Author: admin
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Poem Explication
In a well thought and presented essay of about 1400-1500 wordsnot including quotations, in-text citations, or Works Cited(about 5-6 pages) explicate a poem from the list. Explication is a type of analysis that focuses on the work of literature chronologically. When analyzing a poem, you should probably go with the formalist critical approach. Identify the theme of the poem and in your explication support this theme by breaking the poem down sentence by sentencestanza by stanza, line by line, word by wordexploring the meaning and how it works within your theme. Explication for poetry requires a close focus on the language of the poem, so use The Oxford English Dictionary found in the library database; in fact, you are required to use at least 6 definitions of words in your selected poem to support your explication of the poemfollowing MLA guidelines for documentation. If the definition you provide is the obvious definition (one that most people already know), it doesnt really add much insight into the poem. -
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SAFE-T Risk Assessment and Diagnostic Formulation for Social Anxiety Emily is a 24-year-old student who is a first-generation college student and who shows the symptoms of social anxiety disorder, such as avoidance, physiological distress, rumination, and academic impairment. The analysis of Step 1 of the SAMHSA SAFE-T model showed the following risk factors: social isolation, chronic anxiety, low self-esteem, rumination, academic problems, and pressure in the family. The themes of family involvement, educational goals, non-substance use, and willingness to support are defined as step 2 protective factors. Step 3 would include direct and compassionate questioning regarding suicidal ideation as a way of eliminating hidden risk (Ryan & Oquendo, 2020). Step 4 assists in outpatient therapy, which aims at anxiety management, and Step 5 is concerned with documentation and follow-up. Based on the Suicide Crisis Intervention Model, cognitive reframing and grounding schemes would assist Emily to dispute catastrophic social scripts and control physiological arousal when encountering feared individuals. Her Mental Status Examination (MSE) would indicate anxious mood, limited affective state, coherent thinking, intact thinking, and preoccupation with perceived social breakdowns. The diagnoses of these results are diagnostically relevant as her non-participative, physiological agitation, and loss of functionality are associated with the DSM-5-TR requirements of social anxiety disorder with potential comorbidities of depression or generalized anxiety. In the context of cultural factors, the family pressure on Emily to perform better and criticize herself as a first-generation student can amplify the performance anxiety and self-criticism. There are two important ethical considerations, such as suicide risk monitoring and cultural sensitivity. I would use her family values in the treatment goals without violating autonomy in accordance with the ACA Code A.2.c. Based on the ACA Code B.2.a, I would engage in continuous suicide risk assessment and safety planning. Within the Christian world perspective, identity reinforcement beyond performance and infusion of faith-based coping, like prayer, are useful to strengthen hope, strength, and significance. References Ryan, E. P., & Oquendo, M. A. (2020). Suicide Risk Assessment and Prevention: Challenges and Opportunities. FOCUS, 18(2), 8899. Links to an external site. American Counseling Association. (2014). ACA code of ethics. Professor feedback Hello Adinnet Thank for all your work on this weeks discussion. Please see my comments below, and the attached video. God bless, Dj Well organized slides Clear delivery via video Risk Assessment -Linked the stressors and suicide risk social isolation, low self-esteem, rumination, family pressure. -Protective factors family involvement, educational goals, no substance usage; -I wondered what her risk would be, low? This will drive the interventions -Note if low, the discussion is a bit misleading, no real risk and do not need suicide interventions. Is there a crisis? I can see periodic check on it. The interventions offered are more for anxiety and thank suicide risk. MSE -I see good attention to mood, affect, thought process . . . See the link below to think about other MSE aspects as needed. See – Links to an external site. -Note that many times I will use WNL, within normal limits, when there are no issues in a specific areas such as speech, eye contact, motor activity, perceptions, thoughts as appropriate. Diagnostic Reasoning -Good to link the MSE to anxiety disorder but try not to say she meets criteria yet. Need a full battery of assessments which is part of the MSE. See the CPAD assignment assessment section to get an idea of what I am aiming to describe. -Note, the MSE may not have any data that links to diagnosis, or it may not point to the presenting problem but a different diagnosis. -When looking at assessment data to collect, think about the specific criteria and use of assessment such as level 1 cross-cutting scores that give specific questions to meet criteria and have severity measures as well Links to an external site. -Also, when conducting the assessment session (s), always look for the