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IDEAS Conference Epworth by the Sea June 3-6, 2014 Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor
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Page 1: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

IDEAS Conference

Epworth by the Sea

June 3-6, 2014

Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor

Page 2: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Amy C. Zaring

Autism Specialist

Fayette County School System

[email protected]

If I look familiar, I am President of the Georgia CEC, and you saw

me at the opening session!

Page 3: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Goals for this session

Understand the purpose of self-monitoring

and building independence

The broader picture of building and

supporting independence

The broader picture of building and

supporting self-monitoring

Teaching students to self-monitoring

Page 4: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

My goals -

Stay on topic!

Give you the rationale – convince you –

Give you the structure for implementation

Not to say a word that doesn’t fit with what

you do and can quickly understand how it fits

The resources (visuals, sheets, etc.) are out there!

Page 5: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

An independent learner -

someone who can manage his or

her own learning to achieve this

purpose and who is not wholly

dependent on a teacher

Page 6: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Successful, engaged learners -

responsible for their own learning:

self-regulate

able to define their own learning goals

evaluate their own achievement

energized by their learning

have the skills to work with others

Page 7: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Self-Monitoring

Self-monitoring empowers students!

Page 8: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Understands the impact of his “disability” on

his or her life

Appreciates his own strengths and special

skills

Understands his own learning style

Learns to compensate for deficits by using

classroom accommodations

A self-aware student . . .

Page 9: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

A student with self-control . . .

Learns to use anger management skills to

avoid emotional blow-ups

Uses peer mediation and conflict resolution

to solve problems in relationships

Works with his teachers and parents to use

problem solving strategies to resolve social,

emotional, and academic problems

Page 10: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Self-Regulation

refers specifically to the ability to

manage one's behavior in the face

of strong feelings, such as anger,

anxiety, disappointment, and fear

Page 11: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Self-Regulation

an important skill that most children

master by the time they enter school

Infants start gaining an understanding

of how to deal with those feelings as

they gain language and observe the

models presented by parents and

siblings.

Page 12: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Self-regulation is usually taught through

modeling, observation and natural

reinforcement (reinforcement that happens

through and in the environment.)

Many of our students are not "hard wired" to

observe and learn from the models provided

by parents, siblings, and the environment

Page 13: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

At the same time, so many of our students

have difficulty with language, so late

language development means that they do

not have socially appropriate ways to name

their emotions, to calm themselves down,

and to use their learned experience to

prepare for the next occasion they are called

on to self-regulate.

Page 14: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Students need direct instruction to teach

them how to calm themselves, to name their

emotions, (Emotional Literacy) and use

language to appropriately address and

resolve their concerns.

Page 15: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

What are the benefits of teaching students to self-manage?

Strategies can be differentiated

Less invasive than teacher-managed

strategies

Have higher levels of self-efficacy,

motivation, and school achievement

Use of appropriate help-seeking behaviors to

learn how to do things independently

Can use to manage a variety of behaviors

Page 16: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

From Tough Kids book

Advantage to teaching “tough kids” to evaluate

and self monitor – they then depend less on

the teacher for guidance, reinforcement, and

control.

Emphasis on this self-management approach is

relevant to teacher concerns regarding time

demands placed on them for implementing

strategies.

Page 17: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Other advantages!

Students become participants in their own

improved performance.

They perceive themselves as more

competent as well.

Self-management skills go where the student

goes!

Page 18: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Levels of Prompts

When teaching -

Hand-over-hand

Gesture/Model

Verbal

Visual

When cueing -

Visual

Verbal

Gesture/Model

Hand-over-hand

Page 19: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Visual reminders

If you say it three times in

one hour – create a visual

Page 20: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Change the paraprofessional mindset!

“You are there to help the student(s) become

an independent learner.”

Your best job performance – you don’t need to

be there!

Visual – visual – visual!!!

Ask a question first!

Page 21: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

The first thing you say . . . .

Should be a question –

What should you be doing?

Do you have a question?

What materials do you need to get out?

Page 22: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Make pullout/resource count!

Teach to the whole group – even if two

Walk away and expect students to keep

working

Provide the same visual supports you use in

other settings

Page 23: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

The Importance of Checklists:

Seven good reasons to use them

every day!

