Positive Behavior Interventions And Supports (PBIS)

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Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports (PBIS) is a framework that many schools in the United States use to promote positive behavior by their students and determine how to respond to misbehavior. Often used interchangeably with School-Wide Positive Behavior Supports, or SWPBS, the structure of PBIS is based on a proactive, positive approach in which the goal is to teach positive behaviors and prevent undesirable or dangerous behaviors (OSEP Technical Assistance Center on Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports, 2017). The PBIS framework strives to enhance student behavior by teaching constructive practices.
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Driven by a need for effective interventions for students with behavior …show more content…

Intervention at this level typically takes the form of small groups of ten or more students who engage in activities focused on areas such as social skill building opportunities (OSEP Technical Assistance Center on Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports, 2017). An important facet of tier 2 support identified by OSEP Technical Assistance Center on Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (2017) is that the interventions can be implemented by typical school staff members with a high rate of success (What is Tier 2 Support, para. 2). This suggests that a school’s successful PBIS framework is not dependent upon staff member’s specialized education in behavioral analysis, but that broad training on the principles of PBIS as well as an understanding of the school’s specific procedures and rules, are adequate to drive positive …show more content…

However, once students step outside the classroom, inconsistencies in rules, behavior management, and routines can cause confusion and undermine the efforts of the classroom teacher. Implementation of a formal PBIS framework helps to align practices throughout a school, and provides students with a setting that conveys consistency in its message, routines, procedures and expectations. The impact of a combination of effective classroom management and how the school operates, defines a student’s perception of the school (Marzano, Marzano, & Pickering, 2003). When a student is held to a standard inside the classroom, yet outside the classroom can exhibit contradictory behavior, the message received by the student is one of tolerance of inappropriate behavior. This can quickly create elevated frustration by the classroom teacher, other staff members and

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