following signs, symptoms their frequency, severity, duration, course, location, and evidence of impairment. These are the essential ingredients for a DSM-5TR diagnosis. Cultural Aspects (2 issues) -First generation college student -ACA code offered with cultural sensitivity, ongoing suicide risk offered, safety planning -Christian Worldview remove beyond performance, spiritual disciplines to bring about hope, resilience. Common APA -Race is uppercase such as Black, White -Italic for website titles, journal titles and their volume, and book titles. -Disorders, diseases, and theories are lowercase unless proper noun. For example, Adlerian is uppercase but psychodynamic is not. A disease or disorder is lowercase such as major depressive disorder, general anxiety disorder, or hyperthyroidism. -How to cite the DSM-5TR – Links to an external site. PowerPoint Instruction The Diagnostic Presentation Discussion is designed to help you integrate your understanding of the client’s intake process, theoretical foundations, and cultural considerations to justify the diagnosis for your AI-generated client case study. You will refer to the DSM-5-TR and scholarly literature to apply the corresponding diagnostic criteria relevant to your client. In your presentation, clearly and briefly identify your clients presenting problems, background information, gender, and culture. Additionally, be sure to match the clients presenting problem and symptoms with the diagnostic criterion. You are also required to support each criterion listed with examples of how it meets your clients specific needs and concerns. Because the AI-generated information may be limited, you are expected to identify and fill in any missing details using your clinical reasoning and creativity. This assignment will help you understand both the purpose and process of using the DSM-5-TR in clinical diagnosis. Your PowerPoint presentation must be recorded as if you are presenting live to the class. Instructions Based on the Sperry and Sperry reading for Module 3, prepare 5-8 slides that define the following topics with application for how you would approach an interview for your AI generated client (approved week 1) you will be using for your case study. Slide 1 client demographic information, important historical information and presenting problems. Slide 2 – Deductive reasoning (define and provide at least 3 questions you would use to interview your client to assess symptoms related to the diagnostic criteria). Slide 3 – 5 – Client Diagnosis (refer to DSM-5/TR criteria and list criteria met with examples) (you may use more than one slide if needed). Slide 4-6 -Inductive reasoning (define and provide possible Theoretical Orientation which can help guide and frame the assessment, case conceptualization and treatment plan for your client, briefly justify the orientation as appropriate to the presenting client and diagnosis). Slide 5-7 Cultural Formulation (CF) Using elements of CF Listed in Sperry and Sperry (table 3.3, p.49) briefly describe your client through these elements and include spiritual and religious considerations. Slide 8 – References This presentation should be 5-8 slides (not including title and references slides). The slides should not include excessive text in the slides. Utilize the notes section in the presentation to detail what you would say if you were presenting this information to a group, including at least 100 words in the notes section of each slide. Refrain from thorough details for this presentation as you are preparing for future development for Case Study Assignments (CPAD, CPCC, CPTP and CPF). Each slide should use appropriate graphics and be aesthetically pleasing. In a 8-12 minute recorded presentation, present your slides as if you were presenting live to the class and record your presentation (can use a record feature in PPT). Submit to discussion board: You will submit your recording link or embed video and attached PPT as your discussion. The DSM-5/TR and at least 1 other scholarly reference is required for this assignment. Please review the Discussion Assignment Instructions Download Discussion Assignment Instructions before posting. You may also click the three dots in the upper corner to Show Rubric. Discussion Thread: Diagnosis Presentation Resources What is a z-code and how to use them Download What is a z-code and how to use them Additional Clarification for DSM-5 Diagnosis. Download Additional Clarification for DSM-5 Diagnosis. Diagnosis Example of Penny Download Diagnosis Example of Penny -
phl218 week 5 post
In One World Now: The Ethics of Globalization, Peter Singer draws attention to the impact of human activity on our atmosphere (2016, Chapter 2, para. 1). In this discussion, you will consider how ethical frameworks influence human activity related to climate change.
Note: Discussing challenges that face our world often means investigating opinions and ideas different from your own. Remember to remain thoughtful and respectful toward your peers and instructor in your initial and response discussion posts.
Create one initial post and respond to at least two of your classmates.
For your initial post, address the following:
Often, state or local mandates govern our activities to help reduce the problem of climate change. Some examples include car inspections and prohibiting the use of chemicals that contribute to climate change.
