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Are we There Yet? Mapping the PBS Course for the Long Haul Tim Lewis, Ph.D. University of Missouri OSEP Center on Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports

MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

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Dr Tim Lewis' Keynote "Are We There Yet?", for the Missouri Schoolwide Positive Behavior Support Summer Institute 2009. Discussion of key features in school and districwide SW-PBS implementation as well as information regarding the dissemination of SW-PBS in the state of Missouri.

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Page 1: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Are we There Yet? Mapping the PBS Course

for the Long Haul Tim Lewis, Ph.D.

University of MissouriOSEP Center on Positive Behavioral

Interventions and Supports

Page 2: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Starting Point….

• We can’t “make” students learn or behave• We can create environments to increase

the likelihood students learn and behave• Environments that increase the likelihood

are guided by a core curriculum and implemented with consistency and fidelity

Page 3: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

With any journey, there is the possibility of getting a little lost

Page 4: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

SYST

EMS

PRACTICES

DATA

SupportStaff Behavior

SupportDecisionMaking

SupportStudent Behavior

Your PBS Map

Page 5: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Across the Journey• Teams - Administrator• Social behavior curriculum developed / adapted• Data-based decision making• Problem solving logic• Access to Technical Assistance• Working toward district/regional support• SW-PBS is a Marathon, not a sprint

Focus across is on what students should be learning versus what they should not be doing

Page 6: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Creating Environments

Environments that increase the likelihood are guided by a core

curriculum and implemented with consistency and fidelity

Page 7: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Creating Environments to Increase the Likelihood: Universals

• Annually:– Revisit your set of expectations and teaching

activities– Assess and address “problem spots” across school

environments– Assess effective instruction and management in

each classroom

• High Rates of Positive Feedback

Page 8: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Teach & Practice……..

Page 9: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Post expectations across school settings…

Page 10: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

4:1 Positive Ratio?

Page 11: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Creating Environments to Increase the Likelihood: Classrooms

• Keep in mind:– Most problem behaviors occur in the

classroom– Effective social and academic instruction is

essential for ALL classrooms– Classrooms are “personal”

Page 12: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Inverse relationship between increased probability of compliance induced by effective teaching

on the rate of disruptive behavior

(Gunter, Shores, Jack, Denny, & DePaepe, 1994)

Page 13: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Importance of Effective Instruction (Sanders, 1999)

• The single biggest factor affecting academic growth of any population of youngsters is the effectiveness of the classroom.

• The answer to why children learn well or not isn't race, it isn't poverty, it isn't even per-pupil expenditure at the elementary level.

• The classroom's effect on academic growth dwarfs and nearly renders trivial all these other factors that people have historically worried about.

 

Page 14: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

So one of our own is now blaming everything on the

teacher!!

If classroom teachers are struggling, it is a systems issue NOT

an individual teacher issues

Page 15: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Creating Effective Classroom Environments

• Insuring ALL faculty and staff engaging in effective instruction and classroom management

• Align resources to challenges– Work within existing organization structure– Raze and rebuild

• Must build an environment that simultaneously supports student and adult behavior

Page 16: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

On school reform…

Kauffman states “…attempts to reform education will make little difference until reformers understand that schools must exist as much for teachers as for students. Put another way, schools will be successful in nurturing the intellectual, social, and moral development of children only to the extent that they also nurture such development of teachers.” (1993, p. 7).

Page 17: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Not Our Graduates!

Page 18: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Creating Environments

• Focus on socially important behaviors• Inviting atmosphere / Friendly & Helpful • Connections / relationships between:

– Staff-staff– Staff-students– Students- adults

Is your school a place where you would want your own child to attend?

Page 19: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Core CurriculumEnvironments that increase the likelihood are guided by a core

curriculum and implemented with consistency and fidelity

Page 20: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Core Curriculum

• Based on local issues/problems – “What do you want them to do instead”

• Clear goal/purpose• Matched to student need• Research-based• Accompanying training and support for all

staff to implement– Mini-modules + “tip sheets”– Performance feedback

Page 21: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Meaningful PD Outcomes

StaffDevelopment

Change inTeacherPractice

Change in Student

Outcomes

Change inTeacher Beliefs

A Model of the Process of Teacher Change

Guskey, 1986

Page 22: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Peer Coaching with Performance Feedback

• 2 schools – one high SES, one low SES• 4 teacher “cool tools” on instructional talk,

prompts, feedback, and wait time• Implemented school-wide; provided a tip

sheet and mini in-service on each, weekly email reminders from administrators

• Each cool tool 4 weeks long - cumulative

Page 23: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Instructional Talk for all Participants

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60

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120

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Per

cen

tag

e o

f In

stru

ctio

nal

Tal

k

Baseline

DC IT

PC IT

Change

Page 24: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Consistency and FidelityEnvironments that increase the likelihood are guided by a core

curriculum and implemented with consistency and fidelity

Page 25: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Consistency & Fidelity

• On-going, sustained, and purposeful training• On-going access to technical assistance• Periodic checks

– Student outcomes– Student perceptions– Adult perceptions

• Working toward a District-Wide PBS initiative that will sustain over time (Scaling up)

Page 26: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Assess for Fidelity of Implementation

Page 27: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Scaling Up

• Does not simply equal more schools or every school within a district/region/state

• Outcome = increasing school’s adoption and sustained use of evidence-based practices with integrity that lead to improved academic and social outcomes for students with accompanying organizational supports to allow replication

