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Showing 1 to 15 of 22 results Save | Export
Elizabeth Garis – Communique, 2024
If students at your school are not attending classes or coming to school at all, they may be engaging in school refusal. Understanding what school refusal is, as well as the functions behind it, is key to evaluation and a collaborative school-home approach to intervention.
Descriptors: Attendance, Attendance Patterns, Student Behavior, School Phobia
Cipiani, Ennio – Communique, 2020
The function of any behavior (or chain of behaviors) can only be determined by identifying the prevailing antecedent motivating condition (Cipani & Cipani, 2019). The author dubs this antecedent condition the driving force of behavior. What you desire at a particular point in time, if such desire is at a sufficient level, executes two effects.…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Motivation, Contingency Management, Negative Reinforcement
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Allday, R. Allan; Burt, Jonathan L.; Haggard, Kaitlin N. – Preventing School Failure, 2021
Research has suggested that students from underserved and underrepresented backgrounds (e.g., students of color and those with disabilities) have received higher rates of exclusionary discipline (e.g., suspensions and expulsions) than their peers who are White and without disability. Various interventions have been implemented to address this…
Descriptors: Discipline, Disproportionate Representation, Student Behavior, Educational Change
Wendy M. Reinke; Keith C. Herman – Grantee Submission, 2016
The brief Student-Teacher Classroom Interaction Observation (ST-CIO) is a direct observation assessment that evaluates interactions between teachers and students. The measure was developed for use in classrooms during academic instruction to determine the frequency of teacher use of reprimands and praise toward a student, as well as the frequency…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Observation, Evaluation Methods, Student Behavior
Gardiner, Steve – Phi Delta Kappan, 2014
While it may seem almost intuitive that offering rewards to students will yield better results, that is not how it works; the result often is the opposite. The paradox of rewards is that their effect often has a limited impact on students, who then will lose curiosity; it also makes them feel as if they are being controlled--a negative motivating…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Motivation Techniques, Rewards, Incentives
Reed, Gregory K.; Piazza, Cathleen C.; Patel, Meeta R.; Layer, Stacy A.; Bachmeyer, Melanie H.; Bethke, Stephanie D.; Gutshall, Katharine A. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2004
In the current investigation, we evaluated the relative effects of noncontingent reinforcement (NCR), escape extinction, and a combination of NCR and escape extinction as treatment for the feeding problems exhibited by 4 children. For each participant, consumption increased only when escape extinction was implemented, independent of whether NCR…
Descriptors: Positive Reinforcement, Negative Reinforcement, Behavior Modification
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Ghezzi, Patrick M. – Psychology in the Schools, 2007
The advantages of emphasizing discrete trials "teaching" over discrete trials "training" are presented first, followed by a discussion of discrete trials as a method of teaching that emerged historically--and as a matter of necessity for difficult learners such as those with autism--from discrete trials as a method for laboratory research. The…
Descriptors: Autism, Guidelines, Educational Practices, Educational Indicators
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Sidman, Murray – Behavior Analyst, 2006
In this article, the author discusses the distinction between positive and negative reinforcement and some additional considerations. He states that the concept of negative reinforcement has caused confusion, and he believes that the difficulty stems from conventions of ordinary speech, in which the term "negative" usually denotes the opposite of…
Descriptors: Negative Reinforcement, Behavior Disorders, Positive Reinforcement, Definitions
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Marr, M. Jackson – Behavior Analyst, 2006
In this article, the author discusses and presents seven possibilities that describe how symmetry principles are reflected in behavior analysis. First, if there are apparently no functional distinctions to be made between positive and negative reinforcement, then reinforcer effectiveness (by various measures) is invariant under a simple inversion…
Descriptors: Punishment, Negative Reinforcement, Behavior Disorders, Positive Reinforcement
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Iwata, Brian A. – Behavior Analyst, 2006
In this article, the author presents his views on Michael's (1975) and Baron and Galizio's (2005) arguments on eliminating the distinction between positive and negative reinforcement. He first discusses Michael's concept of these two types of operations and contrasts it with the notions of Baron and Galizio. The author provides the readers his own…
Descriptors: Negative Reinforcement, Positive Reinforcement, Definitions, Stimuli
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Lattal, Kennon A.; Lattal, Alice D. – Behavior Analyst, 2006
Baron and Galizio (2005) reviewed and updated Michael's (1975) observations concerning the problems surrounding the distinction between positive and negative reinforcement. In the end they concluded that the valence is unjustified. However, despite the fact that the logical and empirical underpinnings of the distinction have been questioned for…
Descriptors: Negative Reinforcement, Positive Reinforcement, Classification, Attribution Theory
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Fair, George W.
This learning module has been designed to aid the teacher trainee in identifying ways in which he influences student behavior in the classroom and also explores means of selecting more meaningful reinforcers and their application. Terminal objectives of the module are the ability to (1) define the terms "reinforcement,""positive…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Extinction (Psychology), Learning Modules, Negative Reinforcement
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Hobbis, V.; Williams, T. – Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness, 1986
The article discusses the uses of mechanical vibration for stimulating, rewarding, and suppressing behaviors of multiply handicapped blind children. Suggestions for further research and refinement of the techniques are made. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Blindness, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
Matson, Johnny L.; Cahill, Thomas – 1976
Overcorrection is a mild punishment technique that provides for logical consequences of inappropriate behaviors. The method has two components--restitution, during which a disruptive environment is reinstated to a state vastly superior to the original one, and positive practice, during which more appropriate responses are taught to replace the…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Behavior Problems, Change Strategies, Elementary Education
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Brown, Jacob Edward – Psychology in the Schools, 1986
Paradoxical strategies appear to provide a change in the dynamics of the teacher-child relationship and are thus a more systemic way of viewing problem behavior than time-out procedures. Three case studies are presented in which the paradoxical strategies have varying degrees of success. (Author/ABB)
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Behavior Problems, Case Studies, Children
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