Individualized Support Project
Developing and Implementing
Intensive Individualized
Interventions: Prevent-Teach-Reinforce for Young Children
Prevent-Teach-Reinforce for Young Children
NEW EDITION COMING SOON! A practical, reader-friendly guide that explores how to improve social-emotional development and prevent challenging behaviors of young children in preschool settings. bpub.fyi/PTR-YC
Today’s Session
⚫ Importance of understanding challenging behavior
⚫ Overview of PTR-YC: A model of individualized PBS
⚫ Using Prevent strategies
What is PTR-YC?
⚫ A model of individualized Positive Behavior Support designed for implementation in group settings (e.g., pre-K classrooms) serving young children.
⚫ A standardized model designed to enhance.
Who/What is it for?
⚫ Young children with the most severe (troublesome) challenging behaviors.
⚫ Behaviors that have proven resistant to evidence-based universal and secondary procedures.
⚫ To be used by classroom teams (including EC professionals) committed to helping children learn adaptive and appropriate social-emotional behaviors.
Intensive Intervention
Prevent-Teach-Reinforce for Young Children
(PTR-YC) by G. Dunlap, K. Wilson, P. Strain, & J.K. Lee
PTR-YC is part of the Pyramid Model
Family of Products
Individualized Positive Behavior Support: Principles
⚫ Challenging Behaviors (and desirable behaviors) are maintained by their consequences.
⚫ Challenging Behaviors occur in context.
⚫ Challenging Behaviors are “communicative” – Purpose of the communication is the FUNCTION.
Functions of Challenging Behaviors
⚫ To “Get” Something
⚫ To “Avoid” Something
⚫ An activity or a request or demand
⚫ Attention (to be left alone)
⚫ Discomfort of any kind
⚫ A toy, a snack, etc.
Objectives of Individualized PBS
⚫ To TEACH improved skills (communication) for child to use instead of challenging behaviors.
⚫ To PREVENT challenging behaviors by managing the antecedent context.
⚫ To REINFORCE desirable behavior, and to avoid reinforcement for challenging behavior.
Individualized Positive Behavior Support
⚫ Prevent-Teach-Reinforce for Young Children is a model of Individualized Positive Behavior Support.
⚫ Sometimes referred to as:
– “Assessment-based PBS”
– “Function-based PBS”
Some Features of PTR-YC
⚫ Research-based Practices
⚫ Team-driven decision-making
⚫ Manualized, with detailed steps for designing and implementing intervention plans
⚫ All Behavior Intervention Plans (BIPs) include at least 3 components:
– Prevent (antecedent manipulations)
– Teach (instruction on social-communication skills)
– Reinforce (consequences)
Process of PTR-YC
- Teaming and Goal Setting
- Practical Data Collection
- Functional Behavioral Assessment (PTR-YC Assessment)
Step 1: Teaming & Goal Setting
⚫ Identify relevant team members, including families, caregivers.
⚫ Team meeting to discuss and identify goals.
Step 2: Practical Data Collection
⚫ Team identifies data to collect, using behavior rating scales.
⚫ Data collection needs to be efficient, valid, and reliable.
Step 3: Functional Behavioral Assessment
⚫ Indirect measure in a checklist format to identify antecedents and environmental influences.
⚫ Goal: gather as much relevant information as possible, develop hypothesis statement.
Step 4: Intervention
⚫ Menu of intervention options with complete descriptions; examples and considerations included.
⚫ 3 categories of interventions – Prevent, Teach, Reinforce.
⚫ Plans include at least 1 strategy from each category.
Step 5: Using Data for Data-based Decision Making & Next Steps
⚫ Progress monitoring.
⚫ If progress is satisfactory, keep going.
⚫ If progress is unsatisfactory, check fidelity and functional assessment.
Wrapping Up and Moving Forward
⚫ Meet periodically, consider adding behaviors to Behavior Intervention Plan, share with families and colleagues, celebrate successes.
Summary
⚫ Important to understand challenging behavior.
⚫ PTR-YC, a 5-step process, is a model of individualized Positive Behavior Support.