Behavior Plans Begin At Home

One of the pitfalls of being the “behavior lady” is that everyone (E-V-E-R-Y-O-N-E) you know gets put on a behavior plan at some point. And they work even more poorly at home than at work.

Right now, I’ve got my longtime partner, George, on a BIP. I have had George on a BIP since I met him in 1999. His target behaviors right now address his narcissism and his towel-folding (seriously…who folds a towel with the selvage edge exposed?). I expect that I’ll be able to exit him from the towel-folding goal at our next progress monitoring, but the goal addressing narcissism is going to take a while. The last time I told him he was being full of himself, he proudly exclaimed “See? I’m the BEST narcissist!” then narrowed his eyes and growled “Stop SPED-ing me.” Sigh.

Our dog, Meemaw, is also on a BIP. She’s a pug, and her condition comes with some behavioral issues inherent to the breed. Right now, Meemaw’s primary target behaviors are learning how to “dog” instead of “people” and going to her crate without being dragged like a Roman prisoner being thrown into the Colosseum’s lion pit.

Once again, my data tells me that success is eluding her. When presented with a tug toy, Meemaw engages in dogging behaviors (such as pulling at the toy with her teeth and chasing the toy) for an average duration of 153 seconds in the living room setting based on 574 direct observations before removing herself to the sofa to watch Law and Order SVU reruns and eat Cheetos the kids have spilled.

As for the crate…she’s sleeping in the chair in our bedroom as I type this. She and George are both snoring. But that’s another goal for another day.

#enraged2engaged #teacherhumor

About sara

I have spent the last 18 years in various classrooms, most of them in alternative education working with criminal, at-risk, or behavior-disordered students. I am just a regular teacher like you, who learned a lot of quality information the hard way. Currently, I work with students, families, and teachers to formulate effective and creative plans for helping students change problematic behaviors into productive ones as we work together to reintegrate students back into a general education high school setting.

4 comments on “Behavior Plans Begin At Home

    • George, my mom used to talk about selvage when I was an ankle biter. Here is the definition:

      A selvage (US English) or selvedge (British English) is a self-finished edge of fabric. The selvages keep the fabric from unraveling or fraying. The selvages are a result of how the fabric is created.

      The selvage is the tightly woven sides of the material.

      Which one of you stopped biting?

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