Poster
    • What is Positive Behavior Intervention and Support (PBIS)?

      Positive Behavior Interventions and Support (PBIS) is a systems approach to enhancing the capacity of schools to support and educate ALL STUDENTS.  It is a proactive approach to school-wide discipline that is based on three levels of prevention/intervention to address the needs of all students.  PBIS is not a curriculum, intervention, or practice, but rather a framework or approach for assisting school personnel in adopting and organizing evidence-based behavioral interventions into an integrated continuum that enhances academic and social behavior outcomes

  • PBIS Strategies for All to Use

    School/Classroom Expectations: Having clear, consistent, positively stated behavior expectations in and around the campus, are an important key in creating a positive, productive school/classroom environment. Referring to behavior expectations frequently will build strong behavior habits in your students/child.

    Motivations for behavior:  All behavior has a motivation.  The most common motivations for behavior are: avoiding a task, attention seeking behavior, and a power struggle.  Knowing the motivations of your student/child can help you properly address problem behavior. 

    ABC's of Behavior:  Every problem behavior has an Antecedent (the cause of the behavior), the Problem Behavior (the actual behavior), and the Consequence (the result of the behavior).  If you can figure out the cause of the problem behavior, you can often intervene and prevent the problem behavior from every taking place.  Also, if you can make sure that the Consequence of the problem behavior is appropriate to the motivation, then you can reduce the occurrence of the problem behavior.

    Positive Language: Starting the day off right can change everything. If you like hearing kind words, make sure you use them with your kids: “Please and Thank You, I am so glad you are here, Great Job, I am so proud of you!”

    Restorative Questions: These 5 magic questions can change a confrontation into a discussion. When a situation arises with a student either talk about these or have them answer them in writing:

    1. What happened?
    2. What were you thinking at the time?
    3. What have you thought about since?
    4. Who has been affected?
    5. What needs to happen to make things right?

PBIS Coaches

CHS Intervention Poster