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Information
Section: Education
Article: Developing Social
Competence for All Students
Source: Claudia G. Vincent,
Robert H. Horner, and George Sugai, ERIC/OSEP
Digest #E626 (July 2002)*
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INTRODUCTION
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Schools are under pressure to
create safe, orderly and effective learning
environments where students acquire social as well
as academic skills that will allow them to succeed
in school and beyond. This pressure has emerged
from real disciplinary challenges combined with
wariness of school violence sensationalized in the
media (Lewis & Sugai, 1999; Sugai et al., 2000;
Walker, Nishioka, Zeller, Bullis, & Sprague,
2001; Walker & Shinn, 2002). At the same time,
teachers, parents, and administrators report more
and more time consumed by disciplinary measures
intended to correct students' antisocial behaviors
(Skiba & Peterson, 2000). Traditional
punishment and exclusion may provide a short-lived
reprieve from disciplinary problems, but research
has shown that in the long term, punishment and
exclusion are ineffective and can lead to renewed
incidents of disruption and escalating behaviors
(Mayer, 1999).
Over the last two decades,
school populations have become increasingly
diverse. Children sharing the same classroom come
from a broad range of cultures, languages, and
socio-economic backgrounds. Schools face the
challenge of creating environments that are
sensitive to a myriad of individual backgrounds and
support all students' social and academic success.
They can no longer afford to focus exclusively on
delivering academic curricula; they are also
responsible for establishing and maintaining
socio-cultural microcosms that teach children to
negotiate the diverse values and social norms of a
pluralistic society. This digest describes the
challenges of social skills instruction and
provides three strategies to improve all students'
social competence. Social skills are crucial for
mutually productive interactions and durable
interpersonal relationships. Children benefit not
only socially, but also academically, when
appropriate behaviors increase their access to
instructional time. We emphasize the importance of
teaching individual social skills within the
context of establishing a school-wide culture of
social competence.
The success of teachers and
administrators in helping students develop social
competence depends on their ability to (a) develop
a school-wide culture of social competence, (b)
infuse the curriculum with situation-specific
social skills lessons that target key behaviors,
and (c) match the level and intensity of
instruction to students' social skills deficits
(Gresham, 1998; Sugai & Lewis, in
press).
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DEVELOPING
A SCHOOL-WIDE CULTURE OF COMPETENCE
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Schools are complex
environments comprising heterogeneous populations
and activities. Students, teachers, staff,
administrators, and parents often have differing
expectations of how a school should function. To
establish a school climate acceptable to all, a
team representing all members of the school
community should be formed and asked to define
school-wide behavioral expectations (Lewis &
Sugai, 1999). School-wide behavioral expectations
typically
- address the most
frequently observed problem behaviors across all
school settings
- are condensed into three
to five short and easy to remember statements
- are age appropriate
- are positively stated
(e.g., "be respectful" instead of "don't tease")
(Sugai & Lewis, in press).
Visibly posted throughout the
building, school-wide behavioral expectations are
intended to publicize the social values shared by
all members of the school community and the
behaviors representing those values. For instance,
a middle school in Oregon developed the following
school-wide behavioral expectations:
- Be Respectful
- Be Responsible
- Follow Directions
- Hands and Feet to Self
- Be There-Be Ready
(Taylor-Greene et al., 1997).
Formulating and posting
school-wide behavioral expectations alone does not
automatically result in improved student behavior.
All students need to be taught directly and
actively how to perform the behaviors representing
the school's social values (Horner, Sugai,
Lewis-Palmer & Todd, 2001, Lewis & Sugai,
1999; Sugai & Lewis, in press). A one-day
training could be conducted at the beginning of the
academic year or at intervals throughout the year
to illustrate the school's behavioral expectations
through concrete examples in various school
settings (Taylor-Greene et al., 1997). For
instance, being respectful can mean waiting one's
turn in line in the cafeteria or raising one's hand
to get the teacher's attention in the classroom.