- Describe an issue related to climate change that occurs in your community or state. Include a source that explains the issue.
- What regulations or other social practices have people been mandated to comply with to help address this issue?
- What ethical questions does this issue raise for you?
For your response posts, address the following:
- Do you agree or disagree with the ethical questions that your peers have raised about their topics? Why, or why not? What actions would you take differently?
- How do individuals personal ethical beliefs influence their responsibilities to changeor not changetheir lifestyles to help address climate change?
Remember, your contributions to the discussion play an important part in building the classroom learning community. This assignment is graded on the quality of your initial post and at least two response posts to your classmates. Ensure that you include an attribution (or citation) for each source.
Alternatively, Brightspace allows the use of video notes. You may optionally use the Video Note tool to complete this assignment, but you must refer to your sources verbally throughout your video and submit a separate references page. If you use Video Note, your video should be 2 to 5 minutes long. If you need assistance using Video Note, please refer to the resources in the Start Here area of the course.
To complete this assignment, review the .
References
Singer, P. (2016). One World Now: The Ethics of Globalization. Yale University Press.
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Is the Constitution a Living Document?
- Take a position on whether the Constitution should be interpreted strictly or flexibly.
- Use at least one constitutional amendment to support your argument.
- Provide one real or historical example that illustrates your viewpoint.
- Explain why your interpretation makes sense to you as a citizen or future voter.
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Week 6 Discussion post
Instructions:This week is focused on cognitive and mood changes in the older adult. Cognitive changes that are most affected as we age are attention and memory. Attention is required to help us drive (multitasking and reacting to stimuli without warning). Research has shown that the older adult has a significant decline in divided attention which increased their risk for automobile accidents (Gilsky, 2007).
Reference: Gilsky, E.L. (2007).
Boca Raton (FL): CRC Press/Taylor & Francis. Retrieved from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK3885/
Initial Post Requirements:
Please critically evaluate the subjective and objective information provided to you in the attached file below, and use the SOAP template as a reference.
1? The first part of the discussion board is to identify all pertinent positive and, negative information and list missing information. Then create a differential diagnosis list with at least 3 possibly actual diagnosis based on your findings. Here are the headings you should use:
- Pertinent positives
- Pertinent negatives
- Missing information
- Differential diagnoses
2? The second part is to create a plan utilizing clinical practice guidelines for the priority diagnosis. Here are the headings you should use:
- Diagnostics
- Therapeutics
- Educational
- Consultation/Referrals
Be sure to utilize the template, in-text citations and provide full reference citation at the end of the discussion.
Please be sure to validate your opinions and ideas with citations and references in APA format.
Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): NU627 Unit 7 Discussion Case.pdf
Note: Content extraction from these files is restricted, please review them manually.
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Assignment 5 HR
Assignment Topic: Retention Strategies
Use the internet to research “Employee Retention Strategies” and compose a submission that describes three (3) strategies you came across that you think might be good ideas to supplement the basics most firms employ. In your description, identify why those three appeal to you, and if you think they would appeal to a worker whose life stage is different than yours. (For instance, on- site childcare could be great for a single parent of young children … but not so much for a sixty-two year old worker whose children (if any) are adults.)
As always, be sure to provide citations that would allow your instructor to follow up on any or all of the strategies.
Submission Format:
- Submit your assignment in .docx or .doc format. If you do not have a program that allows you to save in that format, please find one, per our syllabus.
- Include a Title Page including your Name, Course Name/Number, Assignment Name, Professor Name, and Date
- Use Times New Roman, double spacing, and 12 font size.
- If your response uses information from sources outside our course or your personal experience, please provide a citation. Citations are required when external information is presented. They should clearly lead your instructor to the original source and be in the format prescribed by your instructor, if a specific writing style has been mandated.
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Project Charter 1
you will use critical thinking, analytical capabilities, and creative insights to develop a Project Charter. A project charter provides an overview of a proposed project and is a working plan for how it will be executed. It contains key information including the who, what, when, and where of the project and how it will be conducted.
