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National PBIS Forum October 2012 Sheri Luecking, Illinois PBIS Network Robert Stevens, Charleston, SC.

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Presentation on theme: "National PBIS Forum October 2012 Sheri Luecking, Illinois PBIS Network Robert Stevens, Charleston, SC."— Presentation transcript:

1 National PBIS Forum October 2012 Sheri Luecking, Illinois PBIS Network Robert Stevens, Charleston, SC

2 The Evolution of Social Workers in Illinois 0 Completing an average of 50-100 SDS’s a year 0 SSW doing individual counseling all day 0 SSW addressing perceived crisis 0 Sitting in IEP meetings 0 SSW delivering classroom groups in isolation. 0 Leading Tier 2 and 3 teams 0 Coordinating Tertiary Interventions (Using Data) 0 Facilitating FBA/BIP teams 0 Facilitating Wraparound teams 0 Coordinating Secondary Interventions (Using Data) 0 Lead small group interventions 0 Coordinate Check in Check out and Check and Connect intervention 0 Organizing Universal Screening for all Students 0 Continuing Education for all staff 0 Provide individual skill building that is based on data

3 Response to Intervention: New Roles for School Social Workers By Kate Usaj, MSSA, LISW; Judith Kullas Shine, MSW, MS, LICSW; and Myrna Mandlawitz, M.Ed., JD School Social Work Association of America Early intervention with struggling learners to link them with appropriate resources. Ongoing progress monitoring. Comprehensive formal and informal ecological assessments including academic functioning, social/emotional and mental health functioning, adaptive functioning, and family and community interactions. Development of Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS). Development and monitoring of Behavioral Intervention Plans (BIP). Comprehensive family services. Individual counseling services. Small group counseling. Community liaison to ensure adequate and appropriate resources for students and families in need. Helping students to develop and maintain personal, social and academic competencies. Consultation to and with educators to ensure understanding and support of struggling learners. Crisis response for students in critical need (e.g. suicide ideation, self-harm, family crisis, homelessness).

4 To meet this challenge, school social workers will need to: 0 Be willing to re-examine their approaches to change and problem resolution. 0 Take risks in terms of attempting new interventions and strategies. 0 Examine their beliefs about special education and services to students with special needs. 0 Engage in regular and ongoing professional development opportunities. 0 Be more physically available to the classroom. 0 Examine their personal service delivery system and make adaptations to better serve students. 0 Determine more efficient ways to provide services to more students. 0 Become more expert in data collection.

5 Tier 3/Tertiary Interventions 1-5% Individual students Assessment-based High intensity 1-5%Tier 3/Tertiary Interventions Individual students Assessment-based Intense, durable procedures Tier 2/Secondary Interventions 5-15% Some students (at-risk) High efficiency Rapid response Small group interventions Some individualizing 5-15%Tier 2/Secondary Interventions Some students (at-risk) High efficiency Rapid response Small group interventions Some individualizing Tier 1/Universal Interventions 80-90% All students Preventive, proactive 80-90%Tier 1/Universal Interventions All settings, all students Preventive, proactive School-Wide Systems for Student Success: A Response to Intervention (RtI) Model Academic Systems Behavioral Systems Illinois PBIS Network, Revised May 15, 2008. Adapted from “What is school-wide PBS?” OSEP Technical Assistance Center on Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports. Accessed at http://pbis.org/schoolwide.htm

6 Primary Prevention: School-/Classroom- Wide Systems for All Students, Staff, & Settings Secondary Prevention: Specialized Group Systems for Students with At-Risk Behavior Tertiary Prevention: Specialized Individualized Systems for Students with High-Risk Behavior ~80% of Students ~15% ~5% SCHOOL-WIDE POSITIVE BEHAVIOR SUPPORT

7 Tier 1/Universal School-Wide Assessment School-Wide Prevention Systems SIMEO Tools: HSC-T, RD-T, EI-T Check-in/ Check-out Individualized Check- In/Check-Out, Groups & Mentoring (ex. CnC) Brief Functional Behavioral Assessment/ Behavior Intervention Planning (FBA/BIP) Complex FBA/BIP Wraparound ODRs, Attendance, Tardies, Grades, DIBELS, etc. Daily Progress Report (DPR) (Behavior and Academic Goals) Competing Behavior Pathway, Functional Assessment Interview, Scatter Plots, etc. Social/Academic Instructional Groups Positive Behavior Interventions & Supports: A Response to Intervention (RtI) Model Illinois PBIS Network, Revised May 2009 Adapted from T. Scott, 2004 Tier 2/ Secondary Tier 3/ Tertiary Intervention Assessment

8 3-Tiered of System Support Necessary Conversations (Teams) CICO SAIG Mentoring Complex FBA/BIP Universal Support Problem Solving Team Tertiary Systems Team Brief FBA/ BIP Brief FBA/BIP Universal Team WRAP Secondary Systems Team Plans SW & Class-wide supports Process data, overall intervention effectiveness Standing team, uses FBA/BIP process for 1 youth at a time Process data, overall intervention effectiveness

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11 Other Things to Consider… 0 School social workers (SSW) struggle with the use of data, pre and post intervention 0 Interventions continue to be implemented year after year whether or not success is noted 0 SSW and school staff default to individual counseling for many students 0 SSW training programs traditionally have not taught the use of data 0 Due to lack of resources, SSW have been encouraged to do therapy rather than skill building with students

12 Reviewing and Changing Job Descriptions (the old way) 0 Completes SDS for Case Study Evaluation 0 Integrates Assessment information to provide a multi-faceted overview of students functional ability 0 Participates in Child Study Team 0 Conducts classroom observations 0 Assists parents and educational personnel in reaching a realistic understanding of student’s ability and needs 0 Provides preventative and therapeutic services to children, parents, and/or families

13 Job Description (the old way, cont.) 0 Provides services on IEP 0 Maintains channels of communication with principals and teachers 0 Provides assistance in crisis situations 0 Maintains communication with students, parents, educational personnel, and community 0 Provides and participates in in-service 0 Conducts seminars for parents 0 Other duties as assigned.

