Building Systems at the Tier 3/Tertiary Level
Sheri Luecking, IL PBIS Network
Ami Flammini, IL PBIS Network
Sara Teeter, Springfield Public Schools
Abbey Wacaser, Springfield Public Schools
Perspectives
• Federal
• State
• District
• Building
• Student and Family
Kansas Illinois ProjectTertiary Grant
• 4 year federal grant
• 6 large districts: Waukegan, Valley View, East Aurora, Springfield, Alton, Rock Island
• Required grant components– District leadership team that meets quarterly– ½ time Tertiary Coach– Lots of training… first tier 3, back up to build
tier 2– Build the continuum of interventions
Results from K-I project• Wrap facilitators trained with many opportunities
for technical assistance– Through Technical Assistance days– Through ongoing coaching– Through ongoing TA provided in district– Through mentoring– And now through our tertiary learning community
• Secondary Interventions developed and refined• Students benefit from a continuum of
interventions (a NEW triangle)• Wraparound becomes part of the system in a
district• The importance of a “system” team
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
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
IndividualizedSystems for Students
with High-Risk Behavior
~80% of Students
~15%
~5%
SCHOOL-WIDE POSITIVE BEHAVIOR
SUPPORT
SYST
EMS
PRACTICES
DATASupportingStaff Behavior
SupportingDecisionMaking
SupportingStudent Behavior
PositiveBehaviorSupport OUTCOMES
Social Competence &Academic Achievement ٭
Adapted from “What is a systems Approach in school-wide PBS?”OSEP Technical Assistance onPositive Behavioral Interventions andSupports. Accessed at http://www.Pbis.org/schoolwide.htm
PRACTICES
SupportingStaff Behavior
SupportingDecisionMaking
SupportingStudent Behavior
PositiveBehaviorSupport OUTCOMES
Social Competence &Academic Achievement ٭
Adapted from“ What is a systemsApproach in school-?wide PBS”OSEP Technical Assistance onPositive Behavioral Interventions and Supports. Accessed athttp://www. Pbis.org/schoolwide.htmpractices
•3 tiers of interventions
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 2009Adapted from T. Scott, 2004
Tier 2/Secondary
Tier 3/Tertiary
Inte
rven
tio
nAssessm
en
t
Deciding Which Tertiary Level Intervention is Most Appropriate
Complex FBA/BIP (T200):• Brief FBA/BIP was not
successful
AND
• NONE of Wraparound criteria are present
Wraparound (T300+):• Youth with multiple needs
across home, school, community & life domains
• Youth at-risk for change of placement
• The adults in youth’s life are not effectively engaged in comprehensive planning (i.e. adults not getting along well)
PRACTICES
SupportingStaff Behavior
SupportingDecisionMaking
SupportingStudent Behavior
PositiveBehaviorSupport OUTCOMES
Social Competence &Academic Achievement ٭
Adapted from“ What is a systemsApproach in school-?wide PBS”OSEP Technical Assistance onPositive Behavioral Interventions and Supports. Accessed athttp://www. Pbis.org/schoolwide.htm
DATA•Outcome•process
Data-Based Decision-Making
Student outcome data is used:– To identify youth in need of support and to
identify appropriate intervention– For on-going progress-monitoring of response
to intervention– To exit or transition youth off of interventions
Intervention integrity or process data is used:– To monitor the effectiveness of the intervention
itself– To make decisions regarding the continuum/
menu of interventions/supports
Data-Based Decision-Making
Intervention integrity or process data is used:– To monitor the effectiveness of the intervention
itself– To make decisions regarding the
continuum/menu of interventions/supports
• This data is monitored by the Secondary Systems Team
Data-Based Decision-Making
Student outcome data is used :a) To identify youth in need of support and to
identify appropriate intervention
b) For on-going progress-monitoring of response to intervention
c) To transition youth out of interventions at the appropriate time