For your Project Charter, you will act as a 21st-century leader to identify and address a problem, gap, or change opportunity that improves health care delivery and/or systems. You will consider how leaders contribute to the profession by applying quality improvement principles and evidence-based standards within a culture of ethical practice, diversity, equity, and inclusion. After the completion of your three-part Project Charter, you will devise a poster presentation that disseminates what you’ve learned to a professional audience. The course assignment due this week corresponds to Part 1 of the Project CharterAccess, download, and review the file that you will use to complete your Project Charter. The template is divided into sections that each corresponds to one of the first three assignments for this course: Project Charter Parts 13. Complete each of these sections when the corresponding assignment is due. The template also includes detailed instructions for completing each section. Study these instructions and then delete and replace them with your own responses before submitting the document to be graded.
For an example of the completed assignment, access and review the resource.
Instructions
For this assignment, use what you learned about quality improvement, identifying a measurable gap, creating SMART objectives, and drafting a project AIM Statement as you develop Part 1 of your Project Charter from a nursing, public health, or health administrative perspective.
Use the to complete the following items found in Part 1:
- Project Name: Create a title for your Project Charter.
- Make the title specific and distinct from other projects so the reader knows the goal and wants to learn more.
- Be creative in developing your title
- Gap Analysis: In this section, identify a gap or change opportunity in measurable terms. Select one specific area than can be quantified/measured: What are you trying to accomplish?
- Describe the quantifiable current state, e.g., the existing condition.
- Describe the quantifiable desired condition: What should be happening?
- What is the quantifiable difference between the current status and what it should be, e.g., the gap?
- What methods were used to identify the gap?
- Why is improvement needed in this area? Why is this problem important/meaningful/relevant?
- Evidence to Support the Need: In this section, select, summarize, and analyze timely sources that substantiate or explain the gap and the need for improvement.
- Include 23 sources that substantiate the gap or problem exists and why improvement is needed.
- Consider primary and secondary data sources, regulatory requirements, clinical practice guidelines, and benchmarking data.
- Cite all sources using the most current version of APA formatting inclusive of publications within the last five years.
- Problem Statement: After performing the Gap Analysis, develop a problem statement (12 sentences) that:
- Focuses on one specific problem.
- Can be realistically solved, e.g., organizationally or local community.
- Identifies the effect on the population or process.
- Is clear and concise (1-2 sentences).
- SMART Objectives: Write SMART Objectives that define the population and the systems affected for your Project Charter. Complete SMART objectives address all of the following:
- Specific: Who is the target population, persons, or process?
- Measurable: How will you measure the change you anticipate: An increase or decrease? This must be stated in measurable terms.
- Achievable: Is it realistic? Do you have the time, support, and resources?
- Relevant: Is it important or meaningful? Does it consider issues related to population health and the social determinants of health (health equity, inclusion)? Does it align with organizational mission and goals?
- Time: When will the project begin and when will it end? Be specific!
- Project AIM: Develop an AIM statement that articulates the overarching purpose of your Project Charter, including:
- The goals you intend to accomplish (use measurable terms, e.g., think about your SMART objective).
- Who will benefit from the this?
- What will be done (evidence to support the action).
- Where the change will occur.
- When it will begin and end.
Additional Requirements
- Written communication: Write clearly, accurately, and professionally, incorporating sources appropriately.
- Length of paper: Complete all fields of the Project Charter Template Part 1 (approximately 34 pages when complete).
- Resources: Include sources where appropriate within the div; each part of the Project Charter must include its own reference page formatted according to the most recent APA style.
- Font and font size: APA format (7th edition) permits Times Roman (12-point), Arial (11-point), and Calibri (11-point).
Competencies Measured
By successfully completing this assignment, you will demonstrate your proficiency in the following course competencies and rubric criteria:
- Competency 2: Analyze a health care issue from a leadership perspective, applying quality improvement principles and evidence based standards.
- Develop a problem statement that focuses on a specific problem and is solvable.
- Develop complete SMART objectives related to the proposed project.
- Develop an AIM statement that includes measurable goals the project is intended to accomplish and the anticipated impact on the population, systems, or organizations served.
- Competency 3: Develop a project charter that addresses a potential gap, problem, or opportunity within a health care system.
- Describe an existing change opportunity that focuses on one area, is measurable, and the desired state after improvement is in measurable terms.
- Discuss multiple timely sources to support the need for improvement.
- Competency 5: Communicate in a manner that is scholarly, interprofessional, and respectful of the diversity, dignity, and integrity of others.
