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Coaches Calendar: Your Implementation Roadmap

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Coaches Calendar: Your Implementation Roadmap. Dana Kuehl Regional Technical Assistance Coordinator, Wisconsin RtI Center [email protected] Linda Stead Regional Technical Assistance Coordinator, Wisconsin RTI Center [email protected]. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The Wisconsin PBIS Network (CFDA #84.027) acknowledges the support of the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction in the development of this presentation and for the continued support of this federally- funded grant program. There are no copyright restrictions on this document; however, please credit the Wisconsin DPI and support of Coaches Calendar: Your Implementation Roadmap a Kuehl ional Technical Assistance Coordinator, Wisconsin RtI Center [email protected] da Stead ional Technical Assistance Coordinator, Wisconsin RTI Center [email protected]
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Page 1: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

The Wisconsin PBIS Network (CFDA #84.027) acknowledges the support of the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction in the development of this presentation and for the continued support of this federally-funded grant program. There are no copyright restrictions on this document; however, please credit the Wisconsin DPI and support of federal funds when copying all or part of this material.

Coaches Calendar: Your Implementation Roadmap

Dana KuehlRegional Technical Assistance Coordinator, Wisconsin RtI [email protected]

Linda SteadRegional Technical Assistance Coordinator, Wisconsin RTI [email protected]

Page 2: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Implementation of PBIS involves systems change.

It disturbs existing systems and will likely involve a break from how things have been done in the past. It is complex and non-linear.

Systems change is difficult because it involves managing tasks and resources

plus managing people who may be resistant to the change.

Page 3: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Change the environment so . . . – It is more efficient and effective for staff to

use PBIS rather than ‘business as usual’• Train, support, technical assistance, technology

– All students have the ability to respond and function more efficiently and effectively

• Teaching, reinforcing, multiple tiers of support– All decisions are driven by data

• Problem identification• Problem analysis• Interventions• Evaluation

PBIS Goal: Systems Change

Page 4: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

SYST

EMS

PRACTICES

DATA

SupportingStaff Behavior

SupportingDecisionMaking

SupportingStudent Behavior

OUTCOMES

• Team approach• Administrator participation• Community of Practice (skill development & performance feedback)

• ODRs• Academic progress• Attendance• Direct observation• School improvement goal progress• Process tools (fidelity)

• Define behaviors, expectations, and rules • Teach, model, and acknowledge behaviors, expectations, and rules• Correct behaviors• Consensus/collaboration

PBIS Implementation

Page 5: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Avoid ‘Train & Hope’Coaching

1. React to Problem Behavior

2. Select and Add Practice

3. Hire Expert to

Train Practice

4. Expect (Hope) for Implemen-

tation

5. Wait for new

problem

Insert Coaching into the cycle and implementation of new information/skills will increase significantly!!

Page 6: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Why is Coaching important to schools implementing SWPBIS?

Page 7: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Next to the principal, coaches are the most crucial change agent in a school.

Fullan & Knight, 2011

Page 8: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Coaching Defined

• Coaching is the active and iterative delivery of: – (a) prompts that increase successful behavior, and – (b) corrections that decrease unsuccessful behavior.

– Coaching is done by someone with credibility and experience with the target skill(s)

– Coaching is done on-site, in real time – Coaching is done after initial training– Coaching is done repeatedly (e.g. monthly)– Coaching intensity is adjusted to need

Page 9: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Outcomes of Coaching

Fluency with trained skills• Adaptation of trained concepts/skills to local contexts and challenges• Rapid redirection from miss-applications• Increased fidelity of overall implementation• Improved sustainability Most often due to ability to increase coaching intensity at critical points in time Horner 2009

Page 10: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Coaching Functions

CommunicateContent andKnowledge

Facilitate

Coaching Functions

•Faculty•Administrator•District Coordinator•Community

•PBIS knowledge•Response to Intervention•Behavioral knowledge•Link to resources

•Action Planning•Faculty training•PBIS Implementation

http://flpbs.fmhi.usf.edu/coachescorner.asp

Page 11: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Critical Features of Coaching

