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Presented by : CCCW Behavior Support Oversight Committee (BSOC)

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1 Presented by : CCCW Behavior Support Oversight Committee (BSOC)

2  Steps for effective Positive Behavior Support Planning.  Data collection.  Identifying the function of a behavior.  Putting a plan together.  Reviewing the plan.

3  Overall goal is to support members through a positive environment and positive daily interactions that supports member’s strengths and abilities.  We do this through pro-active approaches and strategic responsive approaches.  A positive behavior support plan documents and lays out these approaches for individuals working with the member.

4 1. Identify and define the target behaviors. 2. Collect data around the target behavior. 3. Identify function of the target behavior. 4. Develop a plan to support the target behavior. 5. Train staff and collect data. 6. Review and make changes to the plan.

5  Does the behavior lead to significant negative outcomes for the individual?  Health and safety risk  Loss of independence  Decrease in quality of life  Barrier to an outcome

6  Objective  Clear  Simple  Concise  Everyone is in agreement

7  Aggression  Grabbing and/or pinching a staff or peer.  Obsessing over an item  Five or more requests for a can of soda after being verbally redirected within a fifteen minute timeframe  Self-injurious behavior  Example??

8  Simple is better  Trying to identify the ABC components.  Antecedents (what happen before the behavior)  Behavior (the defined target behavior)  Consequence (event that happened right after the behavior, what seemed to reinforce?)  The intent is to try and get some baseline data to allow you to make an educated guess on the function of the behavior.

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10  What are the common Antecedents?  What setting does the behavior occur most often?  With whom did the behavior occur most often with?  Is there a specific time during the day? Does it occur during transition?  Anything unique about the environment where the behavior occurred most often?  What were the immediate consequence, reinforcements after the behavior?

11  This is key to putting the correct supports in place.  The wrong intervention may actually become counter productive and reinforce the unwanted behavior.  Lots of good tools out there.

12  Medical  Disability/Mental illness based  Attention seeking  Maladaptive coping skills  Task avoidance  Environmental (sensory)  Communication barriers  Any others???

13  ALWAYS RULE OUT MEDICAL FIRST!!!  Modifying the environment.  Creating alternatives to desired behaviors.  Tactical ignoring of the behavior.  Positive reinforcement for adaptive behavior.  Changing expectations and demands.  Teaching of adaptive, and coping skills.  Any others?

14  Stay away from interventions that are punitive in nature where change is based on fear or loss of individual rights/services.  These type of interventions do not support the root cause of the behavior.

15  Make sure everyone has buy-in to the plan.  Make sure staff are trained on the interventions within the plan.  Try to have consistent overlap within environments if there are multiple providers and settings involved.  Consistency will take out the variable of inconsistency.

16  Ongoing data collection is essential to measuring the success of supports in place and allows you to continue to evaluate the plan and make tweaks along the way.  Data collection should be formatted to be simple and allow consistency within all staff observation.  Can and should be similar to the method that was used to identify function.

17  How do you know if things are getting better or worse?  Plot your data  Look for patterns  Take the time to understand the information.  Meet with the team to discuss the next steps.

18  Look to see if the interventions should be paired with other rewards to increase effectiveness.  Did the intervention reduce the target behavior? If not, what else could we consider?  Did we guess wrong on the function or has the function changed?

19  Positive Behavior Support Plans are living and breathing plans.  Things in life change.  You need to continually collect and review data.  And make changes as appropriate.

20 “Situational variables can exert powerful influences over human behavior, more so that we recognize or acknowledge.” Philip Zimbardo Philip Zimbardo


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