Teachers often feel that they only have 4 options in dealing with behaviors. Ignore the problem and...

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Teachers often feel that they only have 4 options in dealing with behaviors. Ignore the problem and hope it goes away Refer the student/s to an assistant principal Call the students’ parents and ask for help Apply a consequence, such as detention or some other punishment
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Transcript of Teachers often feel that they only have 4 options in dealing with behaviors. Ignore the problem and...

Page 1: Teachers often feel that they only have 4 options in dealing with behaviors. Ignore the problem and hope it goes away Refer the student/s to an assistant.

Teachers often feel that they only have 4 options in dealing with behaviors.Ignore the problem and hope it goes awayRefer the student/s to an assistant principalCall the students’ parents and ask for helpApply a consequence, such as detention or some other punishment

Page 2: Teachers often feel that they only have 4 options in dealing with behaviors. Ignore the problem and hope it goes away Refer the student/s to an assistant.

Defining the target behavior

Observable Measurable Clear and concise Complete

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Steps in the behavior change process select target behavior collect and record baseline data FBA identify reinforcers implement interventions, collect and record

intervention data evaluate the effects of the intervention

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Select the target behavior

The target behavior is the behavior to be changed or modified.

The target behavior may be an existing behavior that needs to be increased or decreased or a non-occurring behavior.

Considerations of target behavior; type of behavior, frequency of behavior, duration of behavior, intensity of behavior

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Hawthorne Effect

If you discuss what you are observing with your students/subjects. That means when you collect your baseline data that it has been compromised….

People will do better (or worse) than typical if they know…. so the baseline data is not valid.

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Order of priorities

Behaviors that risk the child’s life Behaviors that risk the child’s continuing to

live with the family Behaviors that limit the child’s participation in

special education Behaviors that limit the child’s adaptation to

the community outside home and school

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Factors

danger to individual or others frequency duration behavior will produce higher level of reinforcement for individual than

other behaviors impact of behavior on skill development if learning the behavior will reduce the negative attention that the

individual receives if learning the behavior will increase reinforcement for others in the

individual’s environment difficulty (time and energy) to be expended to change behavior cost involved in changing behavior

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Infrequent behaviors

Some behaviors occur so infrequently that they do not require a formal program

for example: annual 2 minute tantrum occasional reading reversal infrequent falling out of his seat monthly bus-missing behavior

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Behavior change directions

Increase

group participation, in-seat behavior, interactions with peers, typing skills, reading rate, number skills, study skills

•Decrease

verbal outbursts, inattentiveness, use of four letter words, food intake, smoking, talking during study period, spelling errors

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Target behavior selection

select only one behavior analyze behavior for frequency, duration, intensity

and type is behavior to be decreased or increased (direction

of behavior change) is the behavior observable is the behavior measurable in numeric terms describe the behavior in precise, descriptive

terminology

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Ask yourself?

Can you count the number of times the behavior has occurred in a given amount of time?

Can you describe the target behavior so that someone who is unfamiliar with what you are doing will know exactly what to look for?

Have you broken the behavior down to its smallest components

Is the definition valid? Can every instance of the behavior be captured? Is the definition reliable? Can two or more observers record the same occurrences and non-occurrences of the behavior?

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Behavioral Dimensions

FREQUENCY The number of times a behavior occurs. When determining frequency of occurrence of

a behavior, we count the number of times the behavior occurs within an observation period.

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RATE frequency expressed in ratio with time can compare frequency data in non-

standardized observation periods or opportunities to respond.

Rate is calculated by dividing the number of times a behavior occurred by the length of the observation period.

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Duration a measurement of how long a behavior lasts Duration is important when the concern is not

the number of times a behavior occurs but how long

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Latency length of time between instructions to perform

it and the occurrence of the behavior Latency is relevant when the concern is not

how long it takes a student to do something, but how long it takes to begin to do it

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Topography what the behavior looks like topography describes a behavior’s complexity

or its motor components. It may involve many behaviors performed

together.

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Force the intensity of the behavior

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Locus describes where it occurs, either in the

environment, or on the individuals body. Locus describes the target of the behavior or

where in the environment the behavior is taking place

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Project 2

For the purpose of project 2 - we will be using the following behavioral dimensions. frequency rate duration latency topography force locus

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Project 2:

Identify and define a target behavior you will identify a target behavior of the selected

participant to increase. The target behavior must be observable. Identify the DIMENSIONS of the target behavior and define it so it can be measured reliably. Tell why you chose this behavior for the participant. How will increasing the behavior make a difference in the life of the participant?