___________________________

Adapted from –

C. Faherty, Asheville TEACCH, 2003

Page 24: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Checklists provide visual information.

Checklists promote independence.

Checklists become a positive way to allow time for his or her special interests or reinforcement.

Checklists are primary tools for teaching flexibility.

Checklists are an important pre-vocational skill.

Written information creates a greater ease with which the individual with Autism can receive, understand, and accept information… helping him or her become more cooperative.

When checklists are used consistently they become a familiar tool to be used in unfamiliar and new activities.

Page 25: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Checklists – – Elementary – pictures or simple words:

routines, procedures, schedule, center order, etc.

– Middle – words – routines, procedures, reminders, class assignments, self-monitoring reminders, etc.

– High – words or blank – what to do this period, steps of a lab, parts of a long-term project, self-monitoring reminders, etc.

Page 26: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Things to consider when making checklists:

Size?

Attached somewhere or to something; or held in hand?

How many items?

Pictures, words, or a combination?

Should the students literally check off each item or just follow?

Can you insert reminders around the list – behavior cue, short story topic reminder, social cue?

Are there new things on the list that need to be taught?

Page 27: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

The “4” Greatest Things to Know

Make them a part of what you naturally do in your classroom every day!

Live Out Loud Do-Overs

TEACH the Routines, Rules, and Procedures Check-Ins

Page 28: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Live Out Loud

As a teacher, model your thought process OUT

LOUD whenever possible:

“I am feeling really stressed right now…..”

“I have this problem…..”

“Let me think what I need to do this….”

“We are going to the media center, but….”

Page 29: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Share the agenda/plans – state the obvious

– “live out loud”

Simplify the language – do not expect

students to “read between the lines” –

Page 30: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

“Do-Overs”

Would you like to do that over?

Why don’t you try that again?

Would you like to make a different choice?

Page 31: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

TEACH

TEACH students what you want them to do!

(We too often focus on what we don’t want

them to do!)

Learning the “rules” of a situation and/or

setting is a social skill – and learning how to

function successfully in that teacher’s

classroom is a part of social skills!

Page 32: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Rules

– Make the rules clear

– Post the rules

– Remind the student of the rule(s)

– Give a personal copy when necessary

– Highlight the most significant rules

Page 33: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Procedures/Routines

– Teach the procedures

– Role-play the procedures

– Give reminders about the procedures

– Provide student with a checklist of routines –

morning routine, packing up routine, getting ready

for lunch routine, at-the-locker routine

Page 34: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Check-ins!!!

Determine what “plan” or language will be used – a number or color scale – or student decided!

Have a visual thermometer.

Ask “Where are you?”

Student should respond.

Teacher’s response based on student!

Page 35: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Don’t forget positive behavior supports

– A reinforcement system – what is the goal?

Tokens

Point sheets

Self-monitoring sheets

Page 36: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Stop and Think!

teacher interrupts behavior

“Are you making a good choice or a bad choice?”

If student cannot correct problem, teacher may suggest ideas.

“Just do it!”

Use self-monitoring to determine how well handled

Page 37: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Social Autopsy

The social autopsy is a strategy to help

students with social cognition deficits learn to

interpret social and behavioral situations,

understand social mistakes, and take the

perspective of others.

Page 38: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

The autopsy . . . .

allows for analyzing a social skills problem by

dissecting social incidents. When a social error

occurs, the student works with an adult to

(a) identify the social error or mistake,

(b) determine who was harmed by the mistake,

(c) decide how to correct the mistake, and

(d) develop a plan to ensure that the mistake does

not reoccur.

Page 39: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

The Do’s and Don’t of Social Autopsies

Don’t make filling out an autopsy sheet a punishment.

Don’t do a social autopsy when the student is upset.

Don’t make writing a problem; the adult can do the writing.

Individually decide if a written autopsy should be done before discussion or during discussion.

Page 40: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Reinforce a student’s willingness to analyze and discuss his/her mistakes and take the necessary action.

Do not make the purpose of your autopsy to prove to the student that he or she did something wrong.

