Antisocial Behavior in Young Children

 
First Step to Success:
An Intervention for Young
Children with Problem Behavior
 
Barbara Mitchell, Ph.D.
MO SWPBS Tier 2/3 Consultant
 
Outcomes
By the end of this session participants will be able to…
 
Explain the need for early intervention
 
Describe components of the 
First Step to
Success
 program
 
Determine extent to which 
First Step 
may be a
contextually appropriate intervention for staff
and students in your setting.
 
Antisocial Behavior
 
Consistent violation of behavioral
expectations across a range of settings
Home
School
Neighborhood
Community
 
(Walker et al., 1997)
 
Antisocial Behavior
 
Examples include
Physical aggression
Tantrums
Hostile reactions to social initiations from peers
Defiance of adult directions
Vandalism
Disturbing and disrupting others
Pestering & Over-activity
 
(Walker et al., 1997)
 
 
What Do We Know?
 
Children who begin school with antisocial
behavior patterns are at great risk for a
number of negative long-term outcomes
School failure & dropout
Delinquency
Alcohol and drug use
Adult criminality
Dependence on welfare system
Higher death and injury rates
 
Path to Negative Long-Term Outcomes
for At-Risk Children & Youth
 
What Do We Know?
 
By grade 4 antisocial behavior should be
treated as a chronic condition like diabetes
(not cured, but managed)
 
50% will maintain disorder to adulthood
Life-course persistent antisocial behavior
 
What Do We Know?
 
Punishment is not a solution
Schools that use punishment alone as a
primary tool have increased rates of
Aggression
Vandalism
Truancy
Dropout
 
(Mayer & Sulzer-Azaroff, 1991)
 
What Do We Know?
 
 
Early intervention
 in school, home and
community is best hope for diverting from
path of negative outcomes
 
Three Levels of Implementation
 
A Continuum of Support for All
 
Tier One
All students
Preventive, proactiv
e
 
Tier One
All settings, all students
Preventive, proactive
 
Tier Two
Some students (at-risk)
High efficiency
Rapid response
 
Tier Two
Some students (at-risk)
High efficiency
Rapid response
 
Tier Three
Individual Students
Assessment-based
High Intensity
 
Tier Three
Individual Students
Assessment-based
Intense, durable procedures
 
Academic Systems
 
Behavioral Systems
 
First Step to Success
Helping Young Children Overcome
Antisocial Behavior
 
 
Walker, Golly, Severson, Kavanaugh,
Stiller, & Feil, 1997
Sopris West
 
First Step Description
 
Early intervention program designed to help
children who are at risk for developing
aggressive or antisocial behavioral patterns.
 
Teaches students to
get along with teachers and peers
engage in schoolwork in an appropriate manner
 
First Step Research
 
Two studies met the IES 
What Works
Clearinghouse
 evidence standards
Walker et al., 1998 & Walker et al., 2009
 
Evidence indicates 
First Step
 has
Positive effects on externalizing behaviors
Potentially positive effects on internalizing
behavior, social outcomes, and academic
performance behaviors (e.g., academic engaged
time)
 
Implementation Guidelines
 
Tier 2 intervention, targets students who
already show signs of risk and/or maladaptive
behavior
Coach works with one child at a time in a
classroom, 
but in the same fashion
 for all students
who participate
 
Enhanced version for students with intensive
needs is being developed
 
Implementation Guidelines
 
Appropriate for students PreK – 3
Preschool Kit
K-3 Kit
 
Role of Coach is 
critical!
Meant to be a positive support
 
Careful monitoring and follow-up required
Brief “booster shots” recommended
 
First Step Materials
 
Implementation Guide
homeBase Coach Guide
Timer and stopwatch
Overview video
Lanyard to attach
Green/Red cards
Small Green/Red cards
to take home
Video tape
 
 
 
Large Green/Red point
cards for CLASS
homeBase Parent
Handbooks
homeBase 3 parent bags
homeBase Card Packs
Parent help and activity
cards
Stickers, markers, pen,
paper
 
First Step
 
Roles & Responsibilities
First Step Components
 
Includes three interconnected modules:
First Step Screening
Identifies problems of antisocial behavior
CLASS
Contingencies for Learning Academic and Social Skills
School intervention
homeBase
Home intervention
 
Leverages key social agents
Teacher and peers; Parents/Caregivers; Coach
 
Externalizing Behaviors
Aggression to others or things
Hyperactivity
Non-compliance
Disruptive
Arguing
Defiance
Stealing
Not following directions
Calling out
 
Which Children Are At Risk?
 
Internalizing Behaviors
Exhibits unusual sadness
Sleeps a lot
Is teased or bullied by peers
Does not participate in games
Very shy or timid
Acts fearful
Does not stand up for self
Withdrawn
Avoids social interactions
 
Which Children Are At Risk?
 
