Center on PBIS | Tier 3 (2024)

What is Tier 3 Support?

Center on PBIS | Tier 3 (1)

PBIS’ framework doesn’t just work with school-wide and targeted supports. It’s also an effective way to address sometimes dangerous, often highly disruptive behaviors creating barriers to learning and excluding students from social settings.

At most schools, there are 1-5% of students for whom Tier 1 and Tier 2 supports have not connected. At Tier 3, these students receive more intensive, individualized support to improve their behavioral and academic outcomes. Tier 3 strategies work for students with developmental disabilities, autism, emotional and behavioral disorders, and students with no diagnostic label at all.

Foundational Systems

Tier 3 practices stem from strong foundations in Tier 1 and Tier 2 supports. With both tiers in place, schools are free to organize individualized teams to support students with more intense needs.

The foundational systems involved in Tier 3 supports are:

Multi-disciplinary Team

Tier 3 team membership includes an administrator, a coach/behavior representative, others with basic knowledge of problem solving. Team members should also include personnel who actively provide Tier 3 support in the school. This gives them input on decisions about interventions they provide to students they serve. Including school personnel from different departments ensures an array of perspectives.

Behavior Support Expertise

A school’s Tier 3 team must include someone who has experience providing formal behavior support. They need to have applied behavior expertise and experience developing multi-agency support.

Formal Fidelity and Outcome Data Collection

Documenting student outcomes lets teams monitor how the resources allocated and the practices adopted affect student’s outcomes. These data are essential to:

  • Supporting data-based decision making and problem solving
  • Identifying needed adjustments to Tier 3 practices
  • Maximizing resources
  • Ensuring all students are supported fully and equitably
  • Evaluating the system’s overall effectiveness
  • Determining student eligibility for additional resources
  • Evaluating individual education programs·

Assessing how closely Tier 3 supports are implemented as intended (fidelity of implementation) ensures student outcomes can be attributed to the interventions provided.

For more information on how to setup Tier 3 supports, check out our guides:

  • Tier 3 District-level Systems Guide
  • Tier 3 School-level Systems Guide
  • Tier 3 Student-level Systems Guide

Key Practices

Tier 3 practices start with strong Tier 1 and Tier 2 foundations. In addition to these practices, the key practices involved in Tier 3 supports are:

Function-based Assessments

Functional behavior assessment (FBA) is the formal process for ensuring a student’s plan centers on why a student behaves the way they do. FBA allows teams to identify which interventions are most likely to be useful for an individual student. Plans resulting from a formal FBA process will include strategies for:

  • Preventing unwanted behavior
  • Teaching appropriate behavior
  • Positively reinforcing appropriate behavior
  • Reducing rewards for unwanted behavior
  • Ensuring student safety

For more information, check out our FBAguides:

  • Tier 3 Brief Functional Behavior Assessment (FBA) Guide
  • Tier 3 Comprehensive Functional Behavior Assessment (FBA) Guide

Wraparound

Wraparound differs from many service delivery strategies, in that it provides a comprehensive, holistic, youth and family-driven way of responding when children or youth experience serious mental health or behavioral challenges. Wraparound puts the child or youth and family at the center of the process to develop a support plan. With support from a team of professionals and natural supports, the family’s ideas and perspectives about what they need and what will be helpful drive all of the work in Wraparound.

The student and their family members work with a Wraparound facilitator to build their Wraparound team, which can include the family’s friends and people from the wider community, as well as providers of services and supports.

With the help of the team, the family and young person take the lead in deciding team vision and goals, and in developing creative and individualized services and supports that will help them achieve the goals and vision. Team members work together to put the plan into action, monitor how well it’s working, and change it as needed.

Bruns and Walker (2008) identified ten principles of the wraparound process that included:

  1. Family voice and choice
  2. Team Based
  3. Natural Supports
  4. Collaboration
  5. Community based
  6. Culturally Competent
  7. Individualized
  8. Strengths-based
  9. Unconditional
  10. Outcome based

All of these principles are consistent with a PBIS approach and can result in a seamless connection between PBIS practices at Tier3, that include Functional Behavior Assessments and Behavior Intervention Plans,and wraparound supports.

