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Bartlett, Nadine; Ellis, Taylor Floyd – Canadian Journal of Educational Administration and Policy, 2021
The intended purpose of physical restraint, seclusion, and time-out rooms in schools is to intervene in a crisis when the behaviour of a student poses an immediate or imminent, and significant threat to physical safety. While the use of physical restraint, seclusion, and time-out rooms is intended to provide protection from immediate physical…
Descriptors: Punishment, Discipline, Student Behavior, Behavior Problems
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Kostewicz, Douglas E. – Behavior Analyst Today, 2010
Researchers and practitioners often employ timeout procedures to manage inappropriate classroom behavior. When implemented inappropriately, however, timeout can result in dangerous situations and have received increased scrutiny (i.e., seclusion). The timeout ribbon procedure can prevent some of the dangerous situations associated with other forms…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Timeout, Behavior Problems, Discipline
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Vegas, Kristopher C.; Jenson, William R.; Kircher, John C. – Behavioral Disorders, 2007
One current area of dispute in the psychological literature is the inclusion of and proper meta-analytic data analysis procedures for single-subject designs. The current single-subject meta-analysis (N = 25) investigated the effect of time-out for the reduction of disruptive classroom behaviors in nondevelopmentally delayed children. Two separate…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Computer Software, Meta Analysis, Timeout
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Broussard, Carmen; Northup, John – School Psychology Quarterly, 1997
Evaluates the effectiveness of a peer intervention for disruptive behavior which was based on the results of a classroom-based functional analysis. Results indicate that peer attention, rather than teacher attention or escape/timeout, was associated with the most disruptive classroom behavior, suggesting that peer attention can reduce such…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Behavior Problems, Children, Classroom Techniques
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Sherburne, Sara; And Others – Exceptional Children, 1988
Two procedures were compared for reducing violent or aggressive theme play of six preschool children with behavior disorders and five normally developing peers. Contingency statements followed by a modified time-out produced consistently lower rates of violent theme play than did verbal prompts to engage in more appropriate types of play.…
Descriptors: Aggression, Behavior Change, Behavior Disorders, Classroom Techniques