PBIS stresses the word proactive because discipline management at most school sites is reactive. It stresses the word positive because most discipline management is punitive. And it stresses the word system because so many school sites lack any real system. In order to reduce suspensions for severe misbehavior, PBIS focuses on the development of teachers’ classroom management skills to prevent typical behavior problems from escalating. The accompanying pyramid illustrates the type of interventions that, with a well-trained staff, should precede an office referral. CONTENT OF PBISPBIS is not a specific program or curriculum. Rather, it serves as a catalyst. It engages school districts and school sites in the team building and consensus building required to produce a coherent system of discipline management.
To get the ball rolling, state departments of education have taken the lead in promoting PBIS. School districts and regional education centers have developed the curricula and supplied the training. Those programs emphasize the fundamentals:
TOOLS ALIGNS WITH PBISThe objective of Tools for Teaching is identical to that of PBIS. Both seek to develop and implement effective discipline practices. Both focus on primary prevention in the classroom. Both employ applied behavioral research to build an advanced framework for classroom management. Tools for Teaching, having begun in 1969, represents nearly four decades of constant research, development, and field-testing. It represents a level of sophistication that reflects those four decades of work. During that time, Tools for Teaching has added a new generation of procedures to those described in the research literature. Those new procedures are extremely cost-effective (teachers don’t have extra time). They solve a wide range of problems for the entire class while freeing up the teacher’s time for instruction rather than consuming it in program management. LEARNING TO WIN THE GAMEWhen you spend enough time observing classrooms, you realize that the same transactions occur day after day at every grade level. The management of those transactions determines a teacher’s effectiveness.
Consider classroom management to be a game with offense and defense, with fundamental skills, and with plays that recur predictably. Consider the following example. This teacher is losing. But how do you win? How, for example, do you give corrective feedback to students (the same ones every day, it seems) without both losing control of the class and systematically reinforcing learned helplessness?
Another basic play in the game is backtalk -- the source of most office referrals. The teacher says, What do you do next? If you mess up, this little altercation will spin out of control and end up at the office. Here’s another play. You have a lesson transition. The students know that as soon as the transition is over, you will put them back to work. They have a vested interest in dawdling. How do you get them to hustle? To bring the variables from the research literature down to earth, you must study the game and learn to play it as it actually unfolds in the classroom. Once you begin to play the game, you will find that certain critical issues have never been addressed in the research literature. To play well, you will have to invent. For example, how exactly do you “mean business" so your reliance on formal consequences for misbehavior is minimized? Or, to put it another way, how exactly do you train a room full of seventeen-year-olds to act responsibly by this time tomorrow? TOOLS FOR TEACHING IS A MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
Tools for Teaching is a classroom management system in which The pieces of the classroom management puzzle fall into three broad areas:
Discipline management in Tools for Teaching begins with small disruptions in the classroom -- everyday “goofing off." Small disruptions provide the best starting point because The following thumbnail sketch will give you a sense of the “nuts and bolts" of those discipline practices in Tools for Teaching that comprise primary prevention. As you can see, prevention in discipline management quickly takes you to the center of the instructional process. InstructionWorking the Crowd:When students are near you, they tend to be on their best behavior. Effective teachers make an art form out of working the crowd -- otherwise known as “management by walking around."
Room Arrangement:
Helpless Handraisers: For starters, corrective feedback must be brief -- a simple prompt that answers the question, “What do I do next?" By simply telling the student what to do without giving a “post-mortem" of the error, you guarantee that feedback is always positive, which is a powerful, hidden relationship builder. In addition, a brief prompt maximizes clarity while avoiding cognitive overload. That process is referred to as Praise, Prompt, and Leave.
Visual Instruction Plans (VIPs):
Say, See, Do Teaching:
The first is That pattern characterizes most teaching, especially at the secondary level. Imagine a lecture followed by a brief discussion.
The second pattern is That pattern is characteristic of coaching and skill building in general. Students learn by doing with constant monitoring and feedback. Educators have always pointed to the link between effective instruction and effective discipline management. But what, exactly, is that link? What separates successful teachers from their colleagues is not the curriculum. The difference is in process -- the organization of learning activity. Successful teachers coach performance, whether it is the mastery of a skill or the expression of a concept. Their students are constantly busy. When students are both busy and successful, discipline problems plummet. DisciplineClassroom Structure:Once the teacher has an effective model for instruction, he or she is in a position to teach classroom routines to mastery and to maintain that mastery throughout the semester. Carrying out transitions and routines quickly and efficiently constitutes one of the teacher’s major time-savers and stress reducers. In addition, by making expectations crystal clear, the teacher simplifies the task of rule enforcement.
Meaning Business: When we finally cracked the code, we realized that meaning business is largely body language that signals calm, commitment, and the willingness to follow through. It teaches the students that “no" means “no." Once that understanding is established, teachers can signal students to “cool it" using progressively smaller cues until a word, a look, a pause, or ultimately, the teacher’s mere presence is enough to enforce limits. Rather than providing formal consequences, the teacher becomes the consequence. When the teacher walks into the classroom, the management program has arrived. Since meaning business involves body language, teacher training in that area is quite physical in nature. Say, See, Do Teaching is as important in staff development as it is in the classroom. Of course, formal consequences can be employed at any time to enforce rules. But, with meaning business, these relatively complicated and expensive procedures become rare. MotivationWhy Should I?:Before an unmotivated student will work hard, the teacher must answer one simple question, “Why should I?" The student needs something to work for…something he or she wants…something in the not too distant future. It is called an incentive or preferred activity. The trick with classroom incentives is to make them learning activities. The risk of incentives is that students might do fast and sloppy work in order to get the preferred activity as soon as possible. How do you train students to be both hard working and conscientious?
Continuous Accountability:
Connecting accountability to the learning process in real time requires two things: Tools Provides the Practical SpecificsAs you can see from this brief description of primary prevention in Tools for Teaching, we are not dealing in generalities. We are describing specific skills, and the Tools for Teaching books, videos, and workshops provide training in those skills.In addition, 40 years of working with school sites to implement Tools for Teaching has taught us about the complexity of producing lasting change, particularly in a high school. The Tools for Teaching Study Group Activity Guide, a free download from our web site, provides a step-by-step tutorial for building professional learning communities (PLCs) and for coaching the classroom management skills contained in Tools for Teaching. Once again, the alignment with PBIS is perfect because we are attempting to do the same job. Next month, we will move from primary prevention to secondary prevention in managing discipline problems. We will describe group procedures that apply to the second level of the PBIS pyramid.
Article by Dr. Fred Jones 10/14/2008
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