Page 28: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Research Findings on Scaling Up(Fixsen, Naoom, Blase, Friedman, & Wallace, 2005, p. 70)

• Best evidence documents what doesn’t work:

– Information dissemination alone

– Training by itself

Page 29: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Research Findings on Scaling Up(Fixsen, Naoom, Blase, Friedman, & Wallace, 2005, p. 70)

• What does work

– Long term, multi-level approaches

– Skills-based training

– Practice-based coaching

– Practioner performance-feedback

– Program evaluation

– Facilitative administrative practices

– Methods for systems intervention

Page 30: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Consistency & Fidelity

• Boosters based on data• Apply logic of SW-PBS to adult learners

– Tell-show-practice– Data / Feedback– Data Decisions

• Align Initiatives to SW-PBS work– Eliminate competing initiatives that do not

produce measurable outcomes

Page 31: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Aligning Initiatives

Page 32: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Alignment of Missouri State Improvement Plan, CPS District Improvement Plan and SW-PBS

School-wide PBS Implementation

MSIP

Goal Objective Strategy District PBS

Action Plan Practices Systems Data

Increase Student Achievement

Reduce drop out rate to 4% or less

1. Building plan will include: Step 1: monitor data on students who are likely to drop out. Step 2: professional development 2. District develop programs regarding drugs and violence Step 1: identify needs Step 2: student activities, supports and education

Goal 2: tasks 1, 2, 4, 5 & 6 Goal 3: tasks 1, 3 & 4 Goal 2: tasks 1, 2, 5, & 6 Goal 3: tasks 1, 3 & 4

Page 33: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Are We There Yet?

Page 34: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Remember, Building a Complete Continuum is a Marathon not a Sprint

Page 35: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Nationally

• Over 9000 schools• 46 State-wide PBS initiatives

Page 36: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

472

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Page 38: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis
Page 39: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis
Page 40: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis
Page 41: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Its Not Just About Numbers of Schools

Page 42: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Even at the High School Level….

• West Charlotte High School– 72% Free and reduced lunch / 98% minority

– Reduction in suspensions, increases in achievement

• Triton High School– 48% Free and reduced lunch

– 59% reduction in suspension– Halved the drop out rate

Page 43: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Even at the High School Level….

• Mountain View High School– 30% free and reduced lunch

– 30% reduction in ODR– Last to first in achievement in district

• Lebanon High School– 47% Free and reduced lunch

– Improvement in school climate– 25% Reduction in ODR

Page 44: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Field Elementary School• High Diversity

– School has 290 students; 50% minority; 20% English Language Learners; 13% special education

• Instructional leader turnover• Poverty

– 79% of students qualify for free and reduced lunches

• Highly transient population

Page 45: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Field Elementary School

+ Teachers and Staff committed to the increasing academic and social successof all students

+ A committed Principal who supported faculty in their efforts to change the way the taught to improve children’s lives

Page 46: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Field Elementary School

• Academic Standing– Annual Yearly Progress (AYP)

• 5% of all students scored proficient in 2005, according to the Missouri Assessment Program. Breakdown by group:

– 0% African American– 18% Caucasian– 0% Students with disabilities– 0% English Language Learners– 7% Free/Reduced Priced Lunch

Page 47: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Field Elementary School

• Literacy• In 2004–05, 44% students required

intensive support for reading and writing

• Social Behavior• In 2003-04 Averaging 10.4 discipline

referrals per day

Page 48: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Academic Systems Behavioral Systems

1-5% 1-5%

5-10% 5-10%

80-90% 80-90%

Intensive, Individual Interventions•Individual Students•Assessment-based•High Intensity

Intensive, Individual Interventions•Individual Students•Assessment-based•Intense, durable procedures

Targeted Group Interventions•Some students (at-risk)•High efficiency•Rapid response

Targeted Group Interventions•Some students (at-risk)•High efficiency•Rapid response

Universal Interventions•All students•Preventive, proactive

Universal Interventions•All settings, all students•Preventive, proactive

Designing School-Wide Systems for Student Success

Page 49: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Impact

• Literacy• In 2004–05, 44% students required intensive

support for reading and writing. This number shrunk to 31% in 2007–08.

• Shifted to a structured, explicit, research-based core literacy program with three tiers:

– One: Benchmark– Two: Strategic Intervention– Three: Intensive Intervention

• Monitor progress in fall, winter and spring

Page 50: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Impact

• Improved Academic Standing– Annual Yearly Progress

In 2007, 27% of Field’s students scored proficient (up from 5%).

• African American: 0% improved to 16%• Caucasian: 18% improved to 57%• Students with disabilities: 0% improved to 25%• English Language Learners: 0% improved to

27%

Page 51: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Some Final Thoughts

On the Road to Success

Page 52: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

All of us will have set-backs on the journey

Page 53: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Allow yourself plenty of time to get there

Page 54: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Remember to bring the kids along

Page 55: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

No matter how tempting….. Stay Positive!

Page 56: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Teach & Practice, Teach & Practice, Teach & Practice……

Page 57: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Remember

• We can’t “make” students learn or behave• We can create environments to increase

the likelihood students learn and behave• Environments that increase the likelihood

are guided by a core curriculum and implemented with consistency and fidelity

Page 58: MO SW-PBS Summer Institute 2009 Keynote by Dr. Tim Lewis

Are we There Yet? Mapping the PBS Course

for the Long Haul

pbis.orgpbismissouri.org

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