NDIS Positive Behaviour Support.
Module 2A behaviour support plans. Delivered across Melbourne, Geelong and the Gold Coast.
What it is
NDIS behaviour support, explained simply.
Positive Behaviour Support (PBS) is a structured, evidence-based approach to understanding behaviours of concern and supporting the person to build skills and live a better life. It isn't about 'managing' anyone — it's about understanding why a behaviour is happening and reducing the barriers that caused it.
InLife delivers PBS for children, young adults, and adults across our Melbourne, Geelong and Gold Coast footprint. Our team includes NDIS-approved behaviour support practitioners, and our support workers implement behaviour support plans in line with the Module 2A clinical standards — including where a regulated restrictive practice is in place.
What's included
What you get when you engage InLife for PBS.
Our PBS service is end-to-end. From the initial functional behaviour assessment through to plan writing, implementation, support worker training, monthly restrictive-practice reporting (where applicable), and plan review at 12 months.
How we work
Family first, behaviour second.
Behaviour support that treats the family as an adversary never works. Our practitioners start by listening to the people who know the participant best — family, existing carers, school staff — before writing a single recommendation. The plan is only as good as the team who carries it out, which is why implementation training for everyone in the participant's life is non-negotiable.
We also work in-language where possible. Plans explained in plain English, Farsi, Urdu, Hindi or Punjabi — whichever the family speaks at home — get implemented better than plans written in jargon that nobody reads. Cultural context matters: what counts as a 'behaviour of concern' is not the same across every community, and our practitioners are trained to respect that.
Who this is for
Participants, families and coordinators.
PBS is relevant for NDIS participants of any age whose behaviour is affecting their own wellbeing or the people around them. It is especially important where a regulated restrictive practice is in place, or where the NDIA has asked for a behaviour support plan as part of a plan review.
Support coordinators: we accept referrals, send a Friday weekly summary as standard, and handle the NDIS Commission monthly reporting requirements for restrictive practices without you chasing us.
Frequently asked
Straight answers.
Ready to talk to someone who speaks your language?
15-minute Plan Health Check, free, no pressure. Or send a referral and we’ll call you back.