Early Detection - 
Screen
 
Designed to identify children with elevated
risk for developing antisocial behavior
patterns
 
Screening options
1.
Teacher nominations and rankings
2.
Teacher nomination and ranking followed by teacher
ratings using a 9-item scale
3.
Teacher nomination and rankings; Teacher and parent
ratings; and direct observations  (Early Screening
Project; ESP)
 
 
Nomination & Rank Order
 
-
 
Screen
 
Teacher Rating Scale - 
Screen
 
School Intervention - 
CLASS
 
School Intervention - 
CLASS
 
Provided within a 
regular classroom
 context
 
Requires a 
minimum of 30 program days
 for
successful completion
Each program day has 
performance criterion
 that
must be met
 before proceeding to next day of
program
If criterion isn’t met the program day is repeated
(
recycled
)
 
General Procedures - 
CLASS
 
Large green/red card is used to cue student
Green = keep doing what you’re doing
Red = stop; think about what you need to do
 
Feedback and points are awarded for specified
intervals (stopwatch)
80% or more of opportunities scored “green” gets
class reward
e.g., 5 min extra recess, popcorn
 
General Procedures - 
CLASS
 
Coach/Teacher contacts home 
daily
 to report
on student progress
 
Child takes green/red card with recorded
score home each night
 
Parent rewards child or provides
encouragement for meeting goal the next day;
signs card and returns it to school
 
Procedures Coach Phase - 
CLASS
 
Procedures Teacher Phase - 
CLASS
 
Maintenance Phase - 
CLASS
 
School to Home Link -
 
homeBase
 
Coach meets with family for 6 weeks
45-60 min per week
Provides lessons for promoting school success
 
Parents work with child
10-15 min per day
Skill building and practice; positive interactions
Parent uses help & activity cards
 
School to Home Link - 
homeBase
 
Communicating and sharing school
Cooperation
Setting Limits
Solving Problems
Making Friends
Developing Confidence
 
Parent Lesson - 
homeBase
 
Parent Help Card - 
homeBase
 
Parent Activity Card – 
homeBase
 
Parent Activity Card – 
homeBase
 
First Step Components
 
“Although the intervention components can
stand alone and be used singly and
independently, it is highly recommended that
they be used in concert.  The 
First Step
 program
has 
maximal impact
 when implemented in this
fashion.”
 
*Screen – CLASS - homeBase
 
(Walker et al., 1997, p. 3)
 
Barriers to Effective Implementation
 
Lack of stakeholder commitment
Concerns about screening children
Objections to utilizing rewards
Parent Support
Constraints of school/class schedules
Needs to occur 
daily
Limited resources
Coach, Time, Materials
50-60 hours over 3 months; $500 per student
 
Resources
 
Missouri PBIS Website, Session 8B
http://pbismissouri.org/archives/3483
Intervention Overview
Coach, Teacher, and Parent Roles
 
 
*Documents provide a written description of the
First Step
 intervention and key implementation
responsibilities.
 
 
Resources
 
First Step to Success Information
http://www.firststeptosuccess.org
 
What Works Clearinghouse
http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/interventionreport.aspx?
sid=179
 
OSEP Technical Assistance Center of PBIS
http://www.pbis.org/research/secondary/first_steps_
to_success.aspx
 
 
Resources
 
Purchase 
First Step to Success 
Materials
Preschool Edition
Starter Kit - $178
Re-supply - $60
School-Age Edition
Starter Kit - $204
Re-supply - $50
http://store.cambiumlearning.com/first-step-
to-success/
 
Resources
 
First Step to Success Training Sessions
Two-day workshop (fall and spring)
October 17 or 30
April 23 or 24
Jefferson City
 
Register through South Central & Heart of
Missouri RPDC
 
Contact Information
 
RPDC Regional and/or Tier 2/3 SWPBS
Consultant
 
Barb Mitchell, Tier 2/3 SWPBS Consultant
mitchellbs@missouri.edu
Slide Note
Embed
Share

This intervention program by Barbara Mitchell, Ph.D., addresses the critical need for early intervention in children displaying antisocial behavior. It covers key components of the program, discusses examples of antisocial behavior, potential negative long-term outcomes, and emphasizes the importance of early intervention over punishment alone in educational settings.