- Address most components of the assignment prompt appropriately, using the assignment description to structure text.
- Apply APA style and formatting to scholarly writing.
Requirements: 3-4 pages
- Project Name: Create a title for your Project Charter.
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Nursing practice and education
You are going to answer the following questions with scholarly evidence to back up your answers. 1. What do you believe about the future of nursing practice? 2. What difference does it make whether a registered nurse has a diploma, an associate degree or a BSN? 3. What does lifelong learning mean to health care professionals? 4. How has this course affected your perceptions about what you and other nurses need in order to provide safe and effective patient care? This is a time to imagine. Just remember to support your imagination with resources. Think about utilizing your book and other scholarly sources for this assignment. You need a total of three sources for the assignment. Also, Government websites, including hhs.gov, hrsa.gov, dol.gov, cdc.gov, and census.gov, are great sources of credible information and data. You can use these websites throughout your education, and they are kept up to date. You can always use Masters as a reference, and be sure you search for current professional articles in the online library.Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): Module 4 Paper infomation on Future Nursing.docx
Note: Content extraction from these files is restricted, please review them manually.
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Behavior analysis
Introduction
Residential group homes that support young adults with developmental and behavioral needs rely on dedicated staff to create a safe, effective, and ethical environment. Recognizing the critical role staff play in maintaining safety and quality can foster a sense of pride and accountability.
Global Care developed this Performance Management Plan in response to agency-identified concerns within a residential group home serving individuals ages 18 to 24. Among the most significant concerns reported were a lack of support for hygiene issues, inconsistent documentation practices, medication administration errors, and an increase in behavioral incidents. Given the number of staff members and the 24-hour service model, a comprehensive assessment of staff performance and organizational systems is warranted.
The assessment results will create a foundation for identifying staff strengths and areas for growth, inspiring confidence that targeted improvements will enhance service quality and staff competence.
Assessment
Global Care Inc, completed a structured set of assessments (see Appendices A, B, and C) to identify skill deficits, performance inconsistencies, and organizational variables affecting effective service delivery within the residential group home. The assessment focused on staff behavior and organizational processes related to medication administration, implementation of behavior intervention plans, hygiene support, and documentation practices. Multiple data sources, including documentation audits, direct performance observations, and a staff competency assessment, were used to examine staff performance across shifts and service contexts and to identify patterns of performance breakdown and training needs.
Staff Competency Assessment (Appendix A)
To ensure the competency of 14 staff members, a competency assessment was conducted. (see Appendix A) Results indicated that seven of the twelve direct support professionals did not demonstrate competency across one or more core performance areas, including medication administration, documentation expectations, and behavior plan implementation. Competency results for supervisors indicated variability in performance across staff monitoring, documentation review, and the delivery of performance-based feedback. Both supervisors demonstrated general knowledge of supervisory responsibilities but inconsistently applied structured performance-monitoring practices. Competency deficits were observed across both shifts, indicating gaps in system-level training and supervision. These findings suggest that both staff skill deficits and inconsistent supervisory support influence performance challenges.
Performance Observation (Appendix B)
A performance observation is conducted to assess a staff member’s ability to perform their daily duties effectively and efficiently. Based on observations completed during the morning and evening shifts, using a task-analysisbased checklist to evaluate staff performance during service delivery. Observations revealed inconsistent implementation of medication administration procedures, lapses in hygiene support routines, and lapses in behavior intervention plans (BIP) across shifts. Staff frequently omitted critical steps during medication administration, including verifying administration times and documenting them immediately. Hygiene support was often initiated but not consistently completed. Supervisory presence during observations varied between the two supervisors, and in-the-moment feedback was limited when performance errors occurred. These findings suggest that inconsistent supervisory monitoring across shifts may be contributing to ongoing performance deficits among staff.
Documentation Audit (Appendix C)
A documentation audit including daily service notes, incident reports, and medication administration records over four weeks. Results show inconsistent documentation practices across shifts and staff members. Approximately 40% of reviewed service notes lacked objective, behavior-based descriptions of services delivered. Medication administration records indicated that medications are not administered according to the prescribed schedule on approximately 25% of reviewed days, including multiple missed or delayed doses. Explanations for medication variances were frequently incomplete or absent. A review of supervisory records showed limited and inconsistent monitoring or follow-up of documentation accuracy.
