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Positive Behavior Support at the Secondary "Targeted Group" Level
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Positive Behavior Support at the Secondary "Targeted Group" Level
Yellow Zone Strategies



September 2014 | 208 pages | Corwin

Seal the gaps in student learning with targeted intervention

Research on positive behavior support has focused largely on tier one, school-wide disciplinary policies, and tier three interventions tailored to highly problematic students. This leaves a gap in the middle. “Yellow zone”, or tier two, interventions are an extremely effective way to address many challenging behavior and disciplinary issues in small group settings.  

Positive Behavior Support at the Secondary “Targeted Group” Level shows teachers how to identify the students who can benefit from tier two interventions and demonstrates how to create an implementation plan that delivers results. Focusing on proactive strategies rather than reactive solutions, Riffel and Mitchiner’s research-based techniques include: 

  • General strategies that can be applied at the individual student level, such as self-management, proximity control, and the Premack principle and peer mentoring 
  • Comprehensive action plans that anticipate the full range of disruptions that may occur
  • A  useful behavior rating sheet proven effective in improving student behavior
  • “Funk Sway” For The Classroom: Using Feng Shui principles to create a classroom environment that enhances productivity, learning, and creativity

Apply the techniques in this book to reduce challenging behavior, improve school climate, and improve outcomes for ALL students.

“This book is easy to read, understand, and implement in any classroom or school. Teachers will be drawn to the resources that can be copied and used immediately! I can’t wait to apply some of these practices in my classroom!”
Rachel Spenner, Sixth Grade Teacher
Westridge Elementary School



 
About the Authors
 
1. Introduction
 
2. Increasting Structure and Predictability in the Classroom Through Behavior Management
 
3. Which Came First: The Behavior or the Academic Struggle?
 
4. Which Students Need Booster Shots?
 
5. What Do You Do With the Students Swinging From the Chandeliers?
 
6. Fail to Plan, Plan to Fail: What Are Your Lines of Defense?
 
7. How Do You Get Students to Prefer Good Behavior?
 
8. How Do You Engage and Connect With Students?
 
9. How Do You Get "Funk Sway" in the Classroom?
 
10. Why Is Change So Hard?
 
11. How Do We Change the Consequences?
 
12. What Are Function-Based Interventions?
 
13. How Do I Follow the Navigational Map?
 
14. Sample Intervention Forms

“This book is easy to read, understand, and implement in any classroom or school. Teachers will be drawn to the resources that can be copied and implemented immediately! I can’t wait to apply some of these practices in my classroom!”

Rachel Spenner, Sixth Grade Elementary
Westridge Elementary School, West Des Moines, Iowa

Provides excellent strategies for intervention specialist and general education teachers in my classroom management course to respond to disruptive behaviors.

Mrs Danielle Wall
Teacher Education, Urbana University
December 12, 2019
Key features
  • This is a detailed step-by-step approach to developing a targeted group model within a typical school. 
  • Sample intervention planning forms and rating sheets will be provided.
  • Educators will be able to open the book and follow the guidelines to develop their own unique application of targeted group interventions.

For instructors

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ISBN: 9781483353753

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ISBN: 9781483316789
$39.95