Early Childhood classroom of children that ar
Early Childhood classroom of children that are ages 2 and 3 years old.
Textbook use the link below and login info
University of Arizona Global Campus: Challenging Behavior in Young Children (vitalsource.com)
Username: [email protected]
Password: Jacob#2002
Here are the other links:
Prior to beginning work on this discussion, read Supporting and Responding to Behavior: Evidence-Based Classroom Strategies for Teachers.
After reading Chapter 8 of the course text, select two teaching strategies for preventing challenging behavior in the classroom. Search the Internet (e.g., Scholastic.com (Links to an external site.), Edutopia.org (Links to an external site.), or NAEYC.org (Links to an external site.)) to find a lesson to support each of your chosen strategies. For each strategy, follow the layout below in your discussion prompt and address the following:
· Name and describe the strategy.
· Provide a link to the lesson from the Internet.
· Explain how this lesson will support challenging behaviors.
· Explain how this lesson will support diverse cultures.
· Explain how this lesson will support varying abilities.
Remember that you must address all of the above points for each teaching strategy you selected. This means you will answer the questions twice.
,
This technical assistance document was adapted from the PBIS Technical Brief on Classroom PBIS Strategies written by: Brandi Simonsen, Jennifer Freeman,
Steve Goodman, Barbara Mitchell, Jessica Swain-Bradway, Brigid Flannery, George Sugai, Heather George, and Bob Putman, 2015.
Additional assistance was provided to the Office of Special Education Programs by Brandi Simonsen and Jenifer Freeman. Special thanks to Allison Blakely,
Ambra Green, and Jennifer Rink, OSEP interns who also contributed to the development of this document.
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Purpose and Description What is the purpose of this document?
The purpose of this document is to summarize evidence-based, positive, proactive, and responsive classroom behavior intervention and support strategies for teachers. These strategies should be used classroom-wide, intensified for support small-group instruction, or amplified further for individual students. These
strategies can help teachers capitalize on instructional time and decrease disruptions, which is crucial as schools are held to greater academic and social accountability measures for all students.
What needs to be in place before I can expect these strategies to work?
The effectiveness of these classroom strategies are maximized when: (a) the strategies are implemented within a school-wide multi-tiered behavioral framework, such as school-wide positive behavioral interventions and supports (PBIS; see www.pbis.org); (b) classroom and school-wide expectations and systems are directly linked; (c) classroom strategies are merged with effective instructional design, curriculum, and delivery; and (d) classroom-based data
are used to guide decision making. The following school- and classroom-level supports should be in place to optimize the fidelity and benefits of implementation.
School-level supports Classroom-level supports
• A multi-tiered framework, including strategies for identifying and teaching
expectations, acknowledging appropriate behavior, and responding to inappropriate behavior
• The school-wide framework is guided by school-wide discipline data
• Appropriate supports for staff are provided, including leadership teaming, supporting policy, coaching, and implementation monitoring
• Classroom system for teaching expectations, providing acknowledgments,
and managing rule violations linked to the school-wide framework
• Classroom management decisions are based on classroom behavioral data
• Effective instructional strategies implemented to the greatest extent possible
• Curriculum is matched to student need and supporting data
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What are the principles that guide the use of these strategies in the classro om?
The purpose of the guiding principles is to define the characteristics and cultural features that drive the use of these classroom strategies within a multi-tiered framework. The guiding principles help establish the fundamental norms, rules, and ethics that are essential to the success of these classroom strategies
within a multi-tiered framework. These seven principles are the foundational values that drive the success of these classroom strategies and are important to keep in mind when developing contextually appropriate adaptations of the strategies suggested in this document.
Professional Business-like, objective, neutral, impartial, and unbiased
Cultural Considerate of individual’s learning history and experience s (e.g., family, community, peer group)
Informed Data-based, response-to-intervention
Fidelity-Based Implementation accuracy is monitored and adjusted as needed
Educational The quality of design and delivery of instruction is considered
Instructive Expected behaviors are explicitly taught, modeled, monitored, and reinforced
Preventive Environment arranged to encourage previously taught social skills and discourage anticipated behavior errors
User Guide What is included in this guide?
There are three main parts to this guide on classroom PBIS strategies.
1. Interactive map with corresponding tables, tools, and tips . The interactive map provides the links to the document with the
content to support the implementation of the essential features of these classroom strategies.
2. Self-assessment and decision-making chart. These tools are intended to help guide the user to the parts of the document that
will be most useful.
3. Scenarios. Two scenarios are provided to extend learning and provide concrete examples of how to use classroom PBIS strategies
and many of the tools suggested in this document in consortium.
A short summary and references are provided at the conclusion of the document.