Assessment Summary
Target Outcomes and Behaviors
Due to the deficits seen within the assessment at this home, the following performance outcomes were considered of utmost importance. Global care will work with the group home to train supervisors to increase consistent training practices across staff using Behavior Skills Training (BST) to teach and give ongoing feedback to their employees to increase accuracy across documentation to a permanent average accuracy of 90%. Documentation will include any forms needed for medication administration, those regarding behavior implementation plans (BIPS), incident reports and daily service notes. 90% accuracy rate is to give room for human error, which should be found and used as a training opportunity by supervisors reviewing documentation.
While the first performance outcome is to aid supervisors, Global care wants to help the company, working with the employees as well. Global care will work with employees to help them grow in confidence and consistency within their own skill set. Global Care will work with employees to increase implementation of hygiene support with their clients by completing a weekly hygiene chart that each client will have with their documentation (See appendix E). Hygiene charts should be filled to a permanent average accuracy of 80%.
To obtain these outcomes, Global care will have several smaller goals in place throughout the process. The first two goals that the supervisors would be working on would be worded as such: Supervisors will independently give feedback to staff when needed in the moment 10 times per day across 5 consecutive days. The other is that supervisors will audit documentation daily and have errors fixed on medication administration information to 90% accuracy for 2 consecutive weeks. Both are smaller goals but still give supervisors a large task to work on and keep up with for a consistent two-week period before more expectations are added. For the employees working with the hygiene chart, their first goal would be to complete 30% of hygiene tasks per week across 2 consecutive weeks across all clients. As they can reach this goal, the percentage will increase to that 80% for the complete outcome.
Training Procedures
1. Training Procedures for Staff
In order to improve how the group home runs, we would be bringing in a structured competency-based training program for the staff. The main goals will be to improve the fidelity of the BIPs, improve how medications are managed, improve the quality of documentation, improve the quality of support offered for hygiene needs for the residents, reduce behavioral incidents, and finally improve consistency in all these areas for all working hours. This is because its a 24/7 operation and we have several members of staff.
Training Model Selected
The training process will involve the use of Behavioral Skills Training, as well as performance management techniques from Organizational Behavior Management. BST is chosen due to the fact that it is one of the most well-supported methods of training human service staff, and it has consistently shown to be effective in improving treatment integrity and staff performance.
BST includes four components: Instruction, Modeling, Rehearsal, and Feedback.
Training Procedures and Implementation
Step 1: Initial Orientation and Instruction
All staff members will receive orientation, in which expectations and procedures are clearly outlined. This includes, but is not limited to, an overview of each residents BIP, procedures related to the administration of medication, documentation, hygiene support, and ethical and safety expectations, with written protocols and checklists available to reduce confusion.
Step 2: Modeling
The supervisors or trainers will model the correct implementation of BIP, correct documentation of medications, correct hygiene prompting techniques, and correct data recording techniques.
Step 3: Rehearsal (Role-Play and Practice)
The staff will be asked to rehearse the learned skills through role-playing, for example, handling behavioral incidents, documentation, hygiene prompting, and medication schedules.
Step 4: Feedback
Feedback will be immediate, behavior-specific, and given for correct and incorrect performances.
Step 5: In-Vivo Coaching
This will involve observing and coaching employees while on actual work shifts.
Step 6: Ongoing Monitoring and Booster Training
This will include weekly treatment integrity monitoring, monthly competency assessments, and booster training for skill deficits, as well as data-based decision making.
Rationale Grounded in Evidence-Based Literature
Behavioral Skills Training (BST) has strong support from the behavior analytic literature, indicating its effectiveness as a method for training staff in human service environments. Parsons, Rollyson, and Reid (2012) found that BST consistently enhances staff implementation of behavioral procedures, increasing treatment fidelity more than instruction alone.
Instruction alone is not adequate for bringing about performance changes. Modeling and rehearsal provide the staff the opportunity to learn skills by actively participating, while feedback enhances correct performance and minimizes incorrect responding. Performance feedback is considered the most powerful method for enhancing employee performance (Alvero et al., 2001).
OBM strategies such as checklists and performance monitoring are also helpful for the long-term maintenance of staff performance. Reid, Parsons, and Green (2012) highlight the importance of systems-level support to ensure long-term quality services in human service environments. Supervision and performance evaluation are also critical factors for maintaining high-quality behavioral services (Sellers et al., 2016).