Data Used to Identify Youth in Need of Tertiary Support
• Universal Data by Student (ODR’s, # of absences, # of ISS or OSS)
• Universal Screening Data – SSBD, etc.• Request by Family Member, Teacher or Student
• Recommended referral to Tertiary Systems Team from Secondary Problem Solving team after Brief FBA/BIP was not successful
PRACTICES
SupportingStaff Behavior
SupportingDecisionMaking
SupportingStudent Behavior
PositiveBehaviorSupport OUTCOMES
Social Competence &Academic Achievement ٭
Adapted from“ What is a systemsApproach in school-?wide PBS”OSEP Technical Assistance onPositive Behavioral Interventions and Supports. Accessed athttp://www. Pbis.org/schoolwide.htm
SYSTEMS
•TEAMING
3-Tiered System of Support
Necessary Conversations (Teams)
CICO
SAIG
Group w. individual
feature
Complex
FBA/BIP
Problem Solving Team
Tertiary Systems Team
Brief
FBA/BIP
Brief FBA/BIP
WRAP
Secondary Systems Team
Plans SW & Class-wide supports
Uses Process data; determines overall
intervention effectiveness
Standing team; uses FBA/BIP process for one youth at a time
Uses Process data; determines overall
intervention effectiveness
Sept. 1, 2009
UniversalTeam
Universal Support
Teaming at Tier Three
Teaming at Tier 3
• Tertiary Systems Planning ‘conversation’– Monitors effectiveness of Complex FBA/BIP &
Wraparound supports– Review data in aggregate to make decisions on
improvements to the interventions themselves– Students are NOT discussed
• Individual Student Teams– FBA/BIP Team per student– Wraparound Team per student
Student-Specific Teams
• Wraparound Team:– Family of child and all relevant stakeholders invited by
family. Wrap facilitators are trained to effectively engage families so that they will see that these teams are created by and for the family, and therefore will want to have a team and actively participate. School staff involved are informed that their presence is uniquely important for this youth and invited to participate.
• Individual Youth FBA/BIP Team: – Like the wraparound team, this team is uniquely
created for each individual child in need of comprehensive planning and the families are critical members of the team. All relevant individuals/staff are invited.
Tertiary Systems Team Roles• Team Leader: responsible for agenda &
overall facilitation
• Intervention facilitators (Wrap,FBA/BIP) report out on aggregate student data from interventions they facilitate (ex. “10 youth w/ Wrap plans & 6 are responding”)
• Action Plan Recorder: a.k.a. note taker
• Time Keeper: help team to set time limits and stay within allotted time for each agenda item
Tertiary Systems Planning Team Meeting Agenda
• For Complex FBA/BIP and Wraparound:• # of youth in interventions (record on TT)?
– Number of youth responding (record on TT)?
* Consider Wrap OR use of WIT for all youth not responding
– Number of new youth potentially entering intervention?
• If less than 70% of youth are responding to any of the interventions, the Tertiary Systems Team should review the integrity of the intervention and make adjustments as needed.
Springfield Public Schools District #186
• District #186 has been a Tertiary Site for 4 years
• District provides ongoing tertiary training and tertiary technical support with the help of the Illinois PBIS network.
• Springfield currently has 17 schools that are tertiary sites.
A real school systems & data example
Graham Elementary & AbbeyPopulation: 312
Poverty level: 89%
Ethnicity breakdown: 42% African American, 36% Caucasian, 16% Multi-Racial, 3% Hispanic, 1% Asian, and 1% American Indian
Student Support Leader (role): at Graham 3 days a week and provide Lion’s Quest instruction in sixteen classrooms a week (thirty minutes per class); secondary systems facilitator; cico coordinator; wrap facilitator;
Graham Elementary Tertiary Systems Team
• Team membership & Roles
•Meeting logistics:– Meeting Time– Location of meeting– Frequency of team meetings
Graham’s Tertiary Data Decision RulesHow Do they get in?
