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Taylor, Bridget A.; DeQuinzio, Jaime A. – Behavior Modification, 2012
A skill essential for successful inclusion in general education settings is the ability to learn by observing others. Research, however, has documented children with autism display significant deficits in the fundamental skills necessary for observational learning. This article outlines the skills essential for observational learning from an…
Descriptors: Autism, Observational Learning, Basic Skills, Inclusion
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Falkenstine, Karen Jones; Collins, Belva C.; Schuster, John W.; Kleinert, Harold – Education and Training in Developmental Disabilities, 2009
Special education teachers often search for effective strategies to teach a variety of skills to students with moderate to severe disabilities through small group instruction. The investigators examined the acquisition of academic skills as well as chained and discrete tasks presented as nontargeted information by a small group of students with…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Small Group Instruction, Observational Learning, Special Education Teachers
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Ingram, E.; Johnson, E. G. – Australia and New Zealand Journal of Developmental Disabilities, 1987
A comparison of 28 mildly mentally retarded children with 28 children of average intelligence (mean mental age six years) in learning conservation skills found both groups benefited from Direct Instruction methods, but retarded children acquired only pseudoconservation from Observational Learning methods. Their learning was not tenacious and did…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Conservation (Concept), Generalization
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Werts, Margaret Gessler; Caldwell, Nicola K.; Wolery, Mark – Journal of Special Education, 2003
A study found that 4 boys (age 11) with mild disabilities were able to acquire the behaviors for instructive feedback stimuli when the stimuli were presented after trials on any of a set of target behaviors and could acquire instructive feedback behaviors during acquisition of or mastery of target behaviors. (Contains references.) (Author/CR)
Descriptors: Cues, Elementary Education, Feedback, Generalization
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Wood, Dorothy Ann; And Others – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1993
This study, involving 9 students (ages 8-11) with learning disabilities, found that 1 session of self-instruction training was not sufficiently powerful for students to learn a strategy for solving arithmetic problems, but a second session and access to tape-recorded cues resulted in improved performance. Effects did not generalize to student…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Audiotape Recordings, Autoinstructional Aids, Cues