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positive behavior
support and functional assessment
The ERIC Clearinghouse on Disabilities and Gifted Education (ERIC EC)
The Council for Exceptional Children
1110 N. Glebe Rd.
Arlington, VA 22201-5704
Toll Free: 1.800.328.0272
E-mail: ericec@cec.sped.org
Internet: http://ericec.org
ERIC/OSEP Digest #E580
Author: Cynthia Warger
September 1999
Fighting, biting, hitting, scratching, kicking, screaming—as well as
extreme withdrawal—are behaviors that challenge even the best educators
and families. For years, researchers and practitioners alike have asked
the question: Why does a particular child act that way?
Unlike traditional behavioral management, which views the individual as
the problem and seeks to "fix" him or her by quickly eliminating the
challenging behavior, positive behavioral support (PBS) and functional
analysis (FA) view systems, settings, and lack of skill as parts of the
"problem" and work to change those. As such, these approaches are
characterized as long-term strategies to reduce inappropriate behavior,
teach more appropriate behavior, and provide contextual supports necessary
for successful outcomes.
PBS and FA can help practitioners and parents understand why the
challenging behavior occurs—its function or purpose for the individual. In
addition to helping practitioners and families understand the individual
with the challenging behavior, PBS and FA also help them understand the
physical and social contexts of the behavior. Moreover, PBS and FA provide
a framework for helping the child to change challenging behaviors.
The 1997 reauthorization of the Individuals with Disabilities Education
Act (IDEA) requires the IEP team to consider using PBS to address behavior
that impedes the child's learning and/or the learning of others [Section
614 (d)(3)(B)]. In addition, IDEA requires that a functional behavioral
assessment be conducted for a student either before or not later than 10
days after a disciplinary action [Section 615 (k)(1)(B)(I)]. A functional
behavioral assessment ensures that the student's behavioral intervention
plan is designed to meet that child's unique needs.
Research—much of it supported by the U.S. Office of Special Education
Programs (OSEP)—as demonstrated that PBS and FA are effective in assisting
students with challenging behaviors. The following sections describe some
of this research.
What Do We Know About Positive Behavioral Support?
A synthesis of more than 100 research articles that involved
individuals with various cognitive disabilities found that
- PBS is widely applicable to individuals with serious challenging
behaviors.
- Research in PBS is rapidly contributing to our knowledge of how to
use the results of assessments and how to correct environmental
deficiencies.
- PBS is effective in reducing problem behavior by 80 percent in
two-thirds of the cases.
- Success rates are higher when intervention is based on prior
functional assessment (Carr, as reported by the Beach Center on Families
and Disability, 1998).
Many teachers already take the following actions, which have been
identified by research as supporting positive behaviors:
- Respond to individual needs. PBS requires that services and programs
are responsive to the preferences, strengths, and needs of individuals
with challenging behavior. For example, some school systems may need to
add self-determination skills to their curriculum.
- Alter environments. If something in the individual's environment
influences the challenging behavior, it is important to organize the
environment for success. For example, clearly defined work paces and
quiet work areas may assist a child who is noise-sensitive.
- Explicitly teach new skills to the individual with challenging
behavior and members of his or her social network. Individuals
frequently need to learn alternative, appropriate responses that serve
the same purpose as the challenging behavior.
- Genuinely appreciate positive behaviors. It is important to
reinforce and acknowledge all positive behaviors consistently.
School-wide Positive Behavioral Support
Research studies have demonstrated that when PBS strategies are
implemented school-wide, children with and without disabilities benefit by
having an environment that is conducive to learning. They learn more about
their own behavior, learn to work together, and support each other as a
community of learners.
One PBS model, Effective Behavioral Support (Sugai, 1996), emphasizes a
school-wide system that defines, teaches, and encourages appropriate
behavior in children in elementary and middle schools. This model is based
on the fact that about 85 percent of students have the social skills to do
quite well if placed in a reasonable environment.
To address the behavioral support needs of all students within a school
context, this model considers support from four major perspectives:
- School-wide support—procedures and processes that are intended for
all students, all staff, and all settings. The most important element of
support is a building-wide team that oversees all development,
implementation, modification, and evaluation activities.
- Specific setting support—a team-based mechanism for monitoring
specific settings that exist within the school environment. In settings
where problem behaviors occur, teams should develop strategies that
prevent or minimize their occurrence.
- Classroom support—processes and procedures of the individual
classrooms where teachers structure learning opportunities. Classroom
support should parallel the PBS features and procedures that are used
school-wide.
- Individual student support—immediate, relevant, effective, and
efficient responses to those students who present the most significant
behavioral challenges. There must be processes and procedures for
high-intensity, specially designed and individualized interventions for
the estimated 3-7 percent of students who present the most challenging
behavior.
