FMEA PreConference 2016 A Helene Robinson Ed D
* FMEA Pre-Conference 2016 A Helene Robinson, Ed. D. helene 2@sar. usf. edu
* * Making careless mistakes * Having difficulty sustaining attention * Seeming not to listen * Failing to finish tasks * Having difficulty organizing * Avoiding tasks requiring sustained attention * Losing things * Becoming easily distracted * Being forgetful
* *Fidgeting *Being unable to stay seated *Moving excessively (restless) *Having difficulty engaging quietly in leisure activities *Being “on the go” *Talking excessively
* *Blurting answers before questions are completed *Having difficulty awaiting turn *Interrupting/intruding upon others
* Affect ability to: * Withhold a planned response * Interrupt a response that has already been initiated * Protect an ongoing activity from distracting stimuli * * Involve many self-directed behaviors: * Self-regulation * Working memory * Inner speech * Arousal levels
* Talking excessively * Seeming not to listen * Having difficulty awaiting turn * Interrupting/intruding upon others * Avoiding tasks requiring sustained attention * Blurting answers before questions are completed * * Having difficulty sustaining attention * Failing to finish tasks * Having difficulty organizing * Losing things * Becoming easily distracted * Being forgetful * Moving excessively (restless) * Being “on the go”
* *Refer to handout or link: * C: Usershelene 2DocumentsPAINT centerUDL, Common Core, AIUDL_Guidelines_v 2%25200 Organizer_0. pdf * http: //www. udlcenter. org/sites/udlcenter. org/f iles/updateguidelines 2_0. pdf *Which guidelines when applied would best remove the barriers to learning you identified for your student with ADHD?
* * Guiding Principle 1: Changing inappropriate student behavior requires changing teacher behavior. * Guiding Principle 2: Some students require more time, attention, and structure than others. * Guiding Principle 3: Students exhibit both desirable and undesirable behaviors for a reason. * Guiding Principle 4: Many behavior challenges reflect learning difficulties. * Guiding Principle 5: Most inappropriate behavior is predictably linked to specific contexts and activities. * Guiding Principle 6: It is more efficient and more effective to change student behavior by using positive strategies than punitive strategies. * Guiding Principle 7: It is more efficient and effective to use proactive, preventive strategies rather than relying on reactive strategies after a behavior problem has already developed. * Guiding Principle 8: Students benefit when general educators and special educators work collaboratively meet the needs of all students. * Guiding Principle 9: Students benefit when educators maintain close communication with parents to share information and collaboratively plan educational and home programs.
* *Antecedents – Behavior - Consequence * A – Antecedents: Events that occur before behaviors and that may cue or set the stage for certain behaviors * Lack of clarity and predictability in expectations * Low levels of task engagement, unsuccessful academic performance, or lack of meaningful and dynamic instruction * Poor teacher-student relationship * Academic tasks * Instructions to do disliked or difficult tasks * Peer conflicts * Transitions * Low levels of structure * Exciting or highly stimulating activities * Emotions
* *B – Behavior: Behavior of concern * Deficits in academic skills * Deficits in self-control and self-management skills * Deficits in social skills * Deficits in communication skills * C – Consequence: events that follow a behavior that determine whether the behavior will be repeated or not. * Consequences relate to functions of behavior. Common functions include: * To get something, such as attention, power and control, a preferred item, a preferred activity, a sensory experience * To avoid something, such as work, disliked situations or tasks, people, embarrassment, frustration, fear of failure, physical discomfort
DEFINING BEHAVIOR Behavior must be defined so that it is specific, making it observable and measurable. Give an example of at least one specific, observable, and measurable behavior that a child would demonstrate that is often incorrectly described with the term listed. Non-behavioral term Bad attitude Specific, Observable, Measurable Behavior Lazy ADHD Angry Disruptive Self-injurious Depressed “Hyper” Defiant Throws homework paper in the trash Responds “I don’t care” to words of encouragement Walks away from group activity and makes comment, “This is stupid”.
* Group of volunteers to act out a scenario while audience observes and takes notes on the ABC’s and then interviews teacher to gather more information. After reviewing observation notes and interview notes, decide with partner what you feel the function(s) of behavior was for the student. . . EEX 4084EEX 4070ABC Chart. docx
A-B-C Chart Student’s name: ___________________ School/site: ________ Observed from ___/___ to ___/___ Completed by: _______________ Behavior of concern: (be specific and clear) ______________________ Use this form at the beginning of an FBA to document what happens immediately before and after the behavior of concern. This can help discover what is triggering & reinforcing the behavior. Use for only one behavior (e. g. hitting). Date/Start & A=Antecedent: B=Behavior What end time Location, activity, did the child do? people, etc. C=Consequence Observer What happened Initials after the behavior
* *Design effective intervention plans to modify antecedents for problem behaviors, teach new behaviors to better enable the person to manage those antecedents, and strategies to enable the person to access desirable consequences through appropriate behavior rather than inappropriate behavior.
* * 1. Identify types of problems, replacement behaviors, noting behaviors with high priority. * 2. Use a token system for positive reinforcement (not response cost) for group reinforcement of class expectations and individual reinforcement for replacement behaviors. Make class expectations general so that individual replacement behaviors can be related to a class expectation. * 3. Use self-management techniques with visuals and graphs (self-instruction, self-monitoring, self-evaluation, and self-reinforcement) * 4. Always implement from least restrictive to most restrictive using behavior reductive techniques: DRA, DRI, DRL, DRO; extinction with vicarious reinforcement; response cost; and types of time out (C: Usershelene 2DocumentsEEX 4084EEX 4070Using Time-Out Effectively in the Classroom. pptx
* * What is Arts Integration? * Why. . . ? * Students learn and remember better when they learn big ideas that connect different disciplines. * Students will generalize behavior into other settings when teachers collaborate using visuals so students can increase their self-regulation. * Students are motivated by the creative process: imagine/examine/perceive, explore/experiment/develop craft, create, reflect/access/revise, and share with others. * Findings show that arts integration and PBS, although effective with all students, are even more effective with diverse students.
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