Data-based decision rules for identification:
1) Data source #1: Daily progress reports
Rule for Inclusion in Intervention: Averaging less than 80%
Time frame: After 12 weeks of simple secondary interventions (6 weeks of CICO plus 6 weeks of another secondary intervention) and 4
weeks of a simple FBA
2) Data source #2: Risk of change of placement
Rule for Inclusion in Intervention: ____________________
Time frame: ______________
3) Data source #3: More than 1 psychiatric hospitalization in school year
Rule for Inclusion in Intervention: ____________________
Time frame: ____________________
** Teacher Request for Assistance enters youth (circle one): Yes No
** Referral from Problem Solving Team enters youth (circle one): Yes No
How are they monitored2. What additional data sources will be used to monitor student progress?
a. Additional data source: SIMEO tools (RD-T, EI-T & HSC-T)
4. What is the timeframe for a Wraparound (how long will a student receive support & mtgs. be held before relevant data is reviewed for progress)?
The data will be looked at typically at each meeting, however SIMEO data will be entered anywhere from every 30-90 days. Typically it is around 60 days.
5. How often is SIMEO data collected (ex. time 2 at four weeks)?
SIMEO data is collected anywhere from every 30-90 days
How do they get out?7. How will you know if students are responding to the support (i.e. what
SIMEO items will be the focus for progress monitoring? What defines adequate progress?)
Data-based decision rule for defining “response”:
_The student will be averaging at least 80% on daily progress report, SIMEO will show areas of need and strengths as well as teacher, parent and child report_________
A Real Wrap Around Story
WRAPAROUND STARTED SECOND SEMESTER OF HIS 4TH GRADE YEAR
BenGraham Elementary
The beginning…
• Ben started CICO in September of 2009. He was automatically entered into the intervention when he met the building
criteria of having two, level two office discipline referrals.
• Behaviors of concern included: disobeying directions, talking out, disrupting others learning, off task, hitting
other students, arguing with teacher and students, name calling, cursing to
peers and adults.
• He averaged a 78% after 6 weeks.
And then…
•a reverse request was given to the teacher where she was asked to identify the next secondary intervention (continued check-in-check-out, social-academic instructional groups, check-in-check-out with individual features or mentoring).
•The teacher chose for Ben to receive a mentor.
•His mentor was chosen from the community partnership Graham elementary holds with a local church.
Moving forward
• In December, Ben began asking his mother if he could be admitted to the hospital so he “could get better”.
• He was experiencing anger, thoughts of hurting himself and he was physically aggressive with classmates and peers. He was verbalizing “he couldn’t control himself.”
• Ben had three prior psychiatric hospitalizations (before coming to graham elementary).
And then…• One of our criteria from the guiding questions is for the secondary
systems team to consider wrap around for a student who is at risk for change of placement.
• The secondary systems met and decided to contact mom re: starting a wrap around.
• Ben was at risk for an out of home placement due to behaviors at home (physical aggression with siblings and mom). He was also chosen due to continued office discipline referrals (30 for the year), out of school suspensions (3), and a CICO average of 76%.
The initial steps of wrap around…
• Abbey knew the parent from her presence in the building when Ben was experiencing difficulty.
• The building cico consent letter was sent to mom.
• Abbey contacted Ben’s mom, met with her to discuss the wraparound process and collect baseline simeo data. She also gathered data from the classroom teacher (ed tool).
The mother understood the process of family voice.
Ben and Mom initially chose the teacher and abbey. They also wanted an aunt who was unable to participate.
Mom was unable to identify other adults for the team due to frequent moves, difficulty in the neighborhood and a lack of involvement in the community.
After the first two meetings Ben asked for his mentor to join the child and family team.
FAMILY VOICE
Ben and Mom initially chose the teacher and abbey. They also wanted an aunt who was unable to participate.
Mom was unable to identify other adults for the team due to frequent moves, difficulty in the neighborhood and a lack of involvement in the community.
After the first two meetings Ben asked for his mentor to join the child and family team.
Challenges Ben and family were facing included…
• Single parent family; mom working evenings and overnights.
• No contact with biological father and no consistent male role models.
• ADHD diagnoses; inconsistent use of prescribed medication.
• Limited involvement in community & neighborhood• Limited social relationships at school & home• Stress of moving to different homes.
