|
This intervention rewards students for positive behaviors. It can be used with
small groups or your entire class. Critters provides children with prize slips that they can redeem with the instructor
for classroom privileges. This strategy uses the element of surprise and imaginatively designed reward slips as
additional student motivators.
Jim's Hints for Using...
Critters!: Rewarding Positive Behaviors
Give
Critter Slips Out to Other Staff to Distribute to Your Students. Here
is a strategy to use if you want your students to show the daily positive behavior in settings other than your
classroom (e.g., in art, gym, music, lunch). Give the staff responsible for supervising students in these settings
a handful of Critter Slips. Tell them the target positive behavior and, throughout the class or activity period,
encourage these staff members to hand out slips randomly to students engaging in that behavior.
Have a 'Mystery Behavior Day'. Tell students at the start of
the day that you will be handing out Critter Slips as usual, but that you are keeping secret the positive behavior
that you are rewarding. When handing out slips, say to the receiving students something like: "Nice job.
Here is a Critter Slip. Think about why you received it!". At the end of the day, ask students who had
received Critter Slips to guess the positive behavior that you had selected as the theme for that day.
Customize Reward Slips to Support Curriculum. You may want
to create your own customized reward slips to link them thematically to the curriculum that you are teaching.
If you are presenting a unit on African wildlife, for example, you might make up slips that depict representative
animals from the savannah ecosystem. For a unit on American presidents, you could hand out reward slips featuring
the faces and names of lesser-known Chief Executives to help children better to remember them.
Alter the Reward Slips for Older Students. The Critter Slips
program is suitable for older students as well as for younger children. Since 'cute' Critter Slips may put off
middle and high school students, though, you can replace them with reward slips that resemble currency. Some inventive
teachers even go so far as to create 'classroom bucks', fake dollar bills that display their face and name. Older
students collect these 'dollars' as avidly as smaller children seek Critter Slips!

Materials
Preparation
academic (e.g., Come
to class on time, prepared, and ready to learn) and behavioral (e.g., When passing through the hall, walk in single
file with hands and feet to self) goals. Define these expectations in terms that your students can easily understand
and post them around the classroom so that students can review them as needed.
arn the privilege. For example, you may choose to let students
use one Critter Slip to purchase 5 additional minutes of free time or redeem 5 Critter Slips for the privilege
of avoiding a grade-penalty for a late homework assignment. (If you are stuck for ideas, ask your students what
privileges they might like to see included on your reward list.)
Steps in Implementing This Intervention
Step 1: Introduce
Critter Slips. Reserve 10 minutes of class time to inform students about
the Critter Slips intervention:
and how frequently they can redeem slips (e.g., at the end of each day; just
before lunch period on Fridays).
Step 2: Start the Intervention. On a daily basis:
the chance to redeem their Critter Slips for privileges or rewards.
(Some teachers are comfortable letting students redeem slips whenever they choose while other instructors prefer
the structure of a pre-set ' slips redemption time'.)
Step 3: Fade Critter Slips Intervention.
|
|
|
Perhaps you are concerned, though, that students are hoarding slips in order to cash them in eventually
for an unusually large prize that might be difficult to accommodate (e.g., 45 minutes of continuous free time).
To prevent such an occurrence, you might place modest restrictions on students' redeeming of slips. For example,
you might announce that students can redeem no more than 10 slips on any one day.|
|
|
Thanks to Kathleen Baker, a speech language pathologist from Central
New York, for positive intervention ideas included in this strategy!
![]()
| | www.interventioncentral.org |