Creating Effective School-Home Partnerships. Approaches to handling challenging behavior require consistent efforts across various settings—i.e., school, home and community. When a child displays serious challenging behavior at school, a strong partnership between the school and family needs to be established to maximize the effectiveness of behavior intervention strategies. Both the school and parents need to be aware of the importance of establishing a partnership. It is important for schools to create a system to encourage family involvement. Parents also need to actively and positively participate in their child's behavior support program at school.
Information from parents is critical when designing a behavior support plan or Behavior Intervention Plan (BIP) at school. The information from parents may include observations of and insights into their child's behavior at home and in the community, the child's preferences and strengths, information on any medical issues, and descriptions of the home environment and family routines. Those pieces of information also help school personnel understand important family life-style issues, which should be reflected in the development of any comprehensive positive behavior supports that will be implemented across multiple settings.
A critical factor in maximizing the likelihood of success with a comprehensive, multi-domain behavior support plan or BIP is effective on-going communication. Although it may not be easy because of barriers such as time constraints, other children in the family, transportation, language barriers, and so on, the decision-making process for designing and implementing effective behavioral supports must include parental input and collaboration through on-going communication. Parents should ask their school about the following issues and concerns in order to ensure better communication:
Times for teachers to discuss behavior issues
Involvement of parents in decision making
Network of parents of students with challenging behavior
Verbal or written communication methods in languages of parents
Availability of a parent education program
Parent para-educators in bilingual and special programs for linguistic and cultural diversity
Participating on a Team. Establishing a collaborative team is the first step in creating a successful school-wide PBS program, as well as in developing an effective individual student behavior support plan (BSP/BIP). Parents are the most powerful and valuable resource to the school team. Throughout the teaming process, parents should be able to provide their opinions, experiences, feelings, and insights. All team members should keep in mind that effective behavior intervention strategies are based on a comprehensive understanding of both the student and the environmental factors that influence his/her challenging behavior. Parents are key to making the team strong and effective. A strong team requires:
Common interest in student's behavior
Agreement on goals and purposes
Shared leadership
On-going learning and sharing environment
Engaging in Intervention Activities. Parent participation starts with collecting and providing information about their child and his/her behavior. All information can be useful in the initial stage of PBS planning. The information can include:
General family story
Child's strengths, needs, preferences, and expectations
Long-term goals and dreams for the future
Current responses to challenging behavior
Previous approaches used to address behavior problems
Priorities, current needs, and ongoing concerns
This information will help school personnel understand the student's behavior and lifestyle. Parents also can be involved in the Functional Behavioral Assessment (FBA) process by providing data from the home and community environments regarding antecedents, setting events, consequences of behavior, and behavior patterns (time, a day of the week, place, or people related to the challenging behavior).
Positive behavior support is ongoing process and needs consistency in approaches to enhance effective implementation. When similar strategies are applied at home, in the community, and at school, behavioral interventions and supports can be much more effective. Intervention strategies require frequent feedback and modification to maximize their effectiveness. Data on the effectiveness of behavioral interventions implemented at home should be shared with all team members during regular team meetings.
The authors discuss their life with their son. JT, a man in his 30s with Autism. In this article, they describe JT's life as it is today and review the lessons they have learned, hopeful that their successes and failures, and their process, will be useful to others.
This chapter describes the 1997 version of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act’s (IDEA) family-participation provisions, the PBS provisions of IDEA, the relationship between the PBS and family-participation provisions, and the consequences of that relationship for families, service providers, and researchers.
Data were collected through in-depth telephone interviews with 17 families of children, youth, and adults with challenging behavior. This exploratory study focused on inclusion, the lifestyle that goes along with it, and the importance of these issues to families.
Telephone interviews were conducted with 17 families who had a family member with mental retardation and/or problem behavior.
Students with behaviors that impede both their learning in school and their adjustment in the community may be helped to do much better through positive behavior support (PBS).
Sixteen focus groups were conducted with 69 families of children with disabilities. Findings indicate that families value three particular traits in professionals who work with their children who have problem behavior.
Participants, representing six stakeholder groups, discussed in focus group interviews the kinds of useful informational products they believed would be most helpful in building positive, practical solutions to behavioral challenges.
Based on focus groups with nine individuals with disabilities with cognitive disabilities and/or autism, their opinions toward behavioral issues, information strategies and supports were assessed.