Performance Monitoring
Performance monitoring will be completed with the use of two data sheets that have been created to use with the performance outcomes created. The first of these data sheets is the hygiene tracking sheet that has been created for all the clients (See Appendix E). This data will be taken and graphed at the end of the week to check for upward trends towards a 80% success rate. Graphing will be completed using a simple line graph, only showing the percentage of hygiene tasks completed per week. Within the graphs, phase lines will be added as the goals are completed and the supervisors and staff are working towards a higher percentage of success. Not only are graphs helpful to show behavior change, they are also helpful as a conversational aide to discuss the change with others (Cooper, et al., 2020). If there is a lull or downward trend seen, the visual of the graph may be used for training purposes with the staff to discuss why it may have been seen that week and what may be done to improve percentages again.
For the Supervisors, a separate graph will be created to use for the standardized quality rubric (see Appendix F) created to track weekly audits. A line graph will still be used with two dependent variables being shown within the data range. The dependent variables being tracked will include the medication administration audit and the incident review report. The graph will once again show weekly scores to show the trend working towards a 90% success rate. Both supervisors will manage their own graphs using the same data within the center. By doing this, they are increasing their procedural fidelity, being sure that they are both auditing and graphing correctly each week (Cooper et al.,2020). If the data is not the same within their graphs, audits should be redone until they are the same, making the interobserver agreement (IOA) 100%.
Feedback and Reinforcement
A. Feedback Strategies
Ensuring effective performance management is a key aspect of ABA. To ensure effective performance management in residential settings, it is important to have feedback that focuses on specific behaviors and is systematic. Reid et al. (2021) state that using OBM in providing feedback leads to interventions being implemented consistently and with fidelity, leading to improved client outcomes. In the residential setting, performance concerns include inconsistent documentation, inconsistent medication delivery, lack of fidelity of behavior intervention plan (BIP) implementation, and lack of support for hygiene programs for residents.
A multi-component feedback process will be implemented, focusing on coaching, performance meetings, and written feedback. During direct observation, immediate feedback will be provided through behavior-specific statements and explaining how this behavior impacts the residents that the supervisees are taking care of. Expected performance standards will also be included to demonstrate what is expected of the supervisees. Supervisors will review tasks analyses, checklists for medications, and documentation protocols when providing feedback. Supervisees who demonstrate skill deficits will receive additional training using Behavior Skills Training procedures.
Performance feedback meetings will be conducted biweekly to review performance data, treatment integrity, medication administration, and documentation. Daniels (2016) states that collaboration leads to increased performance. Thus, collaboration will help identify barriers and create short-term goals to meet performance expectations. Written performance summaries will be reviewed and include strengths, areas for improvement, and steps needed to improve. Feedback will be given privately and respectfully to maintain staff dignity. Along with this, there will be more positive feedback than corrective feedback to ensure positive behavior momentum.
B. Reinforcement Plan
A positive reinforcement plan will be implemented to increase staff performance and treatment fidelity. Reid et al. (2021) state that reinforcing staff performances leads to increased job satisfaction, consistency, and client performance. Reinforcement will be given when there is accurate documentation, medication is given appropriately, BIPs are implemented with integrity, and hygiene programs for clients improve. Staff performance will be monitored through reviewing documentation, medication administration, and data analysis of hygiene programs. This will determine if reinforcement is being delivered effectively.
A performance recognition system will be implemented. Staff will earn points, which will then be exchanged for reinforcers, including schedule preferences, small incentives, or recognition. Bacotti et al. (2021) state that incorporating staff preferences increases reinforcement effectiveness and performance. Behavior-specific praise will be constantly implemented to provide social reinforcement. This reinforcement system will be evaluated weekly, and modifications will be implemented if there is insufficient improvement.
Evaluating Outcomes
The goal of evaluating outcomes in this Performance Management Plan is to assess whether improvements in staff performance lead to meaningful, measurable changes in service delivery and resident outcomes. Following the principles of Organizational Behavior Management (OBM), outcome evaluation focuses on results rather than effort and uses objective, observable, and reliable measures (Alvero et al., 2001; Daniels, 2016). Outcome evaluation procedures directly relate to the identified performance outcomes for this residential setting: improved documentation accuracy, increased implementation of hygiene support procedures, better medication administration accuracy, and a decrease in behavioral incidents. Evaluating these outcomes helps Global Care Inc. determine the effectiveness of training, monitoring, feedback, and reinforcement systems, guiding decisions based on data.
