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Jessica Turpin; Anna Jaggears; Rachel Cagliani; Sara Kathryn Snyder – Education and Training in Autism and Developmental Disabilities, 2024
Extended diaper wearing may limit access to inclusive opportunities including general education settings, summer camps, community-based programming, and job opportunities. Toilet training may be delayed due to more pressing concerns, such as challenging behavior. Individualized education plans should include toilet training children with…
Descriptors: Toilet Training, Hygiene, Inclusion, Students with Disabilities
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Jenee Vickers Johnson; Jason C. Travers; Kathleen N. Tuck; Pamela L. Neidert; Heather J. Forbes – Education and Training in Autism and Developmental Disabilities, 2025
Urine-detecting alarms are prevalent in toilet training intervention research and clinical practice for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities, but the effects of urine alarms remain unclear. Urine alarms may function as punishing or reinforcing contingencies, or may merely alert trainers to accidents and improve treatment…
Descriptors: Toilet Training, Reinforcement, Punishment, Intellectual Disability
Jenee V. Johnson – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Over 50 years of research suggests that toilet training based on behavioral principles is effective for most individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD). However, many adults with IDD are never effectively toilet trained. Lack of independent toileting is associated with detrimental physical, mental, and social experiences.…
Descriptors: Toilet Training, Reinforcement, Punishment, Intellectual Disability
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Johnson, Jenee Vickers; Travers, Jason C.; Forbes, Heather J.; Zimmerman, Kathleen – Education and Training in Autism and Developmental Disabilities, 2021
Approximately 50 years of research on rapid toilet training (RTT) first used by Azrin and Foxx (1971) indicates RTT is effective for teaching individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) independent toileting routines. Professionals focused on toilet training may be familiar with RTT procedures but be less informed about the…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Toilet Training, Intellectual Disability
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Scheithauer, Mindy; Martin, Clarissa; Bottini, Summer – Focus on Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities, 2022
Early studies evaluating the relative preference for leisure compared with edible items suggested that, for most participants (>80%), edible items are more preferred than leisure items. Recent studies suggest more variability in the percentage of participants with this preference. The rationale for this variability could be sampling, setting,…
Descriptors: Preferences, Food, Developmental Disabilities, Electronic Equipment
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Kady Francis; Arlene Mannion; Geraldine Leader – Review Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2017
In 2009, Kroeger and Sorensen-Burnworth published a comprehensive review of the literature on toilet training individuals with autism spectrum disorder and other developmental disabilities. Their review highlighted that the majority of toilet training programs were modelled after Azrin and Foxx's Rapid Toilet Training (RTT) method. The current…
Descriptors: Toilet Training, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Developmental Disabilities, Program Evaluation
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Rinald, Katherine; Mirenda, Pat – Research in Developmental Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2012
Individuals with developmental disabilities often experience challenges in acquiring toileting skills, which highlights a need for effective toilet training strategies that can be readily disseminated to caregivers. The purpose of this multiple baseline study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a modified rapid toilet training workshop provided…
Descriptors: Toilet Training, Developmental Disabilities, Children, Parents
Kim, Jinnie – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Far less is known about the effects of functional communication-based toileting interventions for students with developmental disabilities in a school setting. Furthermore, the currently available toileting interventions for students with disabilities include some undesirable procedures such as the use of punishment, unnatural clinic/university…
Descriptors: Toilet Training, Developmental Disabilities, Intervention, Teaching Methods
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Brown, Freddy Jackson; Peace, Natalie – British Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2011
Learning to use the toilet is an important developmental step for a child's independence, health and dignity. It can be particularly difficult to teach continence skills to disabled children with aggressive or challenging behaviour. This study showed how Azrin & Foxx's (1971) basic toilet training procedure could be modified to teach a 13-year-old…
Descriptors: Toilet Training, Developmental Disabilities, Behavior Problems, Aggression
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Kroeger, K. A.; Sorensen-Burnworth, Rena – Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, 2009
The following article reviews the current literature addressing toilet training individuals with autism and other developmental disabilities. The review addresses programs typical to toilet training the developmental disability population, most of which are modeled after the original Foxx and Azrin [Azrin, N. H., & Foxx, R. M. (1971). A rapid…
Descriptors: Autism, Developmental Disabilities, Toilet Training, Training Methods