AN ANALYSIS OF A GROUP TEACHING PROCEDURE FOR PERSONS WITH DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES
- 1 September 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis
- Vol. 25 (3) , 701-712
- https://doi.org/10.1901/jaba.1992.25-701
Abstract
This study evaluated whether a concurrent group teaching procedure, in which all students respond simultaneously, could be used for persons with moderate or severe mental retardation. The teaching procedure used was the Task Demonstration Model, a program based on stimulus-control research and the fading techniques of behavioral psychology. Three teachers and three groups of students participated. Results showed that the teachers increased their rates of questions and instructions, positive feedback, and use of functional materials, but they reduced their rate of prompts to almost zero. Students increased their percentage and rate of correct responding as well as their engaged time. In addition, maladaptive responding, for which there were never any direct consequences, decreased from 45% to 10% for 8 of the 14 students. Results are discussed primarily in two areas: (a) changing stimulus control from teacher prompts to critical elements of the items being taught, and (b) reasons for the reduction of maladaptive behavior for 8 of the subjects.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- DISCRIMINATION TRAINING FOR PERSONS WITH DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES: A COMPARISON OF THE TASK DEMONSTRATION MODEL AND THE STANDARD PROMPTING HIERARCHYJournal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1990
- A comparison of the task demonstration model and the standard prompting hierarchy in teaching word identification to persons with moderate retardationResearch in Developmental Disabilities, 1990
- EVALUATION OF THE EFFECTIVENESS AND EFFICIENCY OF TWO STIMULUS PROMPT STRATEGIES WITH SEVERELY HANDICAPPED STUDENTSJournal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1987
- Teaching autistic children to use extra-stimulus promptsJournal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1982
- TEACHING JANITORIAL SKILLS TO THE MENTALLY RETARDED: ACQUISITION, GENERALIZATION, AND MAINTENANCEJournal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1978
- The motivation of self-injurious behavior: A review of some hypotheses.Psychological Bulletin, 1977
- Some detrimental effects of using extra stimuli to guide learning in normal and autistic childrenJournal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 1976
- THE EFFECTIVENESS OF FADING IN PROGRAMMING A SIMULTANEOUS FORM DISCRIMINATION FOR RETARDED CHILDREN1Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 1967
- ERRORLESS TRANSFER OF A DISCRIMINATION ACROSS TWO CONTINUA1Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 1963
- DISCRIMINATION LEARNING WITH AND WITHOUT “ERRORS”1Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 1963