Response to Intervention: Examining Classroom Behavior Support in Second Grade

2007 ◽  
Vol 73 (3) ◽  
pp. 288-310 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Fairbanks ◽  
George Sugai ◽  
David Guardino ◽  
Margaret Lathrop
Author(s):  
Diane Myers ◽  
George Sugai ◽  
Brandi Simonsen ◽  
Jennifer Freeman

In this article, the authors provide an overview of empirically supported practices and techniques for monitoring and assessing teachers’ use of effective behavior support practices. They focus on how teacher preparation programs, administrators, and supervising teachers provide pre-service teachers with helpful feedback on their teaching performance. In addition, they describe a behaviorally based conceptual model for assessing teachers’ fluent and sustained use of empirically supported classroom behavior support practices and provide recommendations for enhancing the preparation of pre-service educators.


2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 152-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gwendolyn Joy Shultz ◽  
Nathan Havens ◽  
Beth Newberry Gurney ◽  
Jon Burt

Managing problematic classroom behavior is a challenge for many teachers, regardless of population. The website, www.basicfba.com , designed by researchers at Portland State University, offers teachers and practitioners a wealth of materials to assist them in conducting and maintaining a functional behavior assessment and behavior support plan. Tools are also provided to allow participants to graph and analyze data. This article gives an overview of the resources available and how they may be used.


1994 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cecilia Lonnecker ◽  
Michael P. Brady ◽  
Robert Mcpherson ◽  
Jacqueline Hawkins

This study investigated the effects of an instructional package incorporating videotaped self-assessment, self-modeling, discrimination training, and behavioral rehearsal on the cooperative classroom behavior of two second-grade children with learning and behavior problems. Observations were made of selected classroom behaviors in three different classes each day. Results indicate that the intervention was effective in helping young children acquire cooperative classroom behaviors, generalize these behaviors to settings not a part of the training environment, and maintain these behaviors in both the training and generalization settings. The video intervention package also was effective in reducing inappropriate behaviors in the training and generalization settings. Further, there was a marked reduction in variability of behavior for both children. The results suggest that video-based modeling, coupled with discrimination training and rehearsal, is an effective and efficient intervention for early elementary school children with learning and behavior problems.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathan A. Stevenson ◽  
Janet VanLone ◽  
Brian R. Barber

Teachers’ skill in fostering students’ engagement and limiting disruptive behavior is important for maintaining a safe, productive, and effective learning environment. Yet, teachers lacking specific training in classroom and behavior management continue to report higher levels of stress and are more likely to leave the profession (Ingersoll et al., 2018; Zabel & Zabel, 2002). Despite wide agreement from experts about the importance of developing classroom and behavior management skills, many teacher training programs do not require specified coursework or experiences to develop this skill set for teacher licensure or degree completion. In this article, we describe what we observe to be a disconnect between current requirements for and by teacher preparation programs, and the nature of adequate teacher training to appropriately manage and support student behavior. We argue that this disconnect currently contributes to a host of problematic outcomes observable in schools, including teacher attrition, racial disproportionality in discipline actions, and an over reliance on punitive and ineffective behavior support practices. We end our discussion with additional recommendations for improving teacher training and ensuring systems alignment.


2019 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 265-289
Author(s):  
Brandi Simonsen ◽  
Jen Freeman ◽  
Jessica Swain-Bradway ◽  
Heather Peshak George ◽  
Robert Putnam ◽  
...  

2004 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 303-312 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hannu Räty ◽  
Johanna Kiiskinen ◽  
Merja Nykky

This study addressed children's perceptions and explanations of verbal and cognitive intelligence. A group of primary-school children (N = 119) from the second, the fourth, and the sixth grades were asked to choose the best pupils of their respective classes in their mother tongue (native language) and mathematics and to give reasons for their choices. In the mother tongue, the children tended to favor their own gender in their choices, and boys and girls were chosen as the best pupils quite evenly. In mathematics, the boys selected only boys from the second grade on, while the girls started selecting mostly boys from the fourth grade on only. In the mother tongue the consensus was low, and the choices were explained by referring to the pupil's positive classroom behavior and appropriate work habits. But in mathematics the consensus was high, and the choices were explained by referring to the formal academic recognition that the best pupil had attained and to the speed and correctness of his/her performance. These findings seemed to suggest that mathematical ability is personified as a masculine domain and that our culture's gender-bound representation of mathematical ability may well be inherent to the routines of the school institution.


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