  • Antisocial behavior
  • Early intervention
  • Barbara Mitchell
  • Young children
  • Behavior management

Uploaded on Sep 29, 2024 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author.If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

You are allowed to download the files provided on this website for personal or commercial use, subject to the condition that they are used lawfully. All files are the property of their respective owners.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. First Step to Success: An Intervention for Young Children with Problem Behavior Barbara Mitchell, Ph.D. MO SWPBS Tier 2/3 Consultant

  2. Outcomes By the end of this session participants will be able to Explain the need for early intervention Describe components of the First Step to Success program Determine extent to which First Step may be a contextually appropriate intervention for staff and students in your setting. MO SW-PBS

  3. Antisocial Behavior Consistent violation of behavioral expectations across a range of settings Home School Neighborhood Community (Walker et al., 1997) MO SW-PBS

  4. Antisocial Behavior Examples include Physical aggression Tantrums Hostile reactions to social initiations from peers Defiance of adult directions Vandalism Disturbing and disrupting others Pestering & Over-activity (Walker et al., 1997) MO SW-PBS

  5. What Do We Know? Children who begin school with antisocial behavior patterns are at great risk for a number of negative long-term outcomes School failure & dropout Delinquency Alcohol and drug use Adult criminality Dependence on welfare system Higher death and injury rates MO SW-PBS

  6. Path to Negative Long-Term Outcomes for At-Risk Children & Youth

  7. What Do We Know? By grade 4 antisocial behavior should be treated as a chronic condition like diabetes (not cured, but managed) 50% will maintain disorder to adulthood Life-course persistent antisocial behavior MO SW-PBS

  8. What Do We Know? Punishment is not a solution Schools that use punishment alone as a primary tool have increased rates of Aggression Vandalism Truancy Dropout (Mayer & Sulzer-Azaroff, 1991) MO SW-PBS

  9. What Do We Know? Early intervention in school, home and community is best hope for diverting from path of negative outcomes MO SW-PBS

  10. Three Levels of Implementation A Continuum of Support for All Academic Systems Behavioral Systems Tier Three Individual Students Assessment-based Intense, durable procedures Tier Three Individual Students Assessment-based High Intensity Tier Two Some students (at-risk) High efficiency Rapid response Tier Two Some students (at-risk) High efficiency Rapid response Tier One All settings, all students Preventive, proactive Tier One All students Preventive, proactive MO SW-PBS

  11. First Step to Success Helping Young Children Overcome Antisocial Behavior Walker, Golly, Severson, Kavanaugh, Stiller, & Feil, 1997 Sopris West

  12. First Step Description Early intervention program designed to help children who are at risk for developing aggressive or antisocial behavioral patterns. Teaches students to get along with teachers and peers engage in schoolwork in an appropriate manner MO SW-PBS

  13. First Step Research Two studies met the IES What Works Clearinghouse evidence standards Walker et al., 1998 & Walker et al., 2009 Evidence indicates First Step has Positive effects on externalizing behaviors Potentially positive effects on internalizing behavior, social outcomes, and academic performance behaviors (e.g., academic engaged time) MO SW-PBS

  14. Implementation Guidelines Tier 2 intervention, targets students who already show signs of risk and/or maladaptive behavior Coach works with one child at a time in a classroom, but in the same fashion for all students who participate Enhanced version for students with intensive needs is being developed MO SW-PBS

  15. Implementation Guidelines Appropriate for students PreK 3 Preschool Kit K-3 Kit Role of Coach is critical! Meant to be a positive support Careful monitoring and follow-up required Brief booster shots recommended MO SW-PBS

  16. First Step Materials Implementation Guide homeBase Coach Guide Timer and stopwatch Overview video Lanyard to attach Green/Red cards Small Green/Red cards to take home Video tape Large Green/Red point cards for CLASS homeBase Parent Handbooks homeBase 3 parent bags homeBase Card Packs Parent help and activity cards Stickers, markers, pen, paper MO SW-PBS

  17. First Step Roles & Responsibilities Coach Teacher Parents Student - Introduces program - Teaches acceptable behavior - Provides encouragement and recognition - Agrees to participate - Provides materials - Brings home green/red card - Provides encouragement and recognition - Participates in HomeBase meetings - Teaches behavior - Joins in HomeBase activities - Monitors student behavior - Practices skill building from HomeBase - Monitors progress - Phones parent - Leads homeBase MO SW-PBS

  18. First Step Components Includes three interconnected modules: First Step Screening Identifies problems of antisocial behavior CLASS Contingencies for Learning Academic and Social Skills School intervention homeBase Home intervention Leverages key social agents Teacher and peers; Parents/Caregivers; Coach MO SW-PBS

  19. Which Children Are At Risk? Externalizing Behaviors Aggression to others or things Hyperactivity Non-compliance Disruptive Arguing Defiance Stealing Not following directions Calling out MO SW-PBS

  20. Which Children Are At Risk? Internalizing Behaviors Exhibits unusual sadness Sleeps a lot Is teased or bullied by peers Does not participate in games Very shy or timid Acts fearful Does not stand up for self Withdrawn Avoids social interactions MO SW-PBS