Try to use social autopsies for situations that do not require a consequence/punishment. If appropriate to do both, make sure the consequence is discussed separate of the autopsy and its results.

Page 41: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

References for Social Autopsies

Bieber, J. (1994). Learning disabilities and social skills with Richard LaVoie: Last one picked ... first one picked on [DVD]. Washington, DC: Public Broadcasting Service.

Lavoie, R. D. (1994). Learning disabilities and social skills with Richard Lavoie: Last one picked ... First one picked on [Video and Teacher’s Guide]. (Available from PBS Video, 1320 Braddock Place, Alexandria, VA 22314‐1698).

Lavoie, Richard (2002). “Social Competence and the Child with Learning Disabilities.” Retrieved from http://www.ricklavoie.come/articles.html

Lavoie, Rick (2005). “Social Skills Autopsies: A Strategy to Promote and Develop Social Competencies.” 2010 WETA. Retrieved from http://www.ldonline.org

Page 42: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

The Social Autopsy is now a very popular

strategy for use with students with social

cognition deficits. You can search the

internet and find many resources and

samples of social autopsy forms.

Page 43: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

The Incredible 5-Point Scale

Thermometer type activity with number scales

Breaks down common target behaviors and puts them in “thermometer format”

Then you create a visual -

Page 44: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Goal Setting

Goal setting can be taught in any class

Goal setting can be demonstrated and

monitored in any class

– This week our plan is . . . . .

– Did we reach our goals?

Page 45: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Goals for Younger Students

Have class goals

Have visual representations of the goals

Talk about the goals; why are they important

Point out when a goal is being worked on

– Great job! We are working on gathering out

materials.

Point out when a goal is met

– We are finished with our safety unit.

Page 46: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

For older students -

Set academic and personal goals

Have a plan for keeping up with the goals

– Develop an action plan for meeting the goal(s)

– Develop a plan for monitoring progress

Have students evaluate their progress

Alter the goals or the plan for meeting those

goals as needed

Carry the goal sheet around!

Page 47: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

What is our next goal?

We have talked about some broad

range strategies –

Let’s teach kids to self-monitor!

Page 48: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

For the whole Class

A cue such as a beep or tone

Each student marks on a form whether or not he is working on-task at that particular moment. Simply knowing the beep is coming and then being reinforced for working helps change the student’s behavior.

Intervals between beeps vary

more frequent as skill taught

gradually spaced further apart

ultimately phased out over time as students become

aware of being on task!

Page 49: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Self-monitoring for an individual

Discuss with student; student wants to try

Identify the behavior the student will monitor

Give student a self-monitoring check sheet

Show the student what to do; practice!

Student my wear ear plug to hear beep – or

a watch, etc.; marks whether or not working

on task

Page 50: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

For several behaviors

Initially, teacher rates the student on four to five

behaviors – giving a score of 0 to 5 at end of class

Examples: completed classwork; turned in

homework; followed instructions; comes to class on

time

Then the teacher talks with the student about the

behaviors and shows him how to rate

Student practices and compare ratings with the teacher

Gradually, teacher ratings faded out; student only doing

Page 51: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Teach students to monitor their own behavior -

Index card for tally marks

Form with multiple dates/tally marks.

“+ or –” or “yes or no” or “smiley face”

Small sheet of questions “Today I . . .”

“Was I Doing My Work?” Time/Yes or No

Rate your performance (1=NI, 2=OK, etc.)

Student and teacher rate

Page 52: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Teach students to monitor their own behavior -

Number of times blurted out/raised hand.

Number of times used appropriate words.

On-task behavior/working on assignment.

Work completion/problems finished.

I followed directions.

I remained cool and calm.

I kept my hands to myself.

Page 53: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Teach students to monitor their own behavior –

Identify the target behavior.

Define the target or a replacement behavior.

Conference with the student.

Select the self-monitoring procedure – teach

the procedure to the student.

Page 54: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

A simple idea -

A piece of paper with 20 squares

Student is taught to make a +, -

They make a + each time the “think about” or “recognize” working or behaving appropriately

They make a – each time they think they are not working or behaving appropriately

Pluses can be converted to points!