• Communication• Organization• Technical Assistance• Reinforcement of leadership team

and school staff

Page 12: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Communication

• School leadership team• Building principal• Building staff• District Leadership• Families and Community

Page 13: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Organization• Meeting agendas, minutes, action

plans, etc.• Outcome and Evaluation data• Documentation of systems and

artifacts

Page 14: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Technical Assistance• Model data-based decision making

process• Evaluation of implementation

assessments• Specific suggestions for action

planning and task completion

Page 15: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Reinforcement• New, different, or difficult tasks• Moving in the “right direction”• Activities critical to implementation• Ratio (5:1)

Page 16: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Provide ‘SUPPORT’ to the PBIS Team

• Support sustainability and accountability of the team• Use the Team Action Plan to ensure fidelity of implementation• Provide behavioral knowledge and build behavioral capacity • Provide a link between the team, principal, and District Leadership • Ongoing communication with key stakeholders (administrator, staff, families)• Report student data and implementation evaluations • Transition schools to ‘Exemplary School’ status

Page 17: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap
Page 18: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

WISCONSIN PBIS COACHES CALENDAR

http://www.wisconsinpbisnetwork.org/coaches/coaching-calendar.html

Page 19: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Year at a Glance Planner For Coach

Roadmap

Page 20: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Each month has coaching tasks for:• Information (Data) – E.g., review ODR graphs, suspension, ethnicity, attendance, & academic data – E.g., review results surveys, checklists

• Planning (Systems) – E.g., develop needed Cool Tool lesson(s) & schedule time to teach, plan school-wide celebrations

• Implementation (Practices) – E.g., teach cool tools, conduct grade level celebrations

• Communication with staff, families, and community – E.g., present results of evaluation, share data summaries, parent/ community newsletters

Page 21: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Internal_Coach_Year_at_a_Glance.doc

Page 22: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

5 Ways You Can Promote and Sustain School-wide Implementation

Page 23: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

1. Renew commitment each yearDevelop and recommit to team process and PBIS process with staff - ask for buy-in each year-showcase results and form a plan that addresses trends seen from this school

year - if you can predict it, you can prevent it….

• Develop “marketing plan” to renew commitment -how will you keep it novel and new in school and community?

• Continue to make it a priority• Administrator’s commitment is crucial• Continue to make it a top school improvement goal• As it becomes standard practice it will be easier each

year

Page 24: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

2. Use self-assessment data to action plan and set annual goals Collection and use of data for decision-making• Are we implementing SWPBS with fidelity? » SAS, TIC, BOQ www.PBISApps.org• Are students benefiting behaviorally, emotionally, academically? » ODRs, Suspensions » Academic testing, other academic data » Referrals to Special ed., race and ethnicity data www.swis.org• Are the systems and practices efficient? » Faculty/staff time; Student academic engagement; Cost benefit Satisfaction (students, staff, families)• Are all stakeholders happy and seeing results for their efforts? » Feedback: surveys, focus groups, etc.

Page 25: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

3. Develop a school-wide “Community of Practice”

Establish an environment where individuals can feel safe about reporting concerns, supported by their school community, and empowered to be a part of the decision making process.

• Issues, concerns • Input, ideas, innovations• Data• Feedback from ALL staff• Celebrations of success

Page 26: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

4. Help teams become organized and efficient

• Provide members with a schedule of meetings• Send out meeting agenda in advance• Establish and adhere to team meeting norms • Assign roles/responsibilities to team members• Provide a data summary that will help define problems with precision• Organize for an effective problem solving conversation A key to collective problem solving is to provide a visual context that allows everyone to follow and contribute• Document meeting minutes, decisions, actions, timelines

Facilitate effective meetings

Page 27: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

Make it predictable and easy for them to do!

5. Empower staff

Page 28: Coaches Calendar:  Your Implementation Roadmap

When you empower staff, you start to see high fidelity. When they know their behavior

has a direct impact on student outcomesand a better school environment,

fidelity increases.


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