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Administrative Dilemma Cafeteria Behavior

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1 Administrative Dilemma Cafeteria Behavior
Jody Durick Anne McAdam Jeremy Slack Katie Wears

2 Saint Patrick’s Academy Student Population
4 sections of K 80 students 4 sections of 1st 84 students 5 sections of 2nd 100 students 4 sections of 3rd 88 students 7 sections of 4th 140 students 5 sections of 5th 112 students

3 Background Information
Five lunch monitors total. Two lunch monitors are responsible for four classes. Each monitor makes minimum wage and works 2-3 hours a day. School adopted PBIS (Positive Behavior Interventions and Strategies) last year.

4 Situation: Cafeteria Behavior
Students have trouble getting through the line in a timely manner. The students frequently want to change their order when they are in line which slows down the line. Students are rude to the cafeteria workers and the lunch monitors.  The cafeteria is loud and messy.  Monitors say there are not enough of them to sufficiently deal with the number of children.

5 State of the Cafeteria

6 Lunchroom Behavior

7 Cafeteria Behavior

8 Cafeteria Behavior

9 State of the Cafeteria

10 Previous Interventions
Principal’s presence in the cafeteria. Time-out table for behavioral issues. Raffle tickets for students with good behavior.

11 School Improvement Team Meeting
Invite a representative from the lunch monitors to discuss the problem at SIT meeting. Concerns are charted. Possible solutions are brainstormed. Groups take possible solutions and agree to research them. Return to SIT in 2 weeks.

12 Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS)
A systems approach to establishing the social culture and behavioral supports. PBIS organizes the host environment.

13 Summary of PBIS “Big Ideas”
Systems (how things are done). Data (how decisions are made). Practices (how staff interact with students).

14 School Wide Positive Behavior Interventions and Support
Teach behavior & routines directly Actively monitor behavior Acknowledge appropriate behavior with verbal praise Review data to make decisions Correct behavioral errors*** Explicit teaching- Respectful? Role-model? Manners? What do these look like to kids? BE PROACTIVE

15 School Wide Positive Behavior Interventions and Support
Write lesson plan with PBIS committee and lunch staff for positive behavior. Prepare video for classrooms to watch correct behaviors in lunch line and cafeteria. All teachers & lunch staff present during teaching- common understanding & language. Role Play. Practice*** Post expectations & language. Students sign visible poster in cafeteria.

16 School Wide Positive Behavior Interventions and Support
Tier 3 Intervention Ex. Video Lunch Bunch Group Practice School Wide Video

17 Rubric

18 School-Wide Expectations

19 Lesson Plan

20 Solution- SWBIS—Future Plans
Review data as a committee. Adjust and booster with lessons. New incentives. Friendly competition. Recess before Lunch.

21 Recess Before Lunch Improved cafeteria atmosphere.
Improved student behavior.

22 Implementing Recess Before Lunch
Have discussions with staff and build support. Re-evaluate the master schedule. Develop a hand washing routine. Design a plan for storage of lunches for students who bring their lunch. Develop a system for students with lunch money. Practice the new routines with students. Be visible. Be committed.

23 Positive Classroom Discipline
Where to begin? Adequate structure prevents expensive remediation. Sample procedures. Plans, priorities, and logistics.

24 Rethinking Lunchtime: John Muir Elementary School
Lunchtime as education. Integrating food into the curriculum.

25 Rethinking Lunchtime: John Muir Elementary School
Committed faculty and staff. Administrative leadership and support. Effort at many levels. Outside agencies.

26 Discussion


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