
Best Practice PBIS Implementation
Author(s) -
Jessica Djabrayan Hannigan,
John Hannigan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of school administration research and development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2470-850X
pISSN - 2470-8496
DOI - 10.32674/jsard.v5i1.2111
Subject(s) - champion , pdca , tier 2 network , best practice , tier 1 network , process management , plan (archaeology) , variety (cybernetics) , operations management , computer science , medical education , psychology , quality management , medicine , engineering , management system , political science , telecommunications , the internet , archaeology , artificial intelligence , world wide web , law , history
This study presents empirical data on the best practice implementation of the Positive BehaviorInterventions and Supports (PBIS) Champion Modeling schools at each of the three tiers of implementation. The purpose of this study was to identify PBIS best practices evidence indicators for each of the tiers. The design included a review of evidence indicators from a cohort of schools (N = 117) that participated in a three-year PBIS Champion Model workshop series during the 2016-2019 school years and met model criteria for implementation based on the PBIS ChampionModel Framework. Evidence indicators were collected and analyzed from schools that met the requirements of each implementation level. While some met the requirements of all three levels, others met those of two, one, or none. Of the 117 schools in the cohort, 113schools met the Tier 1 level (Bronze) requirement, 94met the Tier 2 level (Silver) requirement, and 86 met the Tier 3 level (Gold) requirement. The findings indicate a variety of evidence indicators in each tier of the PBIS Champion Model Framework (i.e., processes, protocols, training, communication structures) that aligns with Deming’s Plan, Do, Study, Act (PDSA)cycle for quality implementation. This study presents a practical resource that can guide successful systemic implementation of PBIS in each tier and can support student academic learning and behavior in those schools.