PEER‐MEDIATED INTERVENTION: ATTENDING TO, COMMENTING ON, AND ACKNOWLEDGING THE BEHAVIOR OF PRESCHOOLERS WITH AUTISM
- 1 June 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis
- Vol. 25 (2) , 289-305
- https://doi.org/10.1901/jaba.1992.25-289
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of a peer‐mediated intervention on the social interaction of five triads comprised of preschoolers with autism and their typical peers. Strategies thought to facilitate interaction were selected based on analyses of a descriptive data base. Peers were taught to attend to, comment on, and acknowledge the behavior of their classmates with disabilities. These are behaviors preschoolers typically exhibit frequently, but that do not obligate responses to the same extent as questions and requests do. The ABCB reversal designs revealed that improved rates of social interaction during play were clearly associated with the peer intervention for 4 of the 5 children with autism. This intervention offers an alternative peer‐intervention package for increasing interaction between children with and without disabilities.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- INCREASING HANDICAPPED PRESCHOOLERS' PEER SOCIAL INTERACTIONS: CROSS‐SETTING AND COMPONENT ANALYSISJournal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1985
- Children's play: A contextual-functional perspectiveNew Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 1984
- Identification of social skill curriculum targets for severely handicapped children in mainstream preschoolsApplied Research in Mental Retardation, 1983
- The Relationship between Behavioral Characteristics of Children and Social Interaction in an Integrated SettingJournal of the Division for Early Childhood, 1983
- Social Interactions of Normal Preschool ChildrenBehavior Modification, 1981
- A FORTRAN program for lag sequential analysis of contingency and cyclicity in behavioral interaction dataBehavior Research Methods, 1979
- The Development of Peer Verbal Interaction among Two-Year-Old BoysChild Development, 1977
- Effects of Age, Sex, and Partner on Children's Dyadic SpeechChild Development, 1974
- Research: Integrating Handicapped and Nonhandicapped Preschool Children: Effects on Social PlayChildhood Education, 1974
- The Maintenance of Verbal Exchanges between Young ChildrenChild Development, 1972