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Wednesday, September 08, 2010
Idaho Training Initiatives»Positive Behavioral Supports
   
National PBS Minimize

You may view the U.S. Office of Special Education Program's Positive Behavioral Supports website at:
http://www.pbis.org/main.htm

It provides items such as a blueprint for School-wide PBS, evaluation tools for System-wide PBS, Self Assessment Blueprints, and Effective Behavior Strategy Self Assessment Survey.

You may view the U.S. Office of Special Education Program's Positive Behavioral Supports website at:
http://www.pbis.org/main.htm

It provides items such as a blueprint for School-wide PBS, evaluation tools for System-wide PBS, Self Assessment Blueprints, and Effective Behavior Strategy Self Assessment Survey.

Idaho Training Initiatives

Educational Supports for Children with Autism is an online course that introduces the Autism Supports model to school teams. Click here to learn more.

Positive Behavioral Supports

Positive Behavioral Supports (PBS) is an approach to working with students who have challenging behaviors. Positive behavioral supports is an individualized, ongoing process with three key components: preventing, teaching, and reacting. Prevention means that we change circumstances that tend to lead to challenging behaviors. Teaching means that we replace challenging behaviors with new skills. Reacting means that we plan consistent, proactive responses to challenging behaviors.

How is PBS implemented?

The Positive Behavioral Supports process can be used to develop an individualized behavioral intervention plan for children, adolescents, or adults who display problem behaviors. A team approach to problem solving is utilized to successfully address behaviors ranging from noncompliance to aggression to self-injury. The team approach lends support to the primary teacher, promotes creative problem solving through brainstorming, allows for an even distribution of the work load in the development of the plan, and assures consistency of responses to the challenging behavior when it occurs. Our experience indicates that it is best to have a school counselor or psychologist facilitate the process because of time constraints facing classroom teachers.

What is the PBS model?

The Positive Behavioral Supports model integrates behavioral, analytic, and humanistic theories and focuses on identifying the function of challenging behaviors. Research suggests that effective PBS strategies identify the communicative intents or motivation for behavior, teach alternative ways to communicate, identify environmental events or medical circumstances that elicit troublesome behavior, modify events and circumstances to better meet individual needs, provide access to a greater number of preferred choices throughout an individual's day, and encourage the development of adaptive behaviors through differential reinforcements strategies.

  • Do you work with students or other individuals who have challenging behaviors?
  • Would you like to learn and use a process for changing these behaviors?
  • Are you interested in learning about such a process?

For more information, contact:

Positive Behavioral Support Project
http://www.idahocdhd.org/dnn/pbs

Barbara Broyles
Telephone: 208-885- 3018
Email: bbroyles@uidaho.edu

 

Educational Supports for Children with Autism is an online course that introduces the Autism Supports model to school teams. Click here to learn more.

Positive Behavioral Supports

Positive Behavioral Supports (PBS) is an approach to working with students who have challenging behaviors. Positive behavioral supports is an individualized, ongoing process with three key components: preventing, teaching, and reacting. Prevention means that we change circumstances that tend to lead to challenging behaviors. Teaching means that we replace challenging behaviors with new skills. Reacting means that we plan consistent, proactive responses to challenging behaviors.

How is PBS implemented?

The Positive Behavioral Supports process can be used to develop an individualized behavioral intervention plan for children, adolescents, or adults who display problem behaviors. A team approach to problem solving is utilized to successfully address behaviors ranging from noncompliance to aggression to self-injury. The team approach lends support to the primary teacher, promotes creative problem solving through brainstorming, allows for an even distribution of the work load in the development of the plan, and assures consistency of responses to the challenging behavior when it occurs. Our experience indicates that it is best to have a school counselor or psychologist facilitate the process because of time constraints facing classroom teachers.

What is the PBS model?

The Positive Behavioral Supports model integrates behavioral, analytic, and humanistic theories and focuses on identifying the function of challenging behaviors. Research suggests that effective PBS strategies identify the communicative intents or motivation for behavior, teach alternative ways to communicate, identify environmental events or medical circumstances that elicit troublesome behavior, modify events and circumstances to better meet individual needs, provide access to a greater number of preferred choices throughout an individual's day, and encourage the development of adaptive behaviors through differential reinforcements strategies.

  • Do you work with students or other individuals who have challenging behaviors?
  • Would you like to learn and use a process for changing these behaviors?
  • Are you interested in learning about such a process?

For more information, contact:

Positive Behavioral Support Project
http://www.idahocdhd.org/dnn/pbs

Barbara Broyles
Telephone: 208-885- 3018
Email: bbroyles@uidaho.edu

 

 

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