Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Securing Sustainable Funding, Political Support, & Visibility Barbara Sims & George Sugai OSEP Center on PBIS University of Connecticut October 30, 2008.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Securing Sustainable Funding, Political Support, & Visibility Barbara Sims & George Sugai OSEP Center on PBIS University of Connecticut October 30, 2008."— Presentation transcript:

1 Securing Sustainable Funding, Political Support, & Visibility Barbara Sims & George Sugai OSEP Center on PBIS University of Connecticut October 30, 2008 www.pbis.org www.cber.org www.swis.org George.sugai@uconn.edu

2 Problem Statement “We give schools strategies & systems for developing positive, effective, achieving, & caring school & classroom environments, but implementation is not accurate, consistent, or durable. Schools need more than training & coaching.”

3 PURPOSE Review rationale & strategies for securing sustainable funding, political support, & visibility in support of SWPBS implementation for EVERYONE in school. George: Basics & Features Barb: Examples & Guidelines All: Questions & Discussion

4 Sustainability & Scaling

5 Pre Post

6 EXPONENTIAL GROWTH

7 ACCURATELY SUSTAINED & SCALED IMPLEMENTATION

8 Pre-Post SETs by Region SCALED FIDELITY OF IMPLEMENTATION

9 PBIS Schools Over Ten Years: Trained & Partially or Fully Implementing

10

11 # IL PBIS Schools & # External Coaches June 30, 2008

12 # IL PBIS Schools & # Ext. & Int. Coaches June 30, 2008

13 Sustaining & Scaling Change Know your basics Adopt & adapt evidence-based practices Monitor implementation fidelity Give priority to what matters Keep data regular, easy, & relevant Know your outcomes Integrate for efficiency & build durable capacity Celebrate successes & improvement Establish sustainable funding, visibility, & political support

14 IMPLEMENTATION PHASES Need, Agreements, Adoption, & Outcomes Local Demonstration w/ Fidelity Sustained Capacity, Elaboration, & Replication 4. Systems Adoption, Scaling, & Continuous Regeneration 2. 3. 1.

15 Valued Outcomes Continuous Self-Assessment Practice Implementation Effective Practices Relevance Priority Efficacy Fidelity CONTINUOUS REGNERATION FOR SUSTAINABLE IMPLEMENTATION & DURABLE RESULTS

16 SYSTEMS PRACTICES DATA Supporting Staff Behavior Supporting Student Behavior OUTCOMES Supporting Social Competence & Academic Achievement Supporting Decision Making Integrated Elements

17 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% CONTINUUM OF SCHOOL-WIDE INSTRUCTIONAL & POSITIVE BEHAVIOR SUPPORT ALL SOME FEW

18 Leadership Team Active Coordination Funding Visibility Political Support Training Coaching Evaluation Local School Teams/Demonstrations PBS Systems Implementation Logic

19 Leadership Team Active Coordination FUNCTIONS Implementation support Data-based action plan Coordination Capacity building Policy & funding Communications Training capacity Exemplars Evaluation MEMBERS Coordinator Representation Behavioral capacity Agency Parent/family Leadership Student Etc

20 TrainingCoachingEvaluation TrainingCoachingEvaluation Continuous Embedded Team-coordinated Data-based Local expertise Action plan linked Etc…. Continuous Function oriented Local support Data-based Preventive Positive Competent Etc…. Continuous Question-based Academic & social Efficient Team-coordinated Public Etc….

21 Local School Teams/Demonstrations Fidelity implementation >80% of staff >80% of students Administrator leadership Team-based Data driven Contextually relevant Teaching focused Integrated initiatives Positively oriented Etc…..

22 Funding Visibility Political Support General fund 3 years of support Integrated Data-based Dedicated FTE Etc…. Demos & research Multiple formats Multiple audiences Acknow. Others Evidence Advocacy Action plan & Eval Etc…. Continuous Top 3 priorities Quarterly/annually Policy Need & benefits Participation Integ. Initiatives Evidence Etc….

23 EXAMPLES & GUIDEINES

24 ILLINOIS 2007-2008 2,378,446 students 4,262 schools 873 districts 950 PBIS schools

25 Illinois Autism Training and Technical Assistance Project An LRE Initiative of the Illinois State Board of Education and Partner in the Illinois Statewide Technical Assistance Center TOTAL Transition Outreach Training for Adult Living

26 PBIS ISTAC Parents IATTAPTOTAL REACH CHOICES ISRC Evaluation Parent Consultant Transition Consultant

27 State Leadership Team History Began in 2005 State Superintendent State Director of Special Education Rob Horner Leadership Team Self Assessment Workgroups – Funding, Visibility, Political Support

28 Legislators –U.S. –State State Agencies –Mental Health –DCFS –Juvenile Justice –ICMHP Unions Parents Public Schools –Superintendents –Special Ed Directors Private Schools Community Providers Universities ISTAC Directors Project Staff Membership

29 Current Workgroups Related Initiatives School/Family/Community Partnerships Tertiary/Interagency Demonstrations Fiscal Political Support/Visibility

30 RELATED INITIATIVES Integration with ISTAC projects, SEL programs, statewide RtI implementation –Shared website –Training –Resource Libraries Integrated coaches network SISEP

31 SCHOOL/FAMILY/COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS ISTAC Family Workgroup –Shared principles –Shared trainings Hierarchy of family involvement

32 TERTIARY/INTERAGENCY IL Children’s Mental Health Partnership School Based Mental Health sites Local Area Networks

33 DEMONSTRATIONS Phases of Implementation Recognition Process –Emerging –Implementing –Fully Implementing

34 FISCAL Current Funding –IDEA Part B funds –State GRF funds –Federal Grants Tertiary Demonstration High School/Character Education “Turbo Tax” template for district fiscal planning

35 POLITICAL SUPPORT/VISIBILITY Database of PBIS schools by legislative district Letters to legislators Testimony before General Assembly Visits to IL PBIS schools by –5 state legislators –1 US Representative –Asst. Secretary for OSERS

36 Congressional Briefing in Washington, D.C. Positive Behavior for Effective Schools Act (H.R. 3407) Dignity in Schools Newsletters Preparation for news articles –20 newspaper articles Recognition Process


Download ppt "Securing Sustainable Funding, Political Support, & Visibility Barbara Sims & George Sugai OSEP Center on PBIS University of Connecticut October 30, 2008."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google