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Three general categories of collecting data for behavioral information Reviewing and analyzing written reports Observation Recording a sample of the behavior as it

occurs

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Methods of obtaining information Interviewing the student Interviewing others Testing the student Directly observing the student

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Recording systems

Permanent product - outcomes of behavior Observational recording systems

event recording - counts interval recording - counts time sampling - counts duration - temporal latency - temporal

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Permanent Product

Recording tangible items or environmental effects that result from a behavior; for example written academic work

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Event recording

Recording a tally or frequency count of behavior as it occurs within an observation period; an observational recording procedure

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Interval recording

An observational recording system in which an observation period is divided into a number of short intervals. The observer counts the number of intervals when the behavior occurs

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Time sampling

An observational recording system in which an observation period is divided into equal intervals; the target behavior is observed at the end of each interval

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Duration

Recording the amount of time between the initiation of a response and its conclusion; an observational recording procedure

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Latency

Recording the amount of time between the presentation of the cue and the initiation of a response.

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Figures

3-3 Observational data collection systems pg 103

Figure 3-22 Selected observational recording procedures pg 134

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FACTORS

Reactivity - presence of an observer Observer drift - change the stringency of

operational definitions Complexity - observational coding system Expectancy - bias interpretation of results

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Classroom Observation

handout

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Recording sheets

Develop a recording sheet for your baseline data collection.

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Graphing Data

Graphs should be simple and uncluttered Purposes for graphs:

means for organization formative & summative program evaluation vehicle for communication commonly used to display data in a serial

manner across duration of instruction or intervention

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Simple Line Graph

Set of boundaries axes

x-axis - abscissa, horizontal y-axis - ordinate, vertical Axes are drawn in a ratio of 2:3

If y = 2, then x = 3

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Abscissa

The x-axis serves as the boundary of the graph.

Shows how frequently data were collected during the period represented on the graph.

The right boundary of the graph ends at the last session. Horizontal line – bottom boundary

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Ordinate

Vertical line serves as the left-hand boundary of the graph.

The label identifies the target behavior and kind of data that is being reported.

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Simple line graph

High School Student Detentions

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1st Qtr 2nd Qtr 3rd Qtr 4th QtrGrading Periods

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Can you label the following parts ? Abscissa Ordinate Abscissa label Ordinate label Ordinate scale Data point Data path

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Simple line graph

High School Student Detentions

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Definitions

Ordinate scale - scale on the y axis, used to record the performance of the target behavior, ALWAYS begins with zero

Scale break - when the ordinate scale is not continuous, it is

permissible to begin the scale at zero, draw two horizontal lines between the first and second lines on the graph paper, & label the 2nd line 50%.

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Data Point

Each data point is individually plotted. The placement or value does not affect the placement or value of the next data point.

Small geometric forms, such as circles, squares, or triangles are used to represent the occurrences of the target behavior during a specific time segment.

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Data Path

When a solid line is drawn connecting the data points, it forms the data path.

A single geometric shape is used to represent each point on a single data path.

When more than one path is represented - each path is represented by a different geometric shape.

No more than 3 different paths should be plotted on a single graph.

Continuity break- 2 parallel hash marks are placed on the data path to indicate a break in the sequence of the intervention

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Student identification

the name of the student(s) is placed in a box in the bottom right hand corner of the page of the graph.

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Permanent Product Data

number of items or percentage of terms resulting from behavior

% of correct responses can be calculated by dividing the number of correct responses by the total number of responses and multiplying the result by 100.

Ex. % of correctly spelled words, # of math problems completed

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Event Data

May be recorded as # of occurrences of a behavior if the

amount of time is consistent across sessions

# of correct or a % if there are a consistent # of opportunities to respond

a % correct if the # of opportunities to respond varies

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Rate Data

Required when concerned about accuracy and speed

Rate data reflect fluency of performance and allow judgements about the development of proficiency.

If the responding varies from session to session, rate must be calculated so that the data can be compared.

See figure 4-6, p. 154

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Interval and Time Sampling

Reported as the number or percent of total observed intervals during which the behavior occurs (usually reported as %).

Interval data is usually divided into short segments of time, if the targeted behavior occurred any time within that interval, it is counted.

Time sampling data is divided into periods of time, and behaviors are counted if they occur at the end of the interval.

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Duration Data

Reported as the number of minutes or seconds it takes a student to complete a behavior or as how much of a specified period of time a student spent engaging in a particular behavior.

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Latency

Reported as the number of minutes or seconds that elapse before a student initiates a behavior following a request for the behavior to be performed or for a natural occasion for its performance to occur.

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Conditions

Phases of an intervention during which different approaches or techniques are used.

Baseline: current level of behavior Intervention: by drawing a dashed line

between the last session of one condition and the beginning of another.

Data points are not connected across conditions.