For more information about wraparound, please visit the National Wraparound Initiative. The Midwest PBIS Network also has an abundance of materials for both the wraparound and person-centered planning process.

Person Centered Planning

Person-Centered Planning (PCP) is a way for diverse people, who share a common need to align:

  • Their vision, purposes, and goals,
  • Their understanding of the student’s past,present and future life, and
  • Their actions for change, mutual support,personal and team development, and learning.

PCP makes a commitment and takes action to ensure that changes will be accomplished for the student. The PCP philosophy aims to 1) build support based on a capacity-based perspective of the student, 2) use natural school, family and community resources to fulfill a vision of a positive future for the student, and 3)build a circle of support for the student that includes friends, family, school personnel and service providers. The PCP team coordinates supports around the life of the individual rather than around the needs of the system and existing services. The team also recognizes that abilities of ordinary citizens, neighbors, fellow students, and school personnel, can teach students skills, help them participate, model appropriate behaviors, and foster interdependent relationships.

PCP is a planning process that involves long-term commitment to an action plan and a positive vision for the future of the student. This plan is not intended to replace an IEP or a Behavior Intervention Plan, but can be seen to supplement and extend those plans by addressing broader quality of life and community, personal, and life goals of the student. PCP has much in common with wraparound, with wraparound being a broader umbrella under which PCP can be used as an effective planning process. Both approaches, as well as PBIS, share a commitment to five essential goals of PCP that include:

  • Being present and participating in community life,
  • Gaining and maintaining satisfying relationships,
  • Expressing preferences and making choices in everyday life,
  • Having opportunities to fulfill respected roles and live with dignity, and
  • Continuing to develop personal competencies.

There are several Person-Centered Planning processes that have been developed using group facilitation techniques and graphic planning supports including:

  • Planning Alternative Tomorrows with Hope (PATH),
  • Making Action Plans (MAP),
  • Essential Lifestyle Planning (ELP),
  • Personal Profile,
  • Futures Plan,
  • Circle of Support, and
  • A combination of the above approaches into hybrid models.

For more information about Person Centered Planning visit the Administration for Community Living and the National Parent Center on Transition and Employment.

Cultural and Contextual Fit

With every practice, the student's and the school's culture and context must be considered. Each of these element influences and adds value to a school’s Tier 3 practices:

  • Local environments such as neighborhoods and cities
  • Personal characteristics such as race, ethnicity, and nationality
  • Learning histories such as family, social routines, customs, and experiences
  • Language such as dialect and vocabulary

Tier 3 Teams

There are two types of teams associated with Tier 3 supports: the Tier 3 leadership team and individual student support teams.

Tier 3 Leadership Team

Tier 3 teams won’t look the same in every school. Whether you have one team looking at Tier 3 specifically, or one team monitoring Tier 2 and 3 systems together, this leadership team meets regularly to be sure:

  • Students who need additional support have access to those systems
  • Students who receive Tier 3 supports are successful

Tier 3 leadership teams are led by someone with applied behavior expertise, administrative authority, multi-agency support experience, knowledge of students, and knowledge about how the school operates across grade levels and programs.

Tier 3 Student Support Team

In addition to a team committed to monitoring Tier 3 systems, there must be a problem-solving team for each student receiving Tier 3 supports. These teams meet regularly to design and refine strategies specific to one student. The team’s goal is always to transition a student to fewer intensive supports.

Tier 3 student support teams typically include people from the student’s school, home, and community. Students and their families input and approval on who is on the team. The school’s administrator must have enough involvement to allocate resources as needed for a student’s plan.

Assessments

The Tiered Fidelity Inventory (TFI) assess how closely school personnel apply the core features of PBIS. The TFI includes three separate surveys – one for assessing each tier – schools can use separately or in combination with one another. Schools at every stage of implementation may use the TFI to assess any tier.

Explore the Evidence Base for Tier 3

At its foundation, PBIS is a framework supported by research spanning decades. Study after study confirms the positive impact Tier 3 systems and practices have on improving student outcomes. The evaluation brief, "Is School-wide Positive Behavior Support an Evidence-based Practice?" and "References for the Evidence Base of PBIS" each lay out some of the research and provide additional resources to explore the topic further.