Initial SIMEO Data:
Strengths identified in the first meeting
Ben’s strengths
Ben: Smart, good at math, reading, writing and playing video gamesMom: Very organized, He’s creative and enjoys drawing cartoonsTeacher: writing and math;
Family Strengths:• Mom consistently takes Ben to his mental health appointments.(This might include getting the city bus for an hour ride, attending an hour
appointment, waiting another 30 minutes for the bus and then riding home and then bringing him to school).
• Mom is an active participant at the school, follows through with suggestions;
MISSION STATEMENT
The mission statement was developed by the team, Ben and his mom.
Ben wanted the mission statement to be
“I will yell less at home so that I can see more smiling from my family”.
The BIG NEED(what’s under the surface)
The Child & Family Team determined the Big Need using the SIMEO data and people’s
perceptions.
~
The need for positive adult and peer relationships at home, the
neighborhood and school
Initial steps as a result of the first child and family team meeting
Continue CICO
Continue mentoring
Continued MH services
Continue communication with Mental Health
TO DO
FBA to be completed by Abbey
Family YMCA (schedule present at LANS for funding)
C&F team meeting number 2• January 22• Abbey, Sara, Teacher, Ben• Discussed improved behavior at home and school
(not in physical fights at school, turning in his work, helping at home)
• Completed BIP using the FBA (help from the baseline SIMEO data)
• Planned next meeting-Ben wanted to invite mentor to the next meeting
Behavior Pathway completed at 2nd c&f team
Behavior Intervention Plan
3rd c&f team meeting (3/5/2010)
• Reviewed strengths
• Celebrated that he walked away from two fights at school
(he had never done that before)
• Used data to determine needs
Team looked at SIMEO Graphs. Ben led the discussion and interpreted and reported out on the improvements needed.
In Ben’s words, he “still had room to improve”. Ben pointed to areas on the SIMEO graphs where he said he still needed to get better.
TO DOTo address the need based on the SIMEO data (things to do/social activities),
Mom was going to bring electric bill so Abbey could continue to work on getting funding for the family YMCA membership pass.
Meeting scheduled for 4/23/2010
• Upon returning from spring break (spring break is three weeks-this is a year round school) mom was in the school office and reported she was evicted and needed to begin staying with extended family.
• Abbey and the parent educator are working to obtain transportation.
• The parent educator (homeless liason) is working with the family to obtain stable housing.
5th Meeting: 5/14/10
-The family may no longer stay at the home they have been out and needs housing-Parent educator and facilitator contact community resources and set up a hotel for 6 nights and then a shelter for the family-Mother has applied for SSI on 2 kids
6th Meeting: 5/28/10-Ben has been suspended 2 times so called “emergency meeting” to discuss -Refreshed the behavior pathway and how to use self-timeout-He has started turning in more school work -Ben will be attending a week long basketball camp this summer-YMCA pass can be utilized for summer-Will attend Lincoln Prairie summer enrichment program
7th Meeting: 8/10/10Beginning of 5th grade
-Ben had very successful summer. He was involved in basketball camp, vacation bible school, Lincoln Prairie Enrichment Program and the YMCA.-Family is still at a shelter and Ben has been helping with chores-Since returning to school, Ben has received 0 referrals and 0 suspensions.-Ben was hospitalized the end of July for suicidal ideations
…
Things we think will get you stuck…
TOP 10 IMMOBILIZERS• not staying at the table
• not having regular meetings
• not recognizing when we need to have “emergency” meetings
• not having family pick the team
• making plans as though they may never get medication again
• not matching intervention with parent/student strengths and needs
• not believing in the possibility of change
• believing kid will be placed in alternative without team
• wrap facilitator lacking interest in the work
• not using data to facilitate meetings/interventions
TIPS for SUCCESSFUL WRAP AROUND
• Stay at the table
• Have regular meetings
• Recognize when you need to have “emergency” meetings
• Have family pick the team
• Match interventions with parent/student strengths & needs
• Believe in the possibility of change
• Ensure the c&f team is involved in discussions if a placement change is being investigated
• Wrap facilitator who is passionate at best and at the least, is interested in the work
• Use data to facilitate meetings/interventions
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