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Carrie Straub © 2010

STRATEGIES FOR BEHAVIORPositive Behavioral Momentum

Carrie Straub © 2010

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LESSON ORGANIZER UNIT or THEMEBehavior Management in Secondary Mathematics

Date: 2/17/09

Topic: Positive Behavioral Momentum Dr. Janet Andreasen & Carrie Straub, MAE 4634

(2)

(3) RelationshipsApplying knowledge

(1) Lesson TopicPositive Behavioral Momentum

(4) Task-related Strategies:1. High P Request Sequence2. Think-Pair-Share

(5) Lesson Map

(6) Challenge Question: How is using positive behavioral momentum different from traditional consequence-based behavioral management systems?

(7) What questions should I ask myself? (Self-test)1. What are the stages of the acting out cycle?2. What are the steps of the High P Request Sequence?

(8) What tasks will I have to accomplish?1.Debrief for TeachME Lab if needed2. Identify Stages of Acting Out Cycle3. Think-Pair-Share

Acting OutCycle

Universal Design for Learning

Positive Behavioral Momentum

Establishing classroom norms Choice-Making

Carrie Straub © 2010

Identifying High P Behaviors

High P Request Sequence

Consequences

Positive Behavioral Momentum

INTE

NSI

TY

5. Peak

1. Calm

3. Agitation

4. Acceleration

2. Trigger

6. De-escalation

ACTING OUT CYCLE

7. Recovery

Carrie Straub © 2010

INTE

NSI

TY

5. Peak

1. Calm

3. Agitation

4. Acceleration

2. Trigger

6. De-escalation

7. Recovery

ACTING OUT CYCLE

Carrie Straub © 2010TIME

INTE

NSI

TY

5. Peak

1. Calm

3. Agitation

4. Acceleration

2. Trigger

6. De-escalation

7. Recovery

ACTING OUT CYCLE

ACTING OUT CYCLE IN ACTIONhttp://iris.peabody.vanderbilt.edu/bi1/bi1_10.html

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POSITIVE BEHAVIORAL MOMENTUMA – AntecedentB – BehaviorC – Consequences

Get student in the “habit” of agreeing, then ask for targeted behavior.

Research shows 3 incidents of compliance in a row works the best!

Identify High Probability (High P) Behaviors- Name on paper- Pick something up

Request 3 or more High-P Behaviors- Wait for 3 positive responses in a row

Then ask for Low-P (target) behavior

Give appropriate consequences

POSITIVE BEHAVIORAL MOMENTUM

Carrie Straub © 2010

Carrie, please help me hand out the

papers.Thanks, Carrie. Now help me

straighten out the chairs.

You did a great job with the chairs! Please erase the

board for me.

POSITIVE BEHAVIORAL MOMENTUM

Thanks for erasing the board. Please get started on the first class activity.

Plan Behavioral Momentum into lesson scheduleAvoid starting with “unlikely” activities such as review of homeworkStart with “likely” activities like a game, THEN follow with Low-P request

TIPS FOR LESSON PLANNING

REMEMBER: Easy and hard tasks vary from student to student

Identify High-P Behaviors

(For example: Name on paper, Pick something up, Help out)

Identify 2 Ways to Incorporate Into Your Lesson Plan Assignment

Be ready to share your ideas

YOUR TURN

This activity is called “Think – Pair – Share” and is a cooperative learning strategy.

CONSEQUENCES

Don’t make these ROOKIE mistakes…

Ignoring Compliance: Always reinforce students who comply with your requests.

Ignoring Noncompliance: The student must never be permitted to escape the request.

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