Strategies for the school-wide, specific setting, and classroom levels
include having:
- A clearly stated, positive purpose.
- A set of positively stated expectations for behavior.
- Procedures for teaching school-wide expectations.
- A continuum of procedures for encouraging students to display
expected behaviors.
- A continuum of procedures for discouraging violations of school-wide
expectations.
- A method for monitoring implementation and effectiveness.
At the student level, procedures include functional assessment
strategies, social skills instruction, self-management training, and
direct instruction. For implementation of the procedures at the individual
student level to be effective, the school-wide PBS system must be in place
and functioning efficiently.
Fern Ridge Middle School in Elmira, Oregon, experienced a 42 percent
drop in office referrals in one year's time after implementing Effective
Behavioral Support (see Taylor-Greene et al., 1997). Three levels of PBS
were implemented:
- Level 1:
This preventive level provided the necessary supports to
80-90 percent of the student population. Staff defined their
expectations for student behavior-called "High Five." At the beginning
of the year, staff directly taught the skills underlying these
expectations. Students then practiced the appropriate behaviors with
reinforcement and feedback. A school-wide token economy system was put
into place to reinforce students throughout the year.
- Level 2:
Some students needed more structure to help them solve
problems and set goals. These students attended daily morning check-in
and afternoon check-out sessions with counseling staff. Students carried
a point card on which teachers awarded points when the youngster
demonstrated the High Five expectations. The card is brought to the
counselor at the end of each day and sent home to families. An
individualized behavioral education plan (BEP) also was developed for
these students.
- Level 3: Intensive support and additional structure were provided to
students who were not succeeding. To support these students, a more
intensive BEP was developed.
Using Functional Assessment with Young Children
Research on the use of functional assessment with young children
includes case studies of efforts to improve the social and behavioral
performance of young children identified as having behavior risks in Head
Start and kindergarten classrooms (Kamps et al., 1995). The functional
assessment of environmental events allowed researchers to prescribe
appropriate interventions. The results of the case studies were
encouraging: Children's behaviors improved over time as a result of
environmental manipulations including:
- Increased teacher praise and reinforcement for appropriate behavior
and peer interaction.
- Decreased teacher attention for inappropriate behavior.
- More structure in classroom routines and rule following.
Kamps recommends that practitioners consider incorporating the
following positive supports when addressing challenging behaviors:
- Direct instruction of appropriate behavior and social rules.
- Use of behaviorally appropriate role models.
- Use of concrete, visual examples of positive interaction and play.
- Consistent, frequent reinforcement of prosocial behaviors.
- Incidental teaching and reinforcement of appropriate behaviors;
redirection of antisocial behaviors.
Resources
- Beach Center on Families and Disability (1998). What research says:
Understanding challenging behavior. University of Kansas, Lawrence,
KS: author.
- Dadson, S., & Horner, R. (1993). Manipulating setting events to
decrease problem behaviors. TEACHING Exceptional Children, 25,
53-55.
- ERIC/OSEP Special Project (Fall 1997). School-wide behavioral
management systems. Research Connections in Special Education, Number
1, 1-8.
- Fitzsimmons, M. (November 1998). Functional behavioral assessment
and behavior intervention plans. ERIC/OSEP Digest E571. Reston, VA:
ERIC Clearinghouse on Disabilities and Gifted Education.
http://ericec.org/digests/e571.htm.
- Kamps, D.M., Ellis, C., Mancina, C., Wyble, J., Greene, L., & Harvey,
D. (1995). Case studies using functional analysis for young children with
behavior risks. Education and Treatment of Children, 18, 243-260.
- Taylor-Greene, S., Brown, D., Nelson, L., Longton, J., Gassman, T.,
Cohen, J., Swartz, J., Horner, R., Sugai, G., & Hall, S. (1997).
School-wide behavioral support: Starting the year off right. Journal
of Behavioral Education, 7, 99-112.
- Sugai, G. 1996). Providing effective behavior support to all students:
Procedures and processes. SAIL, 11(1), 1-4.
- Turnbull, A.P., & Ruef, M. (1997). Family perspectives on inclusive
lifestyle issues for individuals with problem behavior. Exceptional
Children, 63, 211-227.
Based on Research Connections in Special Education,
Number 4, Cynthia Warger, Winter 1999
ERIC/OSEP Digests are in the public domain and may
be freely reproduced and disseminated, but please acknowledge your source.
This digest was prepared with funding from the Office of Special Education
Programs (OSEP), U.S. Department of Education, under Contract No.
ED-99-CO-0026. The opinions expressed in this publication do not
necessarily reflect the positions or policies of OSEP or the Department of
Education.
Copyright © 1999
ERIC Clearinghouse on Disabilities and Gifted Education
http://ericec.org
Revised:
09/15/2007.
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