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Engaging Disengaged Youth: PBIS and Check and Connect A Multi-Tiered Approach to Dropout Prevention 2010 JoAnne M. Malloy, Project Director Jonathon Drake,

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Presentation on theme: "Engaging Disengaged Youth: PBIS and Check and Connect A Multi-Tiered Approach to Dropout Prevention 2010 JoAnne M. Malloy, Project Director Jonathon Drake,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Engaging Disengaged Youth: PBIS and Check and Connect A Multi-Tiered Approach to Dropout Prevention 2010 JoAnne M. Malloy, Project Director Jonathon Drake, Project Trainer Institute on Disability University of New Hampshire 1

2 Drop Outs Characteristics: Academic failure (Allensworth & Easton, 2005; Balfanz, & Herzog, 2005), Problem behavior (e.g. disruption, disrespect, etc.) (Sweeten, 2006; Tobin & Sugai, 1999), History of grade retention (Allensworth et al, 2005), Poor teacher relationships (Barber & Olson, 1997) Low attendance (Balfanz, & Herzog, 2005; Jerald, 2006; Neild & Balfanz, 2006), and Diagnosed with a disability (NTLS-2, ; Wagner, Newman, Cameto, Levine, Garza, 2006). 2

3 School Retention Literature Students stay in school based upon: Adult feedback or interaction (Croninger & Lee, 2001; Dynarski, 2001; Fashola & Slavin, 1998; Hayward & Tallmadge, 1995; Kerr & Legters; Lee & Burkham, 2003; McPartland, 1994; Schargle & Smink, 2001; Sinclair, Christenson, Lehr, & Anderson, 2003) Increased home / school connection (Dynarski, 2001; Fashol & Slavin, 1998; Sinclair, Christenson, Lehr, & Anderson, 2003; Thurlow, Christenson, Sinclair, Evelo, & Thornton, 1995) 3

4 School Retention Literature Increased structure and predictability (Dynarski, 2000; Fashola and Slavin, 1998; Hayward and Tallmadge, 1995; Lee and Burkham, 2003; Sinclair, Christenson, Lehr, and Anderson, 2003) Both academic and social supports (Dynarski, 2001; Fashol & Slavin, 1998; Hayward & Tallmadge, 1995; Kemple, Herlihy, & Smith, 2005; McPartland, 1994; Schargle & Smink, 2001; Thurlow, Christenson, Sinclair, Evelo, & Thornton, 1995). 4

5 Student engagement has emerged as the bottom line in preventing dropout Dropping out is a process of disengagement Keys to engaging students early on –Enter school ready to learn/early intervention Contextual keys to engaging students –Providing effective instruction – evidence based, best practice –Creating cultural match/relevance – extend to include strategies that are appropriate to student background and culture (Alexander, Entwisle & Kabbani, 2001; Christenson, Sinclair, Lehr & Hurley, 2000; Cotton & Conklin, 2001; Cleary & Peacock, 1998; Finn, 1993; Payne, 2005) 5

6 Relevance: Student Engagement Relating school to personal goals, strengths and needs. “Career development in its broadest perspective is defined as a lifelong process by which an individual defines and refines life and work roles. It includes awareness of individual interests, skills, attitudes, talents, and abilities, particularly as they change and develop during the educational experience.” (K-12 Career Development Curriculum Framework, NH DOE, 2006, p. 4) 6

7 High School Reform Rigor= Academics, Competencies Relevance= Career Development/Student Engagement Relationships = Social, Emotional (PBIS) (Gates Foundation) 7

8 School as a Risk Factor Osher, Dwyer, and Jackson (2004) Alienation Academic Frustration Chaotic Transitions Negative Relationships with Adults and Peers Teasing, Bullying, Gangs Segregation with Antisocial Peers School-driven Mobility Harsh Discipline; Suspension, Expulsion, Push Out/Drop Out 8

9 School as a Protective Factor Osher, Dwyer, and Jackson (2004) Connection Academic Success Supported Transitions Positive Relationships with Adults and Peers Caring Interactions Interaction with Pro-social peers Stability Positive approaches to disciplinary infractions 9

10 PBIS is a comprehensive 3-tiered evidence-based systems approach to schoolwide discipline that can efficiently and effectively improve social, behavioral, and academic outcomes through the use positive, preventative, and function-based behavior support practices within the context of collaborative teaming and data-based decision- making. 10 Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports Defined Muscott & Mann (2006)

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12 New Hampshire’s APEX Dropout Prevention Model To address school-based systems/climate issues: –Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS) (Bohanon, et. al., 2004; Sugai & Horner, 1999) –Student Leadership Development To address issues for students most at-risk: –Rehabilitation for Empowerment, Natural supports, Education and Work (RENEW) (Eber, Nelson & Miles, 1997; Cheney, Malloy & Hagner, 1998; Bullis & Cheney, 1999) –8 th to 9 th grade transition system and practices 12

