Examples of Skill-Building in Positive Supports

Authors

Jessica Simacek, PhD

Dr. Jessica Simacek serves as the Director of the TeleOutreach Center and Research Service Hub at the Institute on Community Integration in the Masonic Institute for the Developing Brain at the University of Minnesota.

Jessica Simacek

Rachel Freeman, PhD

Rachel Freeman is the Director of State Initiatives in the Institute on Community Integration at the Masonic Institute for the Developing Brain at the University of Minnesota. Dr. Freeman has been actively involved in positive behavior support (PBS), statewide research and technical assistance systems for evidence-based practices, evaluation design and implementation, and person-centered practices for over 25 years. She is an Associate Editor for the Journal of Child and Family Studies and serves as a Board of Director for Arc Minnesota and the Association for Positive Behavior Support.

Rachel Freeman

Ashley S. MacSuga-Gage, Ph.D.

Ashley MacSuga-Gage, Ph.D. is a Clinical Associate Professor of Special Education at the University of Florida in the college’s department of Special Education, School Psychology, and Early Childhood Studies (SESPECS). She earned a Ph.D. in Special Education from the University of Connecticut where she studied Positive Behavior Support (PBS), School-Wide Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports (SWPBIS), and Applied Behavioral Analysis (ABA).Her specific research interests include identifying and supporting teachers in the implementation of Class-Wide Positive Behavior Support (CWPBS) practices through the application of Multi-Tiered Systems of Support (MTSS) to professional development (PD) and the implementation, sustainability, and scale-up of SWPBIS efforts. Dr. MacSuga-Gage has worked in partnership with the Florida Positive Behavior Intervention and Support (FLPIBIS) Project. Through her work with this project, she served as the technical assistance specialist in North Central Florida working with rural and urban school districts. After completing her undergraduate and master’s level coursework she received her Connecticut State teaching certification in K-12 Special Education and worked as a special education teacher in several urban settings including New York City and Hartford Connecticut. Currently, Dr. MacSuga-Gage coordinates the disability and society undergraduate minor and graduate certificate programs at the University of Florida.

Ashley MacSuga-Gage

Joe Reichle, PhD

Joe Reichle, PhD, is Professor of Speech- Language- Hearing Sciences and former Director of the Leadership and Education in Neurodevelopmental Disabilities Training Program at the University of Minnesota. A Fellow of the American Speech- Language- Hearing Association, Dr. Reichle has expertise in positive behavior interventions & supports, augmentative communication, communication intervention for persons with significant developmental disabilities, and positive approaches to meet the needs of persons who engage in challenging behavior. He has published over 140 articles, chapters, and books, and served as an associate editor of the Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research and Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools. He has extensive experience delivering technical assistance to public schools and group homes.

Joe Reichle

Adele Dimian, Ph.D.

Adele Dimian, Ph.D. serves as a research associate in the Institute on Community Integration (ICI) and the associate director of the TeleOutreach Center, which uses video communication technology to provide support for young people with mental health and neurodevelopmental disabilities. In her dual roles, Dimian co-leads the Masonic Institute for the Developing Brain Tele Core and multiple telehealth research projects. She specializes in early intervention especially relating to self-injurious behavior among children with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

Adele Dimian

Jennifer Jeffrey-Pearsall, PhD

Jennifer Jeffrey-Pearsall, PhD is a contractor with the Institute on Community Integration (ICI) and the Director of the Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports Training and Technical Assistance Center at Sheppard Pratt. She has over 20 years of experience supporting systems with organization-wide implementation of positive behavior support. Systems supported include comprehensive schools, approved private day-schools and residential treatment facilities in Pennsylvania and Georgia, juvenile justice facilities, and organizations supporting adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities in Maryland and Minnesota. She has served as a consultant to the Maryland Developmental Disabilities Administration, Maryland Department of Juvenile Justice, and Maryland and Pennsylvania Departments of Education.

Jennifer Jeffrey-Pearsall, PhD

Dani Dunphy, MSW, LGSW

Dani Dunphy is a Consultant for the Institute on Community Integration at the University of Minnesota, an Adjunct Professor for the Department of Social Work at the University of Minnesota Duluth, a practicing Therapist for Behavioral Services Inc. in Duluth Minnesota, as well as a social worker with St. Louis County Public Health and Human Services.

Dani Dunphy

John Hoch, Ph.D.

John Hoch, LP, Ph.D. is a psychologist at Behavioral Dimensions. His clinical work centers on providing diagnosis and behavioral interventions for children and young adults with neurodevelopmental disorders. He is also interested in group interventions for parents of children with neurodevelopmental disorders. His role also includes research into evidence based practices and data analytics to gain new insights from clinically collected medical record data. His research centers on understanding autonomic arousal and ways that stress relates to problem behaviors such as aggression and self injury. He is also interested in the relationship between traumatic stress exposure and developmental disorders.

John Hoch

Amy Esler, PhD

Amy Esler is a licensed psychologist and co-director of the clinics at the Masonic Institute for the Developing Brain at the University of Minnesota. She completed her PhD in school psychology from the University of Minnesota and worked as a school psychologist for 3 years prior to specializing in autism. Her clinical interests include early diagnosis of autism and care and support of individuals with profound autism as well as fragile X and other rare genetic conditions. Her research focuses on improving access to care and quality of care in early detection, early diagnosis, and services and supports throughout the lifespan.

Amy Esler

Margaret Moore, PhD

Dr. Margaret “Maggie” Moore, Ed.D., is a singer/songwriter, teacher, healer, consultant, and behavior support specialist. She is founder of the Center for Human Engagement, located in Huntington, WV. Her mission is to teach lifelong creativity and resilient growth to build social wellbeing for all. She has a doctorate in education, is an Endorsed Positive Behavior Support Professional and serves on the Endorsement Board of the West Virginia Association of Positive Behavior Support Network. Dr. Moore serves on the West Virginia Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) Coalition, the West Virginia Association of Positive Behavior Support, and the Barboursville Rotary. She has taught positive behavior support, trauma-informed practices, music as stress reduction, and music as prayer as part of her work in West Virginia, Colorado, and Canada.

Margaret Moore

Tanya Misgen, M. Ed.

Tanya Misgen, M. Ed., is an education specialist at the Institute on Community Integration at the Masonic Institute for the Developing Brain at the University of Minnesota. She is a special education teacher, licensed in the areas of specific learning disabilities and Autism Spectrum Disorder. She has 13 years of experience in the field of education working in various positions including paraprofessional, classroom teacher, and case manager. During her time in schools, she implemented research based interventions, data- based decision making, and PBIS.

Tanya Misgen

Muna Khalif, MS ABA

Muna Khalif is currently attending the University of Oregon. She is a supervised trainee and a tele- interventionist in applied behavioral analysis. She has a BA in Research Methodologies in Sociology and Minor in Biology from the University of Minnesota.

Muna Khalif