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![Page 1: School-wide Positive Behavior Support: Linking Social and Academic Gains Washington Association of School Administrators Rob Horner University of Oregon.](https://reader036.fdocuments.us/reader036/viewer/2022062413/5a4d1b917f8b9ab0599c13c8/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
School-wide Positive Behavior Support: Linking Social and Academic GainsWashington Association of School Administrators
Rob HornerUniversity of Oregon
www.pbis.orgwww.swis.org
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Main Messages•Social behavior is central to achieving
academic gains.
•School-wide PBS is an evidence-based practice for building a positive social culture that will promote both social and academic success.
•Implementation of any evidence-based practice requires a more coordinated focus than typically expected.
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What is School-wide Positive Behavior Support?•School-wide PBS is:
A systems approach for establishing the social culture and individualized behavioral supports needed for schools to be effective learning environments for all students.
•Evidence-based features of SW-PBS Prevention Define and teach positive social expectations Acknowledge positive behavior Arrange consistent consequences for problem behavior On-going collection and use of data for decision-making Continuum of intensive, individual interventions. Administrative leadership – Team-based implementation
(Systems that support effective practices)
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Establishing a Social Culture
Common Vision/Values
Common Language
Common Experience
MEMBERSHIP
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Primary Prevention:School-/Classroom-Wide Systems for
All Students,Staff, & Settings
Secondary Prevention:Specialized Group
Systems for Students with At-Risk Behavior
Tertiary Prevention:Specialized
IndividualizedSystems for Students
with High-Risk Behavior
~80% of Students
~15%
~5%
SCHOOL-WIDE POSITIVE BEHAVIOR
SUPPORT
Nation
Wash
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(n = 201)
Michigan: Distribution of Elementary Reading Intervention Level
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
All Students Students with 6+ ODRs
Benchmark Strategic IntensiveReading Intervention Level (based on DIBELS)
24%
33%
43%
56%
24%
20%
(n = 4074)
Dr. Steve Goodman
Kent
Miora
Amanda
Jorge
Goodman
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A link between SWPBS and Improved Academic Achievement•Randomized Control Trial
RCT
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The current technology of Implementation•94-142 and IDEA
▫Focus on Access to Education▫Access to services
•NCLB and RtI▫Focus on Outcomes▫Shift to Implementation of Effective
Practices
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© Dean Fixsen, Karen Blase, Robert Horner, George Sugai, 2008
Implementation
•An effective intervention is one thing
•Implementation of an effective intervention is a very different thing
•Dean Fixsen
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Implementation Systems
•"All organizations [and systems] are designed, intentionally or unwittingly, to achieve precisely the results they get." R. Spencer Darling
• The single most efficient strategy for changing an organization/system is to define, measure and repeatedly report the outcomes most valued by that organization/system.
• Thomas Gilbert, 1978
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Unintended Effects•Too often our systems are organized to
meet administrative requirements, not achieve student outcomes
•Conflicting programs•Conflicting funding streams•Redundancy•Lack of coordination across programs•Nonsensical rules about program access•Extreme complexity and fiscal inefficiency
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Our education system has grown up through a process of “disjointed incrementalism” (Reynolds, 1988)
K-12 Education
SPED
Migrant
ELL
At-Risk
Title I
Gifted
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Proposed Solution•Combine Response to Intervention with
Conventional Problem Solving Model
Define Proble
m
Develop Plan
Implement
Data Used for Evaluatio
n
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Define Proble
m
Develop Plan
Implement
Data Used for Evaluatio
n
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© Dean Fixsen, Karen Blase, Robert Horner, George Sugai, 2008
Scale Up
•Innovative practices do not fare well in old organizational structures and systems
•Organizational and system changes are essential to successful implementation▫Expect it▫Plan for it
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Leadership Team
FundingVisibility Political
Support
Training Coaching Evaluation
Local Demonstration Schools
Active Coordination
BehavioralExpertise
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Implementation is not linear•Capacity development must often lead
implementation
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Schools adopting SWPBIS in IllinoisLucille Eber
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ValuedOutcomes
Implementation
Identifying& Modifying
Practices
Efficiency
EffectivenessPriority
Continuous Regeneration Continuous
Measurement
Data-BasedProb.
Solving
Capacity
Building
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Lessons Learned from School-wide Positive Behavior Support
• Invest in state, district, building capacity
• Local leadership team
• The role of evaluation
• The role of coaching
• The shift from centralized demonstrations to regional scaling.
• Continuous improvement for sustainability
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Summary• Effective technical assistance begins by understanding
the core outcomes valued by an organization/system.
• New practices need to be effective, efficient, acceptable, and substantively better than what we already do.
• Implementation is a new technology
▫ Implementation will occur in stages▫ Implementation will require iterative change▫ Implementation will focus as much on sustainability as on
initial fidelity.
• Scaling up requires becoming the “norm”