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What is not included in this guide?
This guide should not be considered a replacement for more comprehensive trainings and does not provide the depth of knowledge/research about each topic. Although many of the strategies suggested in this document can be used for individual students, more support likely will be needed from a behavior
specialist or school psychologist for teachers who work with students with more intensive support needs.
This document also does not include strategies for addressing violent or unlawful student conduct.
Where do I start?
The interactive map provides an organizational layout of the document and some basic definitions of terms that may be helpful to know prior to taking the self-assessment. Teachers should begin with the self-assessment to gauge current classroom management practices. The self-assessment is designed to help
teachers know where to focus their attention (e.g., foundations, practices, data systems). After teachers take the self-assessment, the interactive map will direct them to content that will be most useful. The decision-making flow chart should be used to help guide teachers in making decisions about making
adjustments within their classrooms.
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Interactive Map of Core Features
1.1 Settings The physical layout of the classroom is designed to be
effective
1.3 Expectations Three to five classroom rules
are clearly posted, defined,
and explicitly taught
1.2 Routines Predictable classroom
routines are developed and
taught
2.1 Supervision Provide reminders
(prompts), and actively
scan, move, and interact
with students
2.2 Opportunity Provide high rates and varied opportunities for all
students to respond
2.3 Acknowledgment Using specific praise and
other strategies, let
students know when they meet classroom
expectations
2.4 Prompts and Precorrections Provide reminders, before
a behavior is expected, that clearly describe the
expectation
2.5 Error Corrections Use brief, contingent, and
specific statements when
misbehavior occurs
2.6 Other Strategies Use other strategies that preempt escalation,
minimize inadvertent
reward of the problem behavior, create a
learning opportunity for emphasizing desired
behavior, and maintain
optimal instructional time
2.7 Additional Tools
More tips for teachers
Classroom Interventions and Supports
Foundations (Table 1)
Response Prevention
Data Systems (Table 3) Practices (Table 2)
3.1 Counting Record how often or how many times a behavior
occurs (also called
frequency)
3.2 Timing Record how long a behavior
lasts (also called duration).
3.3 Sampling Estimate how often a behavior occurs during part
of an interval, the entire
interval, or at the end of an interval
3.4 ABC Cards, Incident Reports, or Office
Discipline Referrals Record information about the events that occurred
before, during, and after a
behavior incident
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Self-Assessment Teachers should start with the first statement on the self-assessment. When unsure of an answer, teachers should go to the part of the interactive map indicated and read more about the practice.
Classroom Interventions and Supports Self-Assessment Yes No
1. The classroom is physically designed to meet the needs of all students.
If yes, continue with self-assessment. If no, begin with 1.1 on the interactive map.
2. Classroom routines are developed, taught, and predictable.
If yes, continue with self-assessment. If no, begin with 1.2 on the interactive map.
3. Three to five positive classroom expectations are posted, defined, and explicitly taught.
If yes, continue with self-assessment. If no, begin with 1.3 on the interactive map.
4. Prompts and active supervision practices are used proactively.
If yes, continue with self-assessment. If no, begin with 2.1 on the interactive map.
5. Opportunities to respond are varied and are provided at high rates.
If yes, continue with self-assessment. If no, begin with 2.2 on the interactive map.
6. Specific praise and other strategies are used to acknowledge behavior.
If yes, continue with self-assessment. If no, begin with 2.3 on the interactive map.
7. Reminders are consistently given before a behavior might occur.
If yes, continue with self-assessment. If no, begin with 2.4 on the interactive map.
8. The responses to misbehaviors in the classroom are appropriate and systematic.
If yes, continue with self-assessment. If no, begin with 2.5 on the interactive map.
9. Data systems are used to collect information about classroom behavior.
If yes, continue with self-assessment. If no, begin with Table 3 on the interactive map.
If yes on all, celebrate successes! Continually monitor, and make adjustments as needed.
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Decision-Making Chart The decision-making chart will help guide teachers regarding implementation of best practices in preventing and responding to behaviors in the classroom.
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Table 1. Matrix of Foundations for Classroom Interventions and Supports
1.1 SETTINGS
EFFECTIVELY DESIGN THE PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT OF THE CLASSROOM
Description
and Critical Features
Elementary
Examples
Secondary
Examples
Non-
Examples
Empirical Support
and Resources
What key strategies can I use to support behavior in my classroom?
How can I use this practice in my elementary classroom?
How can I use this practice in my secondary classroom?
What should I avoid when I’m implementing this practice?
What evidence supports this practice, and where can I find additional resources?
