When students have complex behavior needs school teams often struggle to maintain student engagement and safety. An appropriate education includes evidence-based strategies for teaching new skills and for decreasing interfering behaviors when universal behavior supports have failed. Unfortunately, teachers and school-based staff often struggle to meet the needs of these students and have limited access to training related to evidence-based behavior analytic technology. Behavior analysts are uniquely equipped to address complex behavior needs of students and to address skills of educators whose lack of skill presents barriers to educational service delivery. Behavior analysts can be welcomed as a collaborative member of an interdisciplinary team when they value teaming relationships and follow their ethical responsibility to collaborate with colleagues to identify and implement solutions. This panel has a cumulative 55 years of experience working with school systems at various levels (e.g., individual, classroom, district, statewide)across 5 states. We will discuss our efforts in public schools to support students’ educational programming and to build capacity in educators’ skills while discussing key elements of the BACB Ethical Code (e.g., collaboration, scope of practice, addressing interfering conditions to service delivery).

At the conclusion of the presentation, participants will be able to:

  1. Identify tactics for initiating engagement with educators who hope to develop the capacity to assess or intervene with dangerous behavior.
  2. Describe collaboration techniques to adapting behavior analytic consultation and technology to educational settings and work alongside non-BCBA practitioners.
  3. Understand the ethical responsibility of behavior analysts to use collaboration to improve their practice in educational contexts relative to dangerous behavior.

About the Presenter

John Staubitz
Director of Behavior Analysis in Education, TRIAD, Vanderbilt Kennedy Center, Assistant in Pediatrics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Brenda Bassingthwaite
Associate Professor, Psychology Department at Munroe-Meyer Institute, Director of School-Based Psychological Services, Program Director, Intensive Behavior Consultation
Patrick Romani
Dr. Patrick Romani is a licensed psychologist and board-certified behavior analyst, doctoral, working in the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. Dr. Romani leads clinical services delivering interdisciplinary treatment for youth with neurodevelopmental disabilities (NDD) engaging in problem behaviors. He also studies refinements to common behavioral assessment and treatment procedures as well as ways to disseminate these practices to non-behavioral providers working with you diagnosed with NDDs in rural communities. He has published over 50 peer-reviewed manuscripts in leading behavior-analytic journals and currently serves on the Editorial Review Boards for the Journals of Behavioral Education, Behavior Analysis: Research in Practice, Education and Treatment of Children, and Behavior Analysis in Practice.
Deva Carrion
Program Manager of School Consultation at Marcus Autism Center
Anonymous

The course was straight forward, interesting, and imparted new knowledge.

Anonymous

I enjoyed hearing the 4 panelists discuss a variety of topics that are critical to building capacity within school settings. Each panelist brought a rich insight to the discussion. I highly recommend for those BCBAs who work closely with school systems.

Anonymous

I really loved the panel as each member gave their own unique perspective to this really diverse topic.

Course information

  • Title: Ethical Applications of the Science of ABA in Public Schools
  • Presenter: John Staubitz M.Ed., Brenda Bassingthwaite PhD, Patrick Romani PhD, Deva Carrion PhD
  • CEUs: 2.5 Learning - Ethics
  • Duration: 2 hours and 5 minutes
  • Customer Rating: (198)
$39.00

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