leadership Team- Tier I –Subset of Leadership Team- Tier II Problem Solving Team- Tier III Establish roles and responsibilities- –Whole team v individuals on team Communication procedures- each other, staff Overlap? What will work best for your school?
10
Embedding Bully-Proofing in School-wide PBS Scott Ross Rob Horner Bruce Stiller
11
Bullying Analyze your school data Plan for prevention, plan for non- responders at Tier II, III Tool for tracking Communication Strategy Move from new to standard operating procedure
12
Defining Bullying Aggressive behavior that intends to cause harm or distress Usually is repeated over time Occurs in a relationship where there is an imbalance of power or strength (HRSA, 2006; Limber & Alley, 2006; Olweus, 1993)
13
Challenges in Defining Bullying Bullying ≠ fighting -Fighting assume balance of power Bullying ≠ conflict -Conflict suggests a disagreement Bullying ≠ harassment - Harassment is for protected classes Bullying ≈ peer victimization or abuse
14
Forms of Bullying Direct Hitting, kicking, shoving, spitting, stealing Taunting, teasing, sexual comments Threatening, obscene gestures Indirect Getting another person to bully someone for you Spreading rumors Deliberately excluding someone from a group or activity Cyberbullying
15
Cyberbullying Study of 3,767 children (grades 6-8) Prevalence -25% of girls and 11% of boys had been cyberbullied at least once -13% of girls and 9% of boys had cyberbullied someone else at least once Common methods of cyberbullying -Instant messaging: 67% (8 th graders more) -Chat rooms: 25% -E-mail: 24% -Website: 24% -Text messaging: 15% (8 th graders more) Who did the cyberbullying? -Student at school (53%) -Didn’t know (48%) -Friend (37%) -Sibling (13%) (Kowalski et al., 2007)
16
Staff Experiences with Bullying Staff Efficacy: Staff who had effective strategies Thought bullying was less of a problem Thought their school was doing “enough” to prevent bullying Were more likely to intervene Were less likely to make the situation worse Felt safer at school Felt like they belonged at school (Bradshaw et al., 2007, SPR)
17
Common “Misdirections” in Bullying Prevention and Intervention Zero tolerance (student exclusion) Conflict Resolution/Peer Mediation Group treatment for children who bully Simple, short-term solutions
18
http://www.pbis.org/files/newwebfiles2008/pbsbullyprevention.pdf
22
Main Ideas “Bullying” is aggression, harassment, threats or intimidation when one person has greater status, control, or power than the other. Bullying behaviors affect the sense of school as a “safe” environment. video
23
Main Ideas Bullying behavior typically is rewarded (maintained) by the “victims” or “bystanders” –Social attention –Social recognition –Social status –Access to physical items/ preferred activities Bullying behavior is seldom maintained by adult attention
24
Main Ideas All “bully proofing” skills are more effective if the school has first established a set of POSITIVE school-wide behavioral expectations. Great care is needed to prevent a “bully-proofing” effort from becoming a “bully-training” program.
25
A Comprehensive Bully-proofing Model Universal Positive Behavior Support Teach a “stop” signal Staff training Individual Student Supports Define & Teach Expectations Consequences For Behavioral Errors Data System Teach “stop” routine Teach Bystander routine Teach being asked to “stop” Teach how to train “stop” Signal Teach Precorrection Teach supervisor routine Function-based support for Aggressive Student (bully) Function-based support for victim
26
Step 1: Establish a social culture Teach school-wide behavioral expectations Be respectful, be responsible, be safe Acknowledge appropriate behavior Establish clear consequences for inappropriate behavior Develop and use a data collection system for monitoring effects, and making decisions.
27
Establishing a Social Culture Common Vision/Values Common Language Common Experience MEMBERSHIP
28
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 Teach Bully Prevention “SKILLS” If someone directs problem behavior toward you. If you see others receive problem behavior If someone tells you to “stop”
29
Step #2: Teach a school-wide “stop” signal If someone is directing problem behavior to you, or someone you are with, tell them to “stop.” What is the “Stop Signal” for your school? Have a physical as well as verbal signal –“Stop” –“Enough” –“Don’t” The language and signal need to age appropriate, and contextually acceptable.
30
Teach how to use the “Stop Signal” How do you deliver the “stop signal” if you feel someone is not being respectful? (e.g. you feel intimidated, harassed, bullied)? How do you deliver the “stop signal” if you see someone else being harassed, teased, bullied? What to do if someone uses the “stop signal” with you? Note: Include “non-examples” of when and how to use “stop” signal.
31
Teach “walk away” “Look Cool and Walk Away” Most socially initiated problem behavior is maintained by peer attention. –Victim behavior inadvertently maintains taunt, tease, intimidate, harassment behavior. –Build social reward for victim for “walking away” Do not reward inappropriate behavior.
32
Teach “getting help” Report problems to adults –Where is the line between tattling, and reporting? The adult should always ask: –Did you say, “stop” –Did you walk away?
