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Conducting a Buy-In Presentation

  • Staff meeting to explain the Pyramid Model
  • Goal is to share information and get all program staff on board
  • Buy-in poll is conducted at end, seeking 80% agreement that doing this work is a good idea for the program

To listen to Lise Fox of NCPMI explain the staff buy-in process and how to use the slide deck click on this link:

https://youtu.be/DPipdc7uPvE

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Doing the Presentation

Invite all staff….

  • Record it in advance and have staff watch on their break and complete poll
  • Have a staff meeting and present (20 minutes without showing full video; 45 minutes with the video)
  • Offer video to staff to watch before meeting and then do the shorter meeting

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Implementing the Pyramid Model

Promoting social-emotional skills and addressing challenging behavior

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AGENDA

  • Why focus on social-emotional development
  • What are your biggest challenges – group discussion
  • What is the Pyramid Model?
  • How does the Pyramid Model Work?
  • What are the benefits to our program?
  • Poll

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Young Children with Challenging Behavior

  • It begins early
    • Between 10-30% of preschool students are not behaviorally and emotionally ready to succeed in school
  • Early problem behavior is predictive of future challenges
    • Best predictor of delinquency in adolescence, gang membership, incarceration

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Young Children with Challenging Behavior

Early educators are challenged

  • Preschool teachers report that children’s disruptive behavior is the single greatest challenge they face
  • Preschool children are three times more likely to be expelled for behavioral issues than children in K-12

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What Are Your Challenges?

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Key Social Emotional Skills�

  • Confidence
  • Capacity to develop good relationships with peers and adults
  • Concentration and persistence on challenging tasks
  • Ability to effectively communicate emotions
  • Ability to listen to instructions and be attentive
  • Ability to solve social problems
  • Ability to calm down when feeling strong emotions

What do children do when they don’t have each of these skills?

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Pyramid Model Approach

  • Adopting a posture of support:
    • Supporting each and every child
    • Supporting each and every family
    • Supporting each and every teacher and provider
  • Promoting equity and addressing bias
  • Supporting inclusion, not exclusion

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If a child doesn’t know how to read, we teach.

If a child doesn’t know how to swim, we teach.

If a child doesn’t know how to multiply, we teach.

If a child doesn’t know how to drive, we teach.

If a child doesn’t know how to behave,

we……..... …….teach? ……punish?

Why can’t we finish the last sentence as automatically as we do the others?”

Tom Herner (NASDE President ) Counterpoint 1998, p.2)

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The Goal of the Pyramid is to Promote Children’s Success By:

  • Creating an environment where EVERY child feels good about coming to preschool.
  • Designing an environment that promotes child engagement and prevents challenging behavior.
  • Focusing on teaching children what to do!
    • Teach expectations and routines.
    • Teach skills that children can use in place of challenging behaviors.
    • Teach social-emotional skills that are critical to child outcomes

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The Pyramid Model

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Pyramid Model for Promoting the Social Emotional Competence of Young Children

Tertiary Intervention Few

Secondary Prevention Some

Universal Promotion All

A Framework of �Evidence-Based Practices

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Pyramid Model Teachers

Connected, Confident, and Competent

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Pyramid Model

Universal Promotion All

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Nurturing and Responsive Relationships

  • Foundation of the Pyramid
  • Essential to healthy social development
  • Includes relationships with children, families and team members

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High Quality Environments

  • Inclusive early care and education environments
  • Comprehensive system of curriculum, assessment, and program evaluation
  • Environmental design, instructional materials, scheduling, child guidance, and teacher interactions that meet high quality practices as described by NAEYC and DEC

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Pyramid Model

Secondary Prevention Some

Universal Promotion All

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Targeted Social Emotional Supports

  • Self-regulation, expressing and understanding emotions, problem solving, developing social relationships as social emotional learning for ALL
  • Explicit instruction for Some
  • Increased opportunities for instruction, practice, feedback
    • Family partnerships
    • Progress monitoring and data decision-making

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Pyramid Model

Tertiary Intervention Few

Secondary Prevention Some

Universal Promotion All

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Individualized Intensive Interventions to Address Challenging Behavior

  • Comprehensive interventions across all settings including home and community
  • Assessment-based
  • Collaborative team
  • Skill-building

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Process of Individualized Positive Behavior Support

  • Step 1: Establishing a collaborative team and identifying goals
  • Step 2: Gathering information (functional assessment)
  • Step 3: Developing hypotheses
  • Step 4: Designing behavior support plans
  • Step 5: Implementing, monitoring, evaluating outcomes, and refining plan in natural environments

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Program-Wide Implementation �Guided by the Leadership Team

Leadership Team

Staff Buy-In

Family Engagement

Program-Wide Expectations

Responding to Challenging Behavior

Continuous Professional Development & Classroom Coaching

Data Decision-Making Examining Implementation and

Procedures for Responding to Challenging Behavior

Data Decision-Making Examining Implementation and Outcomes

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Outcomes for Children

  • Growth in social and emotional skills
  • Decreases in overall disruptive behavior in the classroom
  • Reduction in child challenging behavior
  • Increases in social interactions between children
  • Increases in child engagement in learning opportunities

Happy

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Outcomes for Teachers and Staff

  • Shared language for communicating expectations
  • Improved capacity to teach social and emotional skills
  • Improved capacity to address challenging behavior
  • Ability to support families to promote social and emotional skills
  • Feeling supported by program in efforts to address challenging behavior
  • Positive relationships with families around issues related to challenging behavior
  • High fidelity programs report that No children are asked to leave due to behavior

Excited

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Outcomes for Families

  • Teaming between family and teachers for intervention strategies
  • Parents report feeling more supported in preventing and addressing challenging behavior
  • Decreases in parent concerns about safety and behavior

Proud

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For More Information…

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Poll

  • Our team really wants to commit to implementing Pyramid Model across our program.
  • But we want your input!
  • Please complete the survey at your table and leave in the box on your way out.

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Sample Staff Buy-In Poll

Please take a moment to give us input on how you feel about program-wide adoption of Pyramid Model.

  • I feel confident about adopting the Pyramid Model. I support the need for a program-wide effort for:
    • Addressing children’s social competence and challenging behavior.
    • Using culturally responsive practices.
    • Addressing implicit bias.
  • I like the idea of program-wide adoption, but believe I need more training around this topic.
  • I like the idea of program-wide adoption, but do not feel I can make a commitment at this time.
  • I don’t feel like program-wide adoption will be beneficial and would rather not participate in the process.