To encourage students to
practice the taught behaviors, students'
performance of appropriate behaviors should be
reinforced through routine acknowledgments and
monitored through ongoing data collection
(Taylor-Greene et al., 1997). In comparison to
students who receive teacher attention only in the
form of reprimands for rule violations, students
who know that their socially appropriate behaviors
are appreciated by teachers and staff are more
likely to repeat those behaviors and encourage
their peers to behave appropriately (Sugai &
Lewis, in press). Once a behavioral skill becomes
functional for a student (i.e., is positively
recognized by teachers and peers) the skill is
likely to become part of the student's general
behavioral repertoire.
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SOCIAL
SKILLS LESSONS TARGETING KEY BEHAVIORS IN SPECIFIC
SITUATIONS
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To support the development of
a school-wide culture of competence, social skills
instruction must be an integral part of the
school's curriculum and daily operations (Sugai
& Lewis, in press). During any given school
day, students encounter a variety of settings, for
example, the school bus, hallway, classroom,
cafeteria, playground, and gym. Each setting
requires specific skills for successful
interactions with others sharing the same
space.
With mounting pressure to
improve students' academic achievements, classrooms
have become the focal point for improving student
behavior through social skills instruction, thereby
ensuring students' access to academic content
(Sugai & Lewis, in press). To create a
classroom environment where all students can learn,
teachers must teach appropriate social skills
giving students access to the academic curriculum.
Appropriate behaviors, such as raising one's hand
to signal for help or sitting still during
seat-work help to ensure access to the academic
content being delivered. Once students acquire the
skills necessary for successful classroom
interactions, they will be more likely to
generalize their acquired skills to other settings
and contribute to the school-wide culture of social
competence (Horner et al., 2001; Sugai & Lewis,
in press).
Teachers need to respond to a
students inability to perform a social skill
exactly as they would to a students inability
to complete an academic task. If students do not
know how to solicit teacher attention
appropriately, they need to be actively and
systematically instructed to signal for help, for
example, by raising their hands. Situation-specific
social skills instruction should focus on teaching
behaviors perceived as functional by students and
others with whom they interact. For instance,
getting teacher attention must result from raising
one's hand, and talking out or leaving one's seat
must not result in getting teacher attention. If an
inappropriate behavior is made functional for a
student by evoking the desired response, teachers
inadvertently might encourage the performance of
inappropriate behavior. Socially appropriate
behaviors in the classroom are likely to decrease
the amount of time spent on disciplinary actions
and increase students' access to academic content.
Situation specific instruction should incorporate a
model or description of the appropriate skill,
provide students the opportunity to observe and
practice the skill, assess the students' ability to
perform the skill, provide reinforcement contingent
on performing the taught skill, and avoid
reinforcing inappropriate behavior (Gresham, 1998;
Sugai & Lewis, in press).
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MATCHING
THE LEVEL AND INTENSITY OF INSTRUCTION TO STUDENTS'
NEEDS
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Children enter school with
varying degrees of social competence. While some
students are fluent in social skills and therefore
able to interact appropriately with peers and
teachers, others might not have learned to perform
socially appropriate behaviors and, therefore, are
at risk of low academic achievement and developing
antisocial lifestyles (Walker et al., 1996).
Although variation exists, general research has
shown that approximately 80% of a school's student
population responds to instruction in school-wide
behavioral expectations, and approximately 15% of
students need additional instruction in the form of
targeted situation-specific lessons. Students who
are unresponsive to school-wide and targeted
instructions comprise about 5% of a school's
population and present the toughest challenge to
the daily operations of a school (Horner and Sugai,
2002; Sugai et al., 2000; Walker et al., 1996).
Addressing individual students' persistent
antisocial behaviors requires a systematic process
of determining why a student repeatedly performs
the specific behaviors (Sugai et al., 2000).
Functional behavioral
assessment offers strategies to identify events and
conditions triggering a specific behavior and the
functions maintaining the behavior (i.e.,
get/access or escape/avoid). Direct observations,
review of archival data, or interviews with
students, their teachers, and/or their parents help
to define the circumstances under which the problem
behavior occurs. Based on this information,
individual behavior support plans focusing on
teaching and reinforcing socially appropriate
replacement behaviors can be designed and
implemented to match individual students' skill
deficits (Sugai et al., 2000). To use the
technology of functional behavioral assessment
effectively and efficiently, schools need to focus
on training personnel to conduct functional
behavioral assessments and implement the resulting
individual behavior support plans.