13 13 Primary Prevention: School-/Classroom- Wide Systems for All Students, Staff, & Settings Secondary Prevention: Specialized Group Systems for Students with At-Risk Behavior Tertiary Prevention: RENEW Intervention ~80% of Students ~15% ~5% APEX PBIS MODEL

14 APEX II Dropout Rates 14

15 Tier 3 (Tertiary, or Intensive Services) in High Schools: The RENEW Model Rehabilitation, Empowerment, Natural supports, Education and Work (RENEW), an intensive individualized school- to- career service for the most at risk students Created in NH in 1996, has been provided to over 500 youth with emotional or behavioral disorders in NH Primary Tier 3 or Intensive level intervention for high school students Positive results for youth who typically have very poor post- school outcomes (Eber, Nelson & Miles, 1997; Cheney, Malloy & Hagner, 1998; Malloy, Drake, Abate & Cormier, 2010) “manualized” intervention with tools and fidelity instrument 15

16 RENEW Mentor/Teacher : “we try to help or assist other people we would have helped ourselves, so that’s probably one my biggest things …the growth that I have achieved …what I could be doing as… a better teacher” “…now I realize that even though it’s a reading lesson …actually (it) would be a brick you add to this wall or to this building --- that’s a that’s a very nice feeling you know --- small things- you know do (make) a big difference” 16

17 Check & Connect is a… Model of student engagement that falls within the mentoring strategy area Targeted or selected intervention typically used with youth who are showing signs of disengaging from school 17

18 Origins of Check & Connect Partnership between the University of Minnesota and Minneapolis Public Schools OSEP funded grant to develop and field test dropout prevention strategies for middle school youth with disabilities Research and Development Team: S. Christenson, D. Evelo, C. Hurley, C. Kaibel, C. Lehr, M. Sinclair, M. Thurlow 18

19 Conceptual Underpinnings A focus on influencing alterable variables associated with early school withdrawal McPartland’s (1994) analysis of key components to increase the holding power of schools and engage students Research on resilience 19

20 Program Description Check & Connect Components Check – to systematically assess students’ connections to school –Tardiness –Absenteeism –Behavior –Out-of school suspension –Academic performance 20

21 Program Description Role of the “Mentor” or “Monitor” Neutral person responsible for helping student stay connected in school Cross between a mentor, advocate and case manager Primary goal is to keep education a salient issue for the students, family members, and their teachers 21

22 Program Description Key Features of the Program –Relationship building –Routine monitoring of alterable variables –Individualized and timely interventions –Long-term commitment –Persistence Plus –Problem solving and capacity building –Affiliation with school and learning 22

23 Evidence: Experimental Studies with Secondary Level Students Original Study: Middle School and Transition to High School (1992-1995) 7th grade urban high school youth with learning and emotional behavioral disabilities (n = 94 treatment and control). Intervention occurred in grades 7-9. Students who received C&C were –More likely to be enrolled in school –More likely to persist in school each year –More likely to be on track to graduate (e.g., credit accrual) 23

24 Evidence: Experimental Studies with Secondary Level Students Persistence Plus (1996-2001) Two cohorts of 9 th grade urban high school youth (LD and/or EBD). Intervention occurred in grades 9-12 for students in 7 high schools (n = 150 treatment and control). Students who received C&C were –Less likely to drop out –More likely to persist in school each year –More likely to be on track to graduate (credit accrual) –More likely to have an IEP written during high school, transition goals, parents attend, and their preferences reflected in the IEP –More likely to have completed at the end of five years 24

25 Additional Evidence & Replications School Success (1996-2002) truancy prevention initiative/chronically truant youth/ ages 11 –16, across 10 districts/ referred through the judicial system /over 360 students served Project ELSE (1999-2002) preventive intervention for kindergarten children at-risk for reading disabilities (C&C with literacy support) Early Truancy Prevention (1997 to 2002) metro-ring school districts (30-40% participation in free/reduced lunch)/served children who are absent and/or tardy to school on average 12% or more prior to referral/over 360 students grades K-6 referred Scaling Up for Success (2002 –present) foundation grant for dropout prevention with C&C component. Referrals primarily based on attendance 25

26 “Resiliency does not come from some rare or special qualities, but from everyday magic of ordinary … human resources in … children, in their families and relationships, and in their communities.” (Masten, 2001, p. 235) 26

27 Contact Information McKenzie Harrington Consultant, NH Department of Education and Director, APEX III mharrington@ed.state.nh.us http://iod.unh.edu JoAnne M. Malloy, MSW Project Director Institute on Disability, UCED University of New Hampshire JoAnne.Malloy@unh.edu Jonathon Drake, Project Trainer Institute on Disability, UCED University of New Hampshire Jonathon.Drake@unh.edu 27


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