Free for educators
Behavior Intervention Plan Generator for Teachers and Case Managers
Turn what you already know about a student’s behavior into a structured behavior intervention plan draft — organized by function, prevention, and replacement skills — ready to bring to your team. You stay in control; the plan is yours to edit, and your team reviews and finalizes it.
Try the Behavior Plan GeneratorWrite a behavior intervention plan draft in minutes, not hours
The hardest part of a behavior intervention plan is rarely the ideas — it’s turning what you observe into clean, organized, plan-ready language under a deadline. This free tool takes your description of a student’s behavior and structures it into a complete BIP draft: defined behavior, hypothesized function, antecedent strategies, replacement skills, reinforcement, and a data plan. You edit it; your team reviews and finalizes it.
Describe the behavior
Enter a clear description of the target behavior, when and where it happens, and what you believe is driving it (the function). Add any context from an FBA or your own observations.
Generate a structured draft
The generator organizes your input into a full behavior plan draft — defined behavior, hypothesized function, antecedent strategies, replacement behaviors, reinforcement, and a data plan.
Edit, then bring it to the team
Refine the language, add student-specific detail, and hand a clean working draft to your IEP or behavior team to review, adjust, and finalize together.
What the behavior plan generator does
Function-first structure
Organizes the plan around why the behavior happens, not just what it looks like.
Replacement-behavior built in
Every draft pairs the target behavior with a skill to teach instead.
Antecedent strategies
Prevention-focused supports that change the setup, not only the response.
Editable data-collection plan
A starting point for how the team tracks frequency, duration, or intensity.
Plain, professional language
Clear wording you can drop into a meeting and revise on the spot.
Team-ready format
A draft built to be reviewed and finalized by your IEP or behavior team.
How to build a behavior intervention plan that actually works
Behavior intervention plan FAQs
What is a behavior intervention plan?
A behavior intervention plan (BIP) is an individualized, written plan that describes a student’s persistent challenging behavior, why the team believes it happens, and the proactive supports adults will use to prevent it, the replacement skills they’ll teach, and how they’ll respond. It usually follows a Functional Behavior Assessment and is often attached to an IEP or 504 plan. Its purpose is to address the need behind the behavior, not just suppress it.
Does this tool replace an FBA?
No. A Functional Behavior Assessment is a structured, data-gathering process led by qualified staff, and this tool does not perform one. The generator helps you organize what you already know — including information from an FBA — into a clear plan draft. The assessment and the professional judgment behind it remain the team’s responsibility.
Can I use my own data and observations about the student?
Yes — and you should. The plan is only as accurate as the information you put in, so your firsthand observations about when, where, and why the behavior happens make the draft far stronger. Follow your district’s privacy and data-handling policies when entering any student information, and use only what you’re authorized to use.
Is the plan ready to use exactly as generated?
No. Treat the output as a structured first draft, not a finished or final plan. It’s meant to be edited for your specific student and then reviewed and approved by your IEP or behavior team before anything is implemented. The tool does not provide legal or clinical advice.
Who should review and finalize the plan?
The student’s IEP or behavior team — which may include the case manager, classroom teachers, a school psychologist or behavior specialist, administrators, and the family. A formal BIP is a team decision, and it should be reviewed, adjusted, and finalized together rather than written and implemented by one person alone.
What’s the difference between a classroom support and a formal BIP?
Classroom-level supports are informal strategies a single teacher can put in place quickly — seating changes, a break routine, a clearer reinforcement system — for everyday concerns. A formal behavior intervention plan is a documented, team-driven plan for persistent or serious behavior, usually following an FBA and tied to an IEP or 504. When in doubt, bring your draft to the team.
Draft your behavior intervention plan in minutes
Turn your observations into a structured, team-ready behavior plan draft — defined behavior, function, prevention, replacement skills, and a data plan, all in one place. You edit it, your team finalizes it, and Education Copilot saves you the blank-page time. Free for educators to start.
Try the Behavior Plan Generator