Multiple outcome measures will ensure a reliable and thorough evaluation of performance. Using diverse data sources enables triangulation and increases confidence that observed changes reflect real improvements in staff performance (Cooper et al., 2020). First, documentation accuracy will be evaluated through weekly audits using a standardized quality rubric. Documentation accuracy will be calculated as the percentage of required elements completed correctly. Performance outcomes will be considered achieved when staff maintain an average accuracy rate of at least 90% across two consecutive weeks. Second, the implementation of hygiene support will be evaluated using resident hygiene charts (Appendix E). Completion will be calculated as the percentage of scheduled hygiene tasks accomplished per resident each week. An average completion rate of at least 80% across residents for four consecutive weeks will show that hygiene-related performance outcomes have been met. Third, medication administration accuracy will be assessed through weekly reviews of Medication Administration Records (MARs). Accuracy will be defined as correct adherence to the five rights of medication administration: right individual, medication, dose, time, and route. A sustained zero-error rate over four consecutive weeks will indicate achievement of medication performance outcomes. Finally, behavioral incident frequency will be evaluated using monthly summaries of incident report data. Incident rates will be compared to baseline data collected during the assessment phase. A reduction of at least 30% in behavioral incidents over three months will signal improved behavior, support implementation, and environmental consistency.
To ensure reliable measurement of outcomes, all evaluation tools are standardized and clearly defined. Supervisors will receive training on scoring procedures for documentation audits, hygiene charts, and MAR reviews. Interobserver agreement (IOA) will be checked on at least 25% of outcome measures, aiming for an acceptable agreement criterion of 85% or higher (Cooper et al., 2020). Using permanent products, such as documentation, MARs, hygiene charts, and incident reports, enhances reliability by reducing observer bias and enabling consistent evaluation across shifts and staff members. Decision-Making Supervisors and the consulting team will review outcome data monthly. Data will be visually displayed using simple graphs to examine trends, levels, and variability over time. If performance outcomes are not achieved, data will inform problem-solving decisions, which may include adjustments to training procedures, increasing feedback frequency, or modifying reinforcement systems (Van Houten et al., 2007). This outcome evaluation process ensures that performance management decisions are objective, defensible, and responsive to both staff performance and resident needs.
Barriers to Assessment and Training
A. Predicted Barriers to Assessment and Training
Environmental, organizational, and staff-related barriers can impact assessment accuracy and training effectiveness. Carr et al. (2013) state that performance problems result from antecedent variables, skill deficits, and motivational factors. Thus, these should be evaluated to determine what is impacting performance.
One possible barrier is that of competing job demands. Staff are expected to administer medication, document, support residents, and implement BIPs. Thus, this puts a time limit on when training is available and when performance can be monitored. Workload demands can reduce participation in training, leading to inconsistent implementation and documentation.
A second barrier is skill deficits in administering medication, implementing BIPS, and documentation. Lack of staff performance may be present due to limited modeling opportunities or practice. Without training, procedures can be implemented incorrectly, directly impacting client treatment. Motivational barriers could affect performance. If feedback is inconsistent or reinforcement does not align with what the staff wants, engagement can be reduced.
B. Strategies to Address and Prevent Barriers
Regarding workload and time constraints, supervisors should integrate training opportunities into the daily routines of staff. Job aids can also be implemented, including medication checklists, task analyses, and examples of complete documentation. Choi & Johnson (2021) state that clarifying expectations increases staff performance.
Skill deficit barriers will be addressed with training and performance monitoring. Checklists and documentation review will be implemented to monitor staff performance. This will then be used to identify which skill deficits are improving and which need further training. Sellers et al. (2016) state that competency-based supervision improves staff performance.
Motivational barriers will be addressed through clear performance expectations and consistent feedback, along with reinforcement that incorporates staff feedback. Biscotti et al. (2021) state that aligning staff preferences increases engagement and performance. Identifying barriers leads to the implementation of problem-solving strategies to increase staff performance.
Conclusion (Funnel Method!)