• Design classroom to
facilitate the most typical instructional activities (e.g.,
small groups, whole group,
learning centers)
• Arrange furniture to allow
for smooth teacher and
student movement
• Assure instructional
materials are neat, orderly,
and ready for use
• Post materials that support critical content and learning
strategies (e.g., word walls, steps for the writing
process, mathematical
formulas)
• Design classroom layout
according to the type of
activity taking place:
– Tables for centers
– Separate desk for
independent work
– Circle area for group
instruction
• Consider teacher versus
student access to materials
• Use assigned seats and
areas
• Be sure all students can be
seen
• Design classroom layout
according to the type of
activity taking place:
– Circle for discussion
– Forward facing for group
instruction
• Use assigned seats
• Be sure all students can be
seen
• Consider options for storage
of students’ personal items
(e.g., backpacks, notebooks
for other classes)
• Equipment and materials
are damaged, unsafe, and/or not in sufficient
working condition or not
accessible to all students
• Disorderly, messy, unclean,
and/or visually unappealing
environment
• Some students and/or parts
of the room not visible to
teacher
• Congestion in high-traffic areas (e.g., coat closet,
pencil sharpener, teacher
desk)
• Inappropriately sized
furniture
• Teachers can prevent many
instances of problem behavior and minimize
disruptions by strategically
planning the arrangement of the physical
environment1
• Arranging classroom environment to deliver
instruction in a way that
promotes learning2
Video:
http://louisville.edu/education/ab
ri/primarylevel/structure/group
Book:
Structuring Your Classroom for Academic Success3
1 Wong & Wong, 2009 2 Archer & Hughes, 2011 3 Paine, Radicchi, Rosellini, Deutchman, & Darch, 1983
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1.2 ROUTINES
DEVELOP AND TEACH PREDICTABLE CLASSROOM ROUTINES
Description
and Critical Features
Elementary
Examples
Secondary
Examples
Non-
Examples
Empirical Support
and Resources
What key strategies can I use to support behavior in my classroom?
How can I use this practice in my elementary classroom?
How can I use this practice in my secondary classroom?
What should I avoid when I’m implementing this practice?
What evidence supports this practice, and where can I find additional resources?
• Establish predictable
patterns and activities
• Promote smooth operation
of classroom
• Outline the steps for
completing specific
activities
• Teach routines and
procedures directly
• Practice regularly
• Recognize students when they successfully follow
classroom routines and
procedures
• Create routines and
procedures for the most
problematic areas or times
• Promote self-managed or
student-guided schedules
and routines
• Establish routines and
procedures for:
– Arrival and dismissal
– Transitions between
activities
– Accessing help
– What to do after work is
completed
• Example arrival routines:
– Hang up coat and
backpack
– Put notes and homework
in the “In” basket
– Sharpen two pencils
– Go to desk and begin the
warm-up activities listed
on the board
– If you finish early, read a
book
• Consider routines and
procedures for:
– Turning in work
– Handing out materials
– Making up missed work
– What to do after work is
completed
• Example class period
routines:
– Warm-up activity for
students
– Review of previous
content
– Instruction for new
material
– Guided or independent
practice opportunities
– Wrap-up activities
• Assuming students will automatically know your
routines and procedures without instruction and
feedback
• Omitting tasks that students are regularly expected to
complete
• Missing opportunities to provide: (a) visual and/or
auditory reminders to
students about your routines and procedures (e.g., signs,
posters, pictures, hand
signals, certain music playing, timers) and/or (b)
feedback about student
performance
• Establishing classroom routines and procedures
early in the school year increases structure and
predictability for students;
when clear routines are in place and consistently used,
students are more likely to
be engaged with school and learning and less likely to
demonstrate problem
behavior4
• Student learning is
enhanced by teachers’ developing basic classroom
structure (e.g., routines and
procedures)5
Podcast:
http://pbismissouri.org/classroom
-procedures-and-routines-
content-acquisition-video/
Video: https://www.teachingchannel.org
/videos/create-a-safe-classroom
4 Kern & Clemens, 2007 5 Soar & Soar, 1979
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1.3 EXPECTATIONS
POST, DEFINE, AND TEACH THREE TO FIVE POSITIVE CLASSROOM EXPECTATIONS
Description and Critical Features
Elementary Examples
Secondary Examples
Non- Examples
Empirical Support and Resources
What key strategies can I use to support behavior in my classroom?
How can I use this practice in my elementary classroom?
How can I use this practice in my secondary classroom?
What should I avoid when I’m implementing this practice?
What evidence supports this practice, and where can I find additional resources?