14 Newly Designed Job Description 0 Participate in building based activities that support the School Improvement Plan 0 Participate in Secondary and Tertiary intervention planning meetings 0 Participate in development and implementation of strategies and activities related to PBIS 0 Use data to determine effectiveness of research based intervention (pre and post) 0 Use the three tiered approach to intervention planning to enter, progress monitor, and exit youth from interventions (based on data) 0 Providing coaching and professional development for staff

15 Job Description (New, cont.) 0 Provide conflict resolution training, drug and alcohol education, and social skills training based on secondary or tertiary team 0 Provide direct services to children in crisis 0 Provide school social work services to children as determined in the IEP process based on a continuum of preventative interventions 0 Develop and maintain working relationships with students, parents, educational personnel, and community 0 Participate in the development of Tertiary interventions in the form of FBA/BIP or wraparound teams

16 Tier 1 con·sult

17 Tier 2 co·or·di·nate

18 Tier 3 fa·cil·i·tate

19 BEFORE INDIVIDUAL/DIRECT MINUTES WITH STUDENTS TIME SPENT IN ROLES SUCH AS COORDINATOR, FACILITATOR, COACH, ETC.

20 TRANSITION PERIOD INDIVIDUAL/DIRECT MINUTES WITH STUDENTS TIME SPENT IN ROLES SUCH AS COORDINATOR, FACILITATOR, COACH, ETC.

21 AFTER INDIVIDUAL/DIRECT MINUTES WITH STUDENTS TIME SPENT IN ROLES SUCH AS COORDINATOR, FACILITATOR, COACH, ETC.

22 Common Trends 0 Moving from reactive to preventative 0 Time efficient and least restrictive 0 Moving from Tier 1 to leading Tier 2/3 0 Facilitating Tier 3 Interventions 0 Serving students needs vs. “labeled” populations 0 Systems approach 0 Intervention vs. Referral to Professional

23 Charleston County, SC 0 45,000 students in 78 schools. 0 Over 100 miles from the most distant schools 0 Rural, inner city, and suburban schools 0 Student Population: 46% African American; 46% Caucasian; 3% Mixed; Asian 2%; 1% Native Amer.; 1% other 0 14% Identify themselves as Latin or Hispanic 0 60% receive free or reduced meals 0 9.5% have IEP’s 0 6% not English proficient 0 Historically in CCSD schools; nurses, guidance counselors, a few contracted mental health counselors, para-professional behavior support staff; school psychologists not school based.

24 The Evolution of Social Workers in Charleston, SC 0 Social Workers not in CCSD Schools 0 Very limited (2 District-wide) number of social workers in the district office working in the Office of Exceptional Children supporting identified students

25 From 0 to 60 in one year 8 school-based Social Workers are assigned in 2011-12 0 Federal Counseling Grant 0 Charleston Promise Neighborhood 0 Medical University of South Carolina 0 Social workers assigned to poor inner city schools

26 SYSTEMS PRACTICES DATA Supporting Staff Behavior Supporting Decision Making Supporting Student Behavior SW-Positive Behavior Support OUTCOMES Social Competence & Academic Achievement

27 ISF with Social Workers 0 SSW is a new role in CCSD schools 0 Integrating with current systems, creating new systems 0 Existing Teams – School Leadership 0 PBIS 0 TEAM Two 0 CORE (Tier 3) 0 External Partners

28 Use Data to Drive Activities 0 Data that will lead to intervention before referral 0 At-Risk Alert System 0 SWIS 0 Social Emotional Measures

29 Intervention Vs. Referral 0 ARAS (pronounced “air-us”) is the At-Risk Alert System: a data tool developed by Charleston County School District as part of a federal Safe Schools/Healthy Students grant. 0 Helps identify students potentially at-risk by using existing academic & behavior data. 0 Transforms data into reports to support effective decision making. 0 Provides composite views of magnitudes of risk factors existing for students and schools. 0 Supports a variety of student support models.

30 Risk Indicators 0 ARAS uses student academic and behavior data currently available in PowerSchool and other district data bases as indicators to assess potential risk. 0 For each of eight indicators, students are assigned to one of three levels: 0 Level 1 (Motivated/Low Risk) 0 Level 2 (Vulnerable/Moderate Risk) 0 Level 3 (Critical; High Risk)

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35 Use Data to Monitor Practices Tier Three Tier Two Tier One Academi c Social Emotion al Mental Health Physical

36 What Services are Delivered

37 Initially Focus on Tier One

38 PBIS Problem Solving Logic used by CCSD for School-based Social Workers 1. Establish Ground Rules 2. Start with Data 3. Match Practices to Data 4. Align Resources to Implement Practices Lewis, PBIS Missouri

39 Common Trends From Illinois PBIS Network adopted in Charleston, SC 0 Moving from reactive to preventative 0 Time efficient and least restrictive 0 Moving from Tier 1 to leading Tier 2/3 0 Facilitating Tier 3 Interventions 0 Serving students needs vs. “labeled” populations 0 Systems approach 0 Intervention vs. Referral to Professional

40 What will it take?  To build the collaboration across school employed and community employed partners 0 Knowledge gaps 0 Skill gaps 0 Relationship gaps  To help school leaders build and sustain collaborative programs

41 Contact Information Sheri Luecking, Illinois PBIS Network Sheri.luecking@pbisillinois.org Bob Stevens, Ph.D. Charleston, SC Robert_Stevens@charleston.k12.sc.us


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