PBIS Positively Impacts Student Discipline
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 11/16/18
A new study from Tulane University found that following a  data-driven approach to student behavior correlated with a decrease in  disciplinary incidents by as much as a quarter to almost three-quarters. The focus  of the study specifically examined the use of Kickboard, a combination  of software and professional development, based in positive behavior interventions  and supports (PBIS) and social-emotional learning. A big part of PBIS is to  encourage teachers to focus less attention on punishing bad behavior and more  on "teaching, recognizing and reinforcing positive behaviors." The  Kickstart platform focuses on the collection of data about student behavior and  teacher responses to those behaviors.
The company was formed in New Orleans in 2009, after  Hurricane Katrina struck and the city handed over many of its schools to  non-profit charter school operators to run. Tulane researchers Nathan Barrett  and Douglas Harris chose to study the use of Kickboard in 70 Louisiana schools,  primarily elementary and middle schools, the majority in New Orleans, and all  of which began using the platform sometime between 2009 and 2015.
According to a project  brief, students attending a school using Kickboard tended to do  worse on standardized tests and were more likely to be suspended and to serve  more total days of suspension than the average student attending other schools.
Teachers use the software by entering information on a  number of student behaviors in real time on mobile devices. School  administrators can track student behavior by student and classroom. The software  comes with basic training, and the company also sells additional professional  development to help educators use the software more effectively as part of  changing their school cultures.
The study used anonymized school data from the years  2011-2015 about behavior, both positive and negative, provided by the company  along with data from the state's Department of Education.
The analysis uncovered several findings:
    - Use of the software varied widely among  teachers, administrators and schools. While some teachers logged in several  times a day, others hardly used the software at all.
- In the majority of Kickboard schools, the number  of behaviors marked as positive in the system far exceeded the number of  negative behaviors, consistent with the intended emphasis on positive  behaviors.
- After schools adopted Kickboard, the average  number of suspensions per student they imposed dropped by between 26 and 72  percent from the baseline (the two years prior to Kickboard adoption). The average  number of suspension days per student per year declined by more than half (52  percent) from the baseline.
The researchers acknowledged that simply adopting Kickboard  didn't necessarily lead to the benefits. "We cannot completely rule out  that Kickboard schools were also adopting changes in their discipline policies  at the same time and that these changes led to reduced suspensions," the  brief noted. However, they also attempted to isolate the effect of Kickboard  usage from other factors with two additional tests, one that restricted their  analysis to suspensions due to violent behavior (such as fighting and bringing  weapons to school) and the other by examining schools that didn't use Kickboard  "intensively." In both cases, they concluded that the results pointed  back to the use of Kickboard as being the primary driver for success.
Calling the outcomes "promising," the researchers  concluded that tracking student behavior and using the data as part of a "larger  school culture strategy" offered a way for schools "to reduce  exclusionary discipline and encourage more positive student behavior."
The evaluation brief is available through  Tulane's Education Research Alliance website, along with a technical  report that describes the project in more detail.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.