Educational & Behavioral Interventions for
Challenging Students Program
The Educational and Behavioral Interventions for Challenging Students
(EBICS) Program is for students who exhibit aggressive and/or severe disruptive
behavior and are diagnosed with mental retardation.
The
program began in September 1988 and utilizes a functional, structured,
skill-oriented curriculum. The major program goal is to prepare students
to function as independently as possible in the most complex and least
restrictive community, domestic, vocational and recreational environments.
Each classroom, with four to six students, is staffed with a certified
special education teacher and a school/community trainer or a teaching
assistant. A coordinator and support staff provide supervision, direct
support and overall program development to each classroom.
It
is expected that students in this program will have challenging behaviors
which frequently include physical aggression toward themselves and others.
A functional analysis of behavior, which provides descriptive information
regarding the purpose of a student's behavior, may be completed on each
student. This information is used to design school-based programs to teach
those skills necessary to decrease the frequency of the challenging behavior.
Results from all assessments are combined in the formulation of an individualized
educational program (IEP), which focuses on communication, vocational,
and behavioral training within the school setting, with the ultimate goal
of transition into a community work environment.
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