Center on PBIS  |  Tier 3 (2024)

FAQs

What are the criticism of PBIS? ›

Concerns include: 1) PBIS creates a negative school environment, 2) PBIS is demeaning, 3) PBIS fosters materialism, and 4) PBIS promotes labeling.

How many students should be in Tier 3? ›

Tier 3 : intensive individualized intervention

It is delivered daily in small groups ranging from 1 to 3 students per group.

Why is PBIS controversial? ›

Inherent in the praise of one student is the silent criticism of another. This sets up an unhealthy competitive environment that pits student against student. It is poor practice to use the behavior of a peer to try to force the behavior of another.

Is PBIS evidence-based? ›

Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS) is an evidence-based, tiered framework for supporting students' behavioral, academic, social, emotional, and mental health.

What are the 4 PBIS rules? ›

The four critical features of SW-PBIS include:
  • Locally-meaningful and culturally-relevant outcomes.
  • Empirically-supported practices.
  • Systems to support implementation.
  • Data to monitor effective and equitable implementation and to guide decision making.

What is the PBIS pyramid? ›

Early childhood PBIS refers to PBIS implementation within early childhood settings – The Pyramid Model. The Pyramid Model is a multi-tiered framework with a continuum of evidence-based practices to promote expected behavior, prevent problem behavior, and intervene when students need more support.

Is PBIS an ABA? ›

School-wide Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS) is an example of applied behavior analysis implemented at a scale of social importance.

What does Tier 3 behavior look like? ›

The array of behavior problems requiring Tier 3 supports may include externalizing behavior problems (e.g., disruptive behaviors, aggression) and internalizing behavior problems (e.g., suicidal ideation, depression, anxiety).

What does Tier 3 intervention look like? ›

Tier 3: Intensive interventions

This is the most intense level of RTI. Tier 3 can mean small group work, or it can mean individual lessons. Most kids who get this support still spend a lot of their day in a general education classroom. Yet they may spend bigger parts of the day in a resource room.

How many minutes is a Tier 3 intervention? ›

Time – Depending on the age of the student, instruction should be provided daily, ranging from 40 to 60 minutes, which must be taken from the daily schedule. Two options to consider are: Providing Tier 3 intervention twice a day (e.g., 20 minutes in the morning and 20 minutes in the afternoon)

How do you teach a Tier 3 student? ›

Tier 3. Instruction should be intensified by focusing on fewer high priority reading skills during lessons and scheduling multiple and extended instructional sessions. One-on-one or small group instruction also provides intensity as students have more opportunities to practice and respond.

What is Tier 3 in elementary school? ›

At Tier 3, these students receive more intensive, individualized support to improve their behavioral and academic outcomes. Tier 3 strategies work for students with developmental disabilities, autism, emotional and behavioral disorders, and students with no diagnostic label at all.

What percentage of students need Tier 3 intervention? ›

Although most students respond to Tier 1 or Tier 2 instruction, a small percentage (i.e., 5%) will not and may require Tier 3 intervention (i.e., special education services). In a three-tiered model, a special education teacher provides the intervention, which is guided by data, individualized, and recursive.

What are major infractions in PBIS? ›

Inappropriate Language Defiance/ Disrespect/ Insubordination Fighting/ Physical Aggression Disruption Harassment/ Bullying Theft Lying/ Cheating/ Forgery Property Damage/ Vandalism Inappropriate Display of Affection Technology Violation Dress Code Violation Skip…

What are the barriers to PBIS? ›

Lack of parental involvement, poor communication channels, and differing educational approaches in high-need schools create barriers for improving student behavior at school. Some parental educational approaches at home are misaligned with positive, proactive teaching practices at school.

What are consequences in PBIS? ›

Consequences are more that “punishment.” They are the actions that follow the problem behavior and can either help to increase or decrease problem behaviors. PBIS views appropriate consequences as those that are effective in changing the student's problem behavior.

What does the research say about PBIS? ›

Results indicated that PBIS was effective in improving classroom quality as evidenced by a statistically significant change on the classroom organization domain on the Classroom Assessment Scoring System and the overall score on the Early Childhood Environmental Rating Scale-Revised.

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