When the student engages in problem behaviors in the absence of any demand. For example, the student flaps their hands and bangs his head on the desk, what function of behavior does this describe?
What is Sensory?
You observe the student visibly upset, crying, and running away from adults trying to help them.
What is Flight?
This is the movement you should do when first trying to talk to a child who appears to be escalated.
What is "Move low, and slow."
Immediately
This is the mascot of your school.
What are The Panthers?
When the student is prompted by the teacher to begin their math worksheet and the student runs away out of the classroom, what function of behavior does this describe?
What is Escape?
You observe a student during recess appear to be arguing with another peer. The student then begins to yell at the other student and engages in verbal aggression.
What is Fight?
What does it mean to "validate the student's facial expression"?
What is "acknowledging their facial expressions by saying 'I see your body and it's telling me something is wrong, how can I help you?' and helping the student match their body language to an emotion.
What do you use to determine what items to use as reinforcers?
What is a Preference Assessment?
Name the TIBA team members who are presenting?
Who are Alyssa BCBA, Jasmine BCBA, Rosa BCBA?
When the student continuously asks for the teacher's help doing a worksheet that they have done plenty of times before independently, what function of behavior does this describe?
What is Attention?
You observe a student getting talked to by another adult whom the child is not familiar with. The child stays very still, says nothing, and just stares back at the teacher.
What is Freeze?
This is a tool to use when wanting to distract a child.
What is the "Follow my Finger" game?
When you add something to increase the future likelihood of the behavior occurring again?
What is Positive Reinforcement?
What does ACES stand for?
What is Adverse Childhood Experiences?
When the student has an item that you have noticed is always with them, and when you take that item away, the student engages in problem behaviors, what function of behavior does this describe?
What is Access?
You observe a student rocking back and forth on their chair, bouncing their legs and they've been passing gas randomly.
What is Fidget?
This excerise is when you tell the student to follow your breathing.
What is breathing exercises?
This is when you remove something to increase the likelihood of the behavior occurring again.
Ex. You take away the loud noises in a room so that the student can focus on their test.
What is Negative Reinforcement?
This is what TIBA Unit stands for.
What is Trauma Informed Behavior Analytic Unit?
When the student is given a assignment or demand, and they say I will only do it like this (describes their way), what function of behavior does this describe?
What is Control?
When a student hears a crash sound in the cafeteria and dropped to the floor and lies still with a blank stare what trauma response is this?
What is Faint?