  21. Early Detection - Screen Designed to identify children with elevated risk for developing antisocial behavior patterns Screening options 1. Teacher nominations and rankings 2. Teacher nomination and ranking followed by teacher ratings using a 9-item scale 3. Teacher nomination and rankings; Teacher and parent ratings; and direct observations (Early Screening Project; ESP) MO SW-PBS

  22. Nomination & Rank Order - Screen

  23. Teacher Rating Scale - Screen

  24. School Intervention - CLASS Classroom Teacher First Step Coach Parents/C aregiver First Step Student MO SW-PBS

  25. School Intervention - CLASS Provided within a regular classroom context Requires a minimum of 30 program days for successful completion Each program day has performance criterion that must be met before proceeding to next day of program If criterion isn t met the program day is repeated (recycled) MO SW-PBS

  26. General Procedures - CLASS Large green/red card is used to cue student Green = keep doing what you re doing Red = stop; think about what you need to do Feedback and points are awarded for specified intervals (stopwatch) 80% or more of opportunities scored green gets class reward e.g., 5 min extra recess, popcorn MO SW-PBS

  27. General Procedures - CLASS Coach/Teacher contacts home daily to report on student progress Child takes green/red card with recorded score home each night Parent rewards child or provides encouragement for meeting goal the next day; signs card and returns it to school MO SW-PBS

  28. Procedures Coach Phase - CLASS Coach Teacher Parents Days 1- 5 -Implements program with child in classroom -Provides verbal praise -Check for green/red card each day -Announces incentive to class -Gives praise and incentive for making daily points -Communicates with parents daily -Supports delivery of incentive -Completes green/red card; determines if goal is met -Remains neutral if child doesn t make daily points -Supports green/red card going home -Signs card and returns it to school. MO SW-PBS

  29. Procedures Teacher Phase - CLASS Coach Teacher Parents Days 6- 30 -Implements weekly homeBase program; 6 sessions -Takes over daily intervention implementation -Participates in weekly homeBase program with coach -Records information on monitoring form -Participates in daily homeBase activities w/ child -Provides support and consultation to teacher -Communicates daily with parents -Provides praise, incentives, and monitors green/red card MO SW-PBS

  30. Maintenance Phase - CLASS Coach Teacher Parents Days 31 and Beyond -Continues homeBase program -Works with Coach to maintain positive gains -Continues homeBase program -Monitors child s progress -Works with Teacher to maintain positive gains -Maintains communication with Parents -Provides consultation to teacher -Collects post intervention data MO SW-PBS

  31. School to Home Link - homeBase Coach meets with family for 6 weeks 45-60 min per week Provides lessons for promoting school success Parents work with child 10-15 min per day Skill building and practice; positive interactions Parent uses help & activity cards MO SW-PBS

  32. School to Home Link - homeBase Communicating and sharing school Cooperation Setting Limits Solving Problems Making Friends Developing Confidence MO SW-PBS

  33. Parent Lesson - homeBase MO SW-PBS

  34. Parent Help Card - homeBase MO SW-PBS

  35. Parent Activity Card homeBase MO SW-PBS

  36. Parent Activity Card homeBase MO SW-PBS

  37. First Step Components Although the intervention components can stand alone and be used singly and independently, it is highly recommended that they be used in concert. The First Step program has maximal impact when implemented in this fashion. *Screen CLASS - homeBase (Walker et al., 1997, p. 3) MO SW-PBS

  38. Barriers to Effective Implementation Lack of stakeholder commitment Concerns about screening children Objections to utilizing rewards Parent Support Constraints of school/class schedules Needs to occur daily Limited resources Coach, Time, Materials 50-60 hours over 3 months; $500 per student MO SW-PBS

  39. Resources Missouri PBIS Website, Session 8B http://pbismissouri.org/archives/3483 Intervention Overview Coach, Teacher, and Parent Roles *Documents provide a written description of the First Step intervention and key implementation responsibilities. MO SW-PBS

  40. Resources First Step to Success Information http://www.firststeptosuccess.org What Works Clearinghouse http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/interventionreport.aspx? sid=179 OSEP Technical Assistance Center of PBIS http://www.pbis.org/research/secondary/first_steps_ to_success.aspx MO SW-PBS

  41. Resources Purchase First Step to Success Materials Preschool Edition Starter Kit - $178 Re-supply - $60 School-Age Edition Starter Kit - $204 Re-supply - $50 http://store.cambiumlearning.com/first-step- to-success/ MO SW-PBS

  42. Resources First Step to Success Training Sessions Two-day workshop (fall and spring) October 17 or 30 April 23 or 24 Jefferson City Register through South Central & Heart of Missouri RPDC MO SW-PBS

  43. Contact Information RPDC Regional and/or Tier 2/3 SWPBS Consultant Barb Mitchell, Tier 2/3 SWPBS Consultant mitchellbs@missouri.edu MO SW-PBS

Related


More Related Content

giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#