• If in a school implementing a multi-tiered behavioral
framework, such as school- wide PBIS, adopt the three
to five positive school-wide
expectations as classroom
expectations
• Expectations should be
observable, measurable, positively stated,
understandable, and always
applicable
• Teach expectations using
examples and non-examples
and with opportunities to practice and receive
feedback
• Involve students in defining expectations within
classroom routines
(especially at the secondary
level)
• Obtain student commitment
to support expectations
• Post:
– Prominently in the
classroom
– Example: Be safe, Be
respectful, Be ready, Be
responsible
• Define for each classroom
setting or routine:
– Being safe means hands and feet to self during
transitions
– Being safe means using all classroom materials
correctly
• Teach:
– Develop engaging
lessons to teach the
expectations
– Regularly refer to
expectations when interacting with students
(during prompts, specific
praise, and error
corrections)
• Post:
– Prominently in the
classroom
– Example: Be respectful,
Be responsible, Be a
good citizen, Be ready to
learn
• Define for each classroom
setting or routine:
– Being respectful means
using inclusive language
– Being responsible means having all materials
ready at the start of
class
• Teach:
– Develop engaging lessons to teach the
expectations
– Regularly refer to expectations when
interacting with students
• Assuming students will already know your
expectations
• Having more than five
expectations
• Listing only behaviors you
do not want from students (e.g., no cell phones, no
talking, no gum, no hitting)
• Creating expectations that you are not willing to
consistently enforce
• Selecting expectations that are inappropriate for
developmental or age level
• Choosing expectations that do not sufficiently cover all
situations
• Ignoring school-wide
expectations
• A dependable system of rules and procedures
provides structure for students and helps them to
be engaged with
instructional tasks6
• Teaching rules and routines
to students at the beginning
of the year and enforcing them consistently across
time increases student
academic achievement and
task engagement7
Case Study:
http://iris.peabody.vanderbilt.ed
u/wp-
content/uploads/2013/07/ICS-
003.pdf
Podcast:
http://pbismissouri.org/conten t-acquisition-podcast- classroom-rules-and- expectations/
Videos:
http://louisville.edu/education/a bri/primarylevel/expectations/gr
oup
6 Brophy, 2004 7 Evertson & Emmer, 1982; Johnson, Stoner, & Green, 1996
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Table 2. Matrix of Practices for Classroom Interventions and Supports
2.1 SUPERVISION
USE ACTIVE SUPERVISION AND PROXIMITY
Practice Description and
Critical Features Elementary Examples Secondary Examples Non-Examples
Empirical Support and
Resources
What key strategies can I use to support behavior in my classroom?
How can I use this practice in my elementary classroom?
How can I use this practice in my secondary classroom?
What should I avoid when I’m implementing this practice?
What evidence supports this practice, and where can I find additional resources?
A process for monitoring the classroom, or any school setting,
that incorporates moving, scanning, and interacting
frequently with students8
Includes:
• Scanning: visual sweep of entire space
• Moving: continuous movement, proximity
• Interacting: verbal communication in a
respectful manner, any precorrections, non-
contingent attention, specific
verbal feedback
• While students are working independently in centers,
scan and move around the
classroom, checking in with
students
• While working with a small
group of students, frequently look up and quickly scan the
classroom to be sure other
students are still on track
• During transitions between
activities, move among the
students to provide proximity; scan continuously
to prevent problems, and provide frequent feedback as
students successfully
complete the transition
• While monitoring students, move around the area,
interact with students, and
observe behaviors of individuals and the group;
scan the entire area as you
move around all corners of
the area
• Briefly interact with
students: ask how they are doing, comment, or inquire
about their interests; show genuine interest in their
responses (This is an
opportunity to connect briefly with a number of
students)
• Sitting or standing where you cannot see the entire
room or space, such as
with your back to the group
or behind your desk
• Walking the same,
predictable route the entire period of time, such as
walking the rows of desks
in the same manner every
period
• Stopping and talking with a
student or students for
several minutes
• Interacting with the same
student or groups of
students every day
• Combining prompts or precorrection with active
supervision is effective across
a variety of classroom and
non-classroom settings9
Self-Assessment Tool:
http://pbismissouri.org/wp- content/uploads/2017/06/ECP5.1-
Teacher-Tool-Classroom-Active- Supervision-1.pdf?x30198
Module:
http://pbismissouri.org/wp- content/uploads/2017/06/ECP5.2-
Classroom-Module-Active-
Supervision-1.pptx?x30198
Video:
http://louisville.edu/education/abri/
primarylevel/supervision/group
IRIS Ed (secondary):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=rCqIzeU-0hQ
8 DePry & Sugai, 2002 9 Colvin, Sugai, Good, & Lee, 1997; DePry & Sugai, 2002; Lewis, Colvin, & Sugai, 2000
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