Page 55: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

A simple plan -

Behaviors you might want to track

– On-task – focus/attention

– On-task – actively engaged in writing

– Voice Off

– Following Directions

– In my seat

Page 56: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Interval + or -

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

Directions 1. Using some type of tactile prompting device, teacher will observe student and record the targeted behavior once every pre-determined number of minutes. 2. After making a quick observation of the student, the teacher will put “+” if the appropriate behavior is seen; a “-“ if it is not. 3. Count the number of pluses and divide by 10 (the number of intervals). Multiply that number by 100 to get the percentage of time the was exhibiting the appropriate behavior.

A simple plan -

Page 57: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

A simple plan -

Use this plan for teacher data first

Use this plan to teach the student

Use the plan for teacher to graph data

Use this plan when teacher and student

will monitor and then compare data

Use this plan when the student will self-

monitor and then do own graph

Page 58: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Embedding - Maintenance

Use self-monitoring.

Provide reinforcements.

Provide prompts and cues.

Provide feedback.

Page 59: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

For young children -

Use a smiley face, a frowny face, and a

neutral face

Teachers uses this with entire class to teach

entire class skills

Then use with individual students for different

behaviors

Page 60: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Maintenance

Once teacher has transferred most of the

responsibility to the student, the teacher may

continue to rate and mark the behavior some

of the time – random basis so student will not

know – give a bonus point for exact matches

– one or two point difference is O.K. – bigger

difference that one or two, student loses his

points for pluses

Page 61: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Implementing a Self-Management Program

1. Begin to introduce self-management soon

after the behavior has reached an

acceptable level with the teacher managing

it.

2. Specifically define the behavior the student

will monitor and evaluate.

1. Give examples and non-examples

2. Role play

Page 62: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

3. Design a simple means of counting and recording the behavior.

the simpler the system, the more accurate the student will be

4. Set time limits – start with 15 minutes; increase to 20; increase to 30; one class period

Page 63: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

5. Check the student’s accuracy on a random

basis. Build in rewards!

6. Give the student ample opportunity to

practice the process of self-management

and provide positive, correction feedback.

Page 64: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Teach students to monitor their own behavior –

Implement the self-monitoring.

Use specific verbal praise.

Monitor student progress.

Have students graph data.

Maintenance and follow-up.

Page 65: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Student Self-Graphing

To enhance the effects of an interventions

To increase student motivation

Targeted Academic Interventions

Targeted Behavioral Interventions

Targeted Social Skills Interventions

Page 66: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Some suggestions -

Create an individualized graph using graph

paper or an electronic graphing program

Teach the students how to complete and

then read their graph

Let students have choices about writing

implements and colors; let students pick the

font style, color, marker, and graph format

Save the graphs in a folder or an online file

Page 67: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Display appropriate graphs publically (i.e.

student meeting personal goals; class goal)

Provide individual incentives and rewards

Give consideration when to graph: right after

instruction, before next session, when time

permits, when time has passed for

improvement

Assess the data and make changes

Page 68: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

From CEC

Attention Deficit Disorder: Strategies for

School Children by Dr. Clare Jones.

ADHD Project Facilitate: ADHD

Interventions

Both include self-monitoring programs!

Page 69: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Bak N. & Asaro-Saddler, K. (2013).

Self-Regulated Strategy Development for

Students with Emotional Behavioral

Disorders. Beyond Behavior, 22, 46-53.

Page 70: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Dendy. C.A.Z. (2000). Teaching Teens With

ADD and ADHD: A Quick Reference Guide

for Teachers and Parents. Bethesda,

Maryland: Woodbine House.

Page 71: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

Designed for Teachers: How to Implement

Self-Monitoring in the Classroom.

Vanderbilt, Allison A. Beyond Behavior, Fall

2005.

Page 72: Building Independence by Teaching Students to Self … Independence by Teaching Students to Self-Monitor Amy C. Zaring Autism Specialist Fayette County School System zaring.amy@mail.fcboe.org

DiGangi, S.A., & Maag, J.W. (1992). A

component analysis of self-management

training with behaviorally disordered youth.

Behavioral Disorders, 17, 281-290.

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