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REFERENCES
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Gresham, F.M. (1998). Social
skills training: Should we raze, remodel, or
rebuild? Behavioral Disorders, 24,
19-25.
Horner, R.H. & Sugai, G.
(2002, April). Overview of Positive Behavior
Support. Paper presented at the 2002 Convention of
the Council for Exceptional Children, New
York.
Horner, R.H., Sugai, G.,
Lewis-Palmer, T., & Todd, A.W. (2001). Teaching
school-wide behavioral expectations. Report on
Emotional and Behavioral Disorders in Youth, 1(4),
77-79, 93-96.
Lewis, T., & Sugai, G.
(1999). Effective behavior support: A systems
approach to proactive schoolwide management. Focus
on Exceptional Children, 31(6), 1-24.
Mayer, G.R. (1999).
Constructive discipline for school personnel.
Education and Treatment of Children, 22(1),
36-54.
Skiba, R.J. & Peterson,
R.L. (2000). School discipline at a crossroads:
From zero tolerance to early response. Exceptional
Children, 66(3), 335-356.
Sugai, G., Horner, R.H.,
Dunlap, G., Hieneman, M., Lewis, T.J., Nelson,
C.M., Scott, T., Liaupsin, C., Sailor, W.,
Turnbull, A.P., Turnbull, H.R., III, Wickham, D.,
Reuf, M., & Wilcox, B. (2000). Applying
positive behavioral support and functional
behavioral assessment in schools. Journal of
Positive Behavioral Interventions, 2, 131-143.
Sugai, G., & Lewis, T.
(in press). Social skills instruction in the
classroom. In E.J. Kame'enui & C. Darch (Eds.).
Instructional classroom management. (2nd ed.).
White Plains, NY: Longman.
Taylor-Greene, S., Brown, D.,
Nelson, L., Longton, J., Gassman, T., Cohen, J.,
Swartz, J., Horner, R.H., Sugai, G., & Hall, S.
(1997). School-wide behavioral support: Starting
the year off right. Journal of Behavioral
Education, 7, 99-112.
Walker, H.M., Horner, R.H.,
Sugai, G., Bullis, M., Sprague, J.R., Bricker, D.,
& Kaufman, M.J. (1996). Integrated approaches
to preventing antisocial behavior patterns among
school-age children and youth. Journal of Emotional
and Behavioral Disorders, 4, 193-256.
Walker, H.M., Nishioka, V.M.,
Zeller, R., Bullis, M., & Sprague, J.R. (2001).
School-based screening, identification, and
service-delivery issues. Report on Emotional &
Behavioral Disorders in Youth, 1(3), 51-52, 67-70.
Walker, H.M., & Shinn,
M.R. (2002). Structuring school-based interventions
to achieve integrated primary, secondary, and
tertiary prevention goals for safe and effective
schools. In M.R. Shinn, G. Stoner, & H.M.
Walker (Eds.), Interventions for academic and
behavior problems: Preventive and remedial
approaches. National Association of School
Psychologists. Silver Spring, MD.
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FOOTNOTE
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ERIC/OSEP Digests are in the
public domain and may be freely reproduced and
disseminated, but please acknowledge your source.
This digest was prepared with funding from the
Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP), U.S.
Department of Education, under Contract No.
ED-99-CO-0026. The opinions expressed in this
publication do not necessarily reflect the
positions or policies of OSEP or the Department of
Education.
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Information
Section: Education
Article: Developing Social
Competence for All Students
Source: Claudia G. Vincent,
Robert H. Horner, and George Sugai, ERIC/OSEP
Digest #E626 (July 2002)*
View
the PDF
File
(requires free Adobe
Acrobat Reader)
|
Page 1 of 1
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Tourette
Syndrome "Plus" © Copyright 1998 - 2005 Leslie
E. Packer, PhD. except as noted.
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This page last updated January 7, 2005.
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