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Vertical dashed line

runs from the top of the graph to the bottom of the graph

this line is drawn between the last session of one condition and the first session of the next

remember data points are not connected across conditions

a brief descriptive condition label is placed above the data path for each condition

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Cumulative graphs

presents an additive view of a behavior across sessions, providing a count of the total number of responses.

a steep slope indicates rapid responding, a gradual slope indicates slow responding, and a plateau or straight line indicates not responding,

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Cumulative graphs

provides a continuous line with a slope that indicates the rate of responding

steep slope - indicates rapid responding gradual slope - indicates slow responding plateau - indicates no responding (straight

line)

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Baseline data

Joshua’s hitting behavior Time M T W T F Total 9-9:10 / / / / 4 9:30-40 / / // / / 6 10-10:10 ///// / // / 9 10:30-40 /// / //// /// // 13 Day total 76 7 7 5

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GOOD MORNING

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Joshua baseline data

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Joshua baseline data

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Page 59: Teachers often feel that they only have 4 options in dealing with behaviors. Ignore the problem and hope it goes away Refer the student/s to an assistant.

Bar graph - histogram

a bar graph uses vertical bars rather than data points and connecting lines to indicates performance

each vertical bar represents one observation period

height corresponds with a performance value on the ordinate

summarize student performance data

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Trend lines - step 1

Divide the number of data points in half by drawing a vertical line down the graph

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Line is drawn between sessions 5 & 6

Trend line practice

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Trend line practice

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Trend lines - step 2

On the left half of the graph, find the mid-session and draw a vertical line

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Line is drawn at session 3

Trend line practice

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Trend line practice

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Trend lines - step 3

On the left half of the graph, find the mid-performance point and draw a horizontal line.

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Draw line at mid-performance point

Trend line practice

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Page 68: Teachers often feel that they only have 4 options in dealing with behaviors. Ignore the problem and hope it goes away Refer the student/s to an assistant.

Trend line practice

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Page 69: Teachers often feel that they only have 4 options in dealing with behaviors. Ignore the problem and hope it goes away Refer the student/s to an assistant.

Trend lines - step 4

Repeat steps of 2 and 3 on the right half of the graph.

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Trend line practice

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Trend line practice

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Trend lines - step 5

Draw a line connecting the intersections of both halves of the graph.

THIS IS THE TREND LINE

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Trend line

Trend line practice

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Trend line practice

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Single Subject Designs

Review x-axis y-axis phase change line phase labels data points data path (trend line) figure legend

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Purpose of single subject designs to demonstrate experimental control to show intervention effects

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Aspects of single subject designs Comparisons made between conditions must have an intervention to use single

subject design more than one person or group can be

included in the intervention

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Types of single subject designs AB ABAB or reversal Multiple baseline

across settings across subjects across behaviors

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Variable

Refers to any number of factors involved in research dependent variables-behavior being targeted for

change independent variable-intervention being used to

change behavior Functional relationship - trying to demonstrate

a cause-effect relationship between dependent and independent variables

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Baseline data

Quantitative data collected before the behavior change intervention has been implemented.

Process of collecting pre-intervention or baseline data can be referred to as a functional assessment

Baseline data should be stable (provides a representative sample)

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Functional behavioral assessment Identification of antecedent and consequent

events, temporarily contiguous to the behavior,which occasion and maintain the behavior

Baseline data provide the foundation on which the behavior change process is established.

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Trend

Indication of direction in the performance of the behavior

usually 3 successive data points in the same direction no trend increasing trend decreasing trend

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Experimental Control

Experimental control - changes in the dependent variable are related to manipulations of the independent variable

Confounding variables - conditions that are not controlled by the teacher

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AB design

Two phases - baseline and intervention weakest of all designs does not provide for replication simple quick and uncomplicated does not demonstrate confidence in

determination of a functional relationship

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ABAB (reversal)

Phases - baseline, intervention, baseline 2, intervention2

simple allows for precise analysis withdrawal of an effective intervention

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Changing criterion design

Two phases - baseline and intervention intervention phase has sub-phases

systematic changing of performance (increase or decrease) criterion

each intervention sub phase is separated on the graphic display by a dashed line

no need to withdraw a successful intervention

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Multiple baseline design

Simultaneous analysis of more than dependent variable. Page 186 in your text looks at multiple baselines

across behaviors, individuals or settings. Same scale of measurement should be used

across all….

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Advantages/Disadvantages

Can establish a functional relationship without withdrawing the intervention

can be difficult to control confounding variables across settings, behaviors or students.

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Alternating Treatments

Allows comparison of the effectiveness of more than one treatment or intervention on a single subject

ABCBABACAB, BAC can provide accurate and rapid feedback answers the question which method is most

effective

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Changing conditions

Interventions are introduced consecutively ABC design can only give an indication of the

effectiveness no functional relationship can be established