33
Step #3: Focus on Role of Adults How to teach expectations Establish relationships- Acknowledgement System as excuse to get to know everyone Pre-correct (quick practice of appropriate skills just prior to entering “high probability” context) –With whole class –With “at risk” students Reporting routine –What do you say when a student comes to you? –What do you ask of a student accused of being a bully?
34
Reporting Routine A child comes to you and reports that someone else was not respectful –“Did you say stop?” –“Did you walk away?” Talking to the child who was disrespectful –“Did he say stop” –“What did you do” –“Show me doing it the right way”
35
Activity #1 Select an appropriate “stop” signal for your school. –How might you include students in defining this signal? –Ensure that the “stop” signal include BOTH a verbal and physical component.
36
Step #4: Individual Student Support Support for Students who are aggressive –Individualized assessment –Family support –Teach appropriate social skills –Isolate from deviant peer group. Support for Students who are frequent “victims” –Redefine roles –Re-teach respectful behavior –Teach social skills –Embed student in constructive peer groups.
37
Social Responsibility Matrix Location 1Location 2Location 3Location 4 Identify most common problem behavior “Stop” signal Walk skill Reporting Skill
38
Social Responsibility Matrix Location 1 Playground Location 2 Lunch Room Location 3 Hall way Location 4 Bus Area Identify problem behavior Pushing in line: Not respectful Throwing food: Not respectful Not responsible Name calling: Not respectful Pushing others: Not safe Not respectful “Stop” signal (for self/for others) “stop” Walk skill Walk away Reporting Skill Tell teacher
39
Embedding Bully-Proofing: One Example How Bully-Proofing was taught in one school How data were recorded Current status of research effort
40
How it was taught School Rules: –Be Safe, Be Kind, Be Responsible Problem Behaviors –Basketball, Four square, In between Why do kids do it? Stop, Walk, Talk
41
How data were recorded When problem behavior was reported, staff follow a specific school-wide response: 1.Reinforce the student for reporting the problem behavior (i.e. "I'm glad you told me.") 2."Did you tell the student to stop?" (If yes, praise the student for using an appropriate response) 3."Did you walk away from the problem behavior?" (If yes, praise student for using appropriate response)
42
How data are recorded When students report problem behavior appropriately, staff initiate to following response with student accused of inappropriate behavior: 1."Did ______ tell you to stop?" »If yes: "How did you respond?" Follow with step 2 »If no: Practice the 3 step response. 2."Did ______ walk away?" »If yes: "How did you respond?" Follow with step 3 »If no: Practice the 3 step response. 3.Practice the 3 step response.
43
How data are recorded BEHAVIOR not safe not kind not responsible REPORT Behavior Reported Behavior Observed SITE playground cafeteria inside recess office quads quads assembly __________ RECIPIENT Used "Stop" Signal Used "Walk Away" procedure Appropriately Reported Problem Behavior PERPETRATOR Saw the "stop" signal Saw recipient "walk away" 3-step response practiced
44
Tier 3 Tier 2 Tier 1 Triangle Activity: Applying the Three-Tiered Define and Teach SW expectations Teach Signal Build a plan for staff Pre- correct Active Supervision Establish Data System Booster session for targeted group Using lesson plans based on data Individual student works through Lesson plans based on need (data) Good Day Plan 3 rd grade elementary classroom uses lesson plan on decision making Progress Monitor
45
SW Expectations What are your SW expectations? Same Process –Admin critical- allocation of resources –Agreement, ownership, priority, link to SIP –Teaching stakeholders (staff, students, parents) –Expectations/Matrix established –Tracking fidelity and outcomes
46
CICO Record Name: ____________________________ Date: ______________ 2 = great 1 = OK 0= hard time SafeResponsibleRespectful Check In 2 1 0 Before Recess 2 1 0 Before Lunch 2 1 0 After Recess 2 1 0 Check Out 2 1 0 Today’s goalToday’s total points Comments: Daily Progress Report consistent with SW Expectations
47
CICO Record Name: ____________________________ Date: ______________ 2 = great 1 = OK 0= hard time Safe Stay in sight Responsible Request/Report Respectful Use squawk words and signal Check In 2 1 0 Before Recess 2 1 0 Before Lunch 2 1 0 After Recess 2 1 0 Check Out 2 1 0 Today’s goalToday’s total points Comments: Daily Progress Report consistent with SW Expectations
48
HAWK Report Date ________ Student _______________ Teacher___________________ 0 = No 1= Good 2= Excellent Be Safe Be Respectful Be Your Personal Best Teacher initials Keep hands, feet, and objects to self Use kind words and actions Follow directions Working in class Class 0 1 2 Recess 0 1 2 Class 0 1 2 Lunch 0 1 2 Class 0 1 2 Recess 0 1 2 Class 0 1 2 Total Points = Points Possible = 50 Today ______________% Goal ______________%
49
Point Card /Matrix RespectResponsibleReady Hallway Lunch Playground Personal Goal:
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.