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Functional Behavior Assessment: What It Is and How to Use It in California

When a school tells you your child needs a "functional behavior assessment," they're describing a specific type of evaluation — not a punishment, not a threat of more restrictive placement, and not something to agree to without understanding what it should include. An FBA done well is the foundation for a Behavior Intervention Plan that actually reduces behavioral challenges. An FBA done poorly is a waste of everyone's time.

Here's what California parents need to know.

What Is a Functional Behavior Assessment?

A Functional Behavior Assessment (FBA) is an evaluation that identifies the function of a specific behavior — what need the behavior is serving for your child, and what environmental factors are maintaining it.

The core insight behind an FBA is that all behavior serves a function. A child who leaves the classroom during math isn't doing it to be defiant (usually) — they're doing it to escape a task that's too hard, avoid embarrassment, seek sensory relief, or get attention. The intervention that works depends entirely on understanding which function is operating.

A proper FBA includes:

  • Identification of the target behavior — defined in clear, observable, measurable terms ("leaves seat and walks to door during independent seatwork" rather than "is disruptive")
  • Records review — disciplinary records, previous assessments, attendance data, incident reports
  • Interviews — with the student, teachers, parents, and other school staff who see the behavior
  • Direct observation — across multiple settings and times of day, with A-B-C data (Antecedent, Behavior, Consequence)
  • Functional hypothesis — a data-based statement about why the behavior is occurring

A California Hughes Bill-era assessment (prior to 2013) had specific state requirements. AB 86 (which repealed the Hughes Bill in 2013) returned California to federal IDEA standards for behavioral assessment. There is no longer a specific state-mandated FBA format, but IDEA requires that the assessment be sufficient to develop an effective Behavior Intervention Plan.

When Is an FBA Required?

Under IDEA, an FBA is required:

  • When a child with a disability is removed from their placement for disciplinary reasons for more than 10 school days in a school year
  • When a Manifestation Determination Review (MDR) finds that the behavior was a manifestation of the disability

Beyond these legal triggers, you can also request an FBA any time your child's IEP team needs to understand the function of a behavior that is impeding their learning or the learning of others. An FBA request by a parent is a referral the district should address.

If your child is receiving behavioral supports in the IEP but the supports aren't working, requesting an FBA is often the right next step. The prior BIP may be targeting the wrong function.

The Behavior Intervention Plan: What It Should Include

The Behavior Intervention Plan (BIP) is the document that translates FBA findings into strategies. A legally adequate BIP must be based on the FBA's functional hypothesis — not on generic behavioral rules.

A well-written BIP addresses four things:

1. Prevention strategies — What changes to the environment, schedule, or instruction reduce the likelihood of the behavior? (e.g., pre-teaching the vocabulary in math before the lesson starts, reducing the length of the independent work block, providing a fidget)

2. Teaching a replacement behavior — What skill or behavior will serve the same function as the problem behavior? (e.g., if the behavior functions as an escape from difficult tasks, teach the student to request a break using an appropriate cue — a card, a verbal phrase, a AAC symbol)

3. Reinforcement strategies — How will the school increase the replacement behavior and reduce the problem behavior? This section should be specific — what reinforcers, who delivers them, on what schedule.

4. Consequence strategies — What happens when the problem behavior occurs? Effective consequence strategies are not punitive — they account for the function. If the behavior functions to escape, adding an escape-maintaining consequence (sending the student to the office) makes the behavior more likely, not less.

Template warning: A "behavior intervention plan template" filled in with generic strategies that don't reflect the FBA findings is not legally adequate and is unlikely to work. Every section should trace back to the functional hypothesis.

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What Parents Should Demand in the FBA Process

Get the FBA report before the meeting. You're entitled to receive a copy of the FBA results before the IEP team meeting where the BIP will be developed. Don't agree to a meeting where the FBA is presented for the first time and you're expected to consent to the BIP in the same sitting.

Ask who conducted the FBA. A quality FBA should be conducted by someone with behavioral expertise — a Board Certified Behavior Analyst (BCBA), a school psychologist with behavioral training, or a behavior specialist. A single teacher who did a few observations is not typically sufficient for a complex behavioral presentation.

Review the A-B-C data. Ask to see the observation data the FBA was based on. How many observations? How many settings? How many different adults? A functional hypothesis based on one observation is not reliable.

Require the BIP to address function. If the BIP looks like a list of generic behavioral rules ("student will follow teacher directions," "student will keep hands to self"), it is not function-based. The replacement behavior must match the function the FBA identified.

Behavioral Supports and IEP Placement

Under California's AB 114 (2011), educationally related mental health services — including behavioral supports — are the LEA's responsibility, not county mental health's. Districts sometimes try to defer behavioral support by saying it's a mental health issue outside their scope. That is not correct under current California law.

If your child needs intensive behavioral support that the district is not providing through the IEP, this is grounds for:

  • Requesting an NPA (Nonpublic Agency) placement for behavioral services under Ed Code § 56365
  • Filing for due process if the district is denying FAPE by failing to provide adequate behavioral support

Positive Behavioral Interventions: What California Law Requires

California has a specific statutory framework for behavioral interventions that goes beyond IDEA. Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS) is built into California's special education framework, and Cal. Ed. Code § 56520-56524 prohibits the use of aversive interventions — procedures that cause pain, humiliation, or significant discomfort — in California public schools.

If you see anything in a proposed BIP that involves taking away a student's lunch, using physical restraint as a behavioral consequence (as opposed to an emergency safety measure), or any procedure that causes the student distress as a deliberate outcome, that is not permissible in California. Behavioral supports must be positive — designed to teach replacement behaviors and use reinforcement, not punishment.

If a district proposes a BIP that relies heavily on response cost (removing earned reinforcers), isolation, or physical restriction, ask them to walk through how each procedure complies with California's positive behavioral intervention requirements. Concerns about a BIP that uses prohibited procedures can be raised with CDE.

What a Good BIP Review Looks Like at the IEP Meeting

Before signing an IEP that contains a BIP, review the document against these questions:

  • Is the target behavior defined specifically enough that two different teachers would recognize and record it consistently?
  • Does the functional hypothesis state a clear function (escape, attention, tangible, sensory)?
  • Does the replacement behavior serve the same function as the problem behavior?
  • Are the prevention strategies realistic for a classroom environment?
  • Is there a crisis response plan for situations where the behavior escalates beyond what the BIP addresses?
  • How will data be collected and how often will the team review it?

A BIP that doesn't answer these questions isn't ready to implement. Request that the team address the gaps before you sign.

The California IEP & 504 Blueprint includes a BIP review checklist and guidance on requesting behavioral assessments in California's current legal framework.

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