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Ivancic, Martin T.; Bailey, Jon S. – Research in Developmental Disabilities, 1996
Two experiments with 15 individuals having profound mental retardation found difficulties in identifying reinforcers that were actually effective in treatment of chronic training needs. Research needs in evaluating training alternatives for people with profound multiple disabilities who move very little or who respond with very long latencies are…
Descriptors: Identification, Multiple Disabilities, Positive Reinforcement, Program Effectiveness
Fisher, Wayne W.; And Others – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 1996
Caregivers of eight children with severe disabilities were asked to rank order, according to predicted client preference, a standard list of reinforcers and a list generated using a structured interview with caregivers. Systematic choice assessments were then conducted. Results indicated that caregiver predictions of client preferences were…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Caregivers, Children, Contingency Management
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Gast, David L.; Jacobs, Heidi A.; Logan, Kent R.; Murray, Amy Streu; Holloway, Anne; Long, Libby – Education and Training in Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, 2000
This study evaluated the effectiveness of a brief, 2-minute pre-session stimulus preference assessment in predicting the levels of responding of four students (ages 6-9) with profound multiple disabilities. Use of the identified preferred stimulus resulted in higher levels of student responding during the instructional condition across all four…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Motivation, Multiple Disabilities, Positive Reinforcement
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Pasley, Kay; Furtis, Ted G.; Skinner, Martie L. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2002
Identity theory model was tested with fathers (N=186) to assess whether commitment to the fathering role identity affected the psychological centrality of that role. Results showed that fathers who perceived that their wives evaluated them positively as fathers were more likely to report higher levels of involvement in child-related activities and…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Fathers, Identification (Psychology), Parent Participation
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Reilly, Mark P.; Lattal, Kennon A. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2004
Within-session delay-of-reinforcement gradients were generated with pigeons by progressively increasing delays to reinforcement within each session. In Experiment 1, the effects of imposing progressive delays on variable-interval and fixed-interval schedules were investigated while controlling for simultaneous decreases in reinforcer rate across…
Descriptors: Positive Reinforcement, Intervals, Animals, Animal Behavior
Rehfeldt, Ruth Anne; Root, Shannon L. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2005
This project examined whether a history of reinforced relational responding would result in derived requesting skills in 3 adults with disabilities. Participants were first taught to request preferred items using pictures; they were then taught conditional discriminations between pictures and their dictated names and between dictated names and…
Descriptors: Developmental Disabilities, Severe Mental Retardation, Adults, Skill Development
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Muller, Jens – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2005
Background: When developing a domain-specific academic self-concept, students are not restricted to social comparisons; they may also make temporal or dimensional comparisons. Aims: The main purpose of this study was to examine whether these different types of comparison trigger paradoxical effects of praise and criticism in the sense described by…
Descriptors: Grade 9, Inferences, Elementary School Students, Criticism
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Everett, Gregory E.; Olmi, D. Joe; Edwards, Ron P.; Tingstrom, Daniel H. – Education and Treatment of Children, 2005
The present study, using a multiple baseline across subjects design for two children and a nonconcurrent multiple baseline across subjects design for two additional children, evaluated whether the addition of eye contact and then contingent praise for compliance (CP) would lead to increases in childhood compliance for both statement and question…
Descriptors: School Psychology, Positive Reinforcement, Nonverbal Communication, Children
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Martin, Christian A.; Drasgow, Erik; Halle, James W.; Brucker, Jennifer M. – Educational Psychology, 2005
We used functional communication training to teach Bob, a 10-year-old student with autism and severe language delays, to reject items by touching an icon. Our initial assessment revealed that Bob's behaviours serving a rejecting function consisted of pushing away, yelling, bear hugging-grabbing, and leaving. We used prompting, differential…
Descriptors: Positive Reinforcement, Intervention, Delayed Speech, Autism
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Jenson, William R.; Olympia, Daniel; Farley, Megan; Clark, Elaine – Psychology in the Schools, 2004
Students with externalizing disorders make up from three to five percent of the population in public school classrooms and are some of the most difficult students to manage in an educational setting. Behavioral excesses and deficits exhibited by these students are a major factor in poor retention rates for new teachers while the students…
Descriptors: Psychology, Classrooms, Positive Reinforcement, Educational Experience
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Skinner, Christopher H.; Williams, Robert L.; Neddenriep, Christine E. – School Psychology Review, 2004
In their meta-analysis, Stage and Quiroz (1997) found that group-oriented contingencies yielded the largest effect size of interventions designed to reduce inappropriate behaviors in public schools. However, such procedures may be underutilized for enhancing academic performance and learning. The current article describes how interdependent…
Descriptors: Group Dynamics, Classroom Techniques, Meta Analysis, Rewards
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Meadows, Sadonya F.; Skinner, Christopher H. – Journal of Behavioral Education, 2005
Research on the additive interspersal procedure was extended by exposing seventh-grade students to curricula-based (e.g., educationally valid) language arts assignments. In Experiment I, each student was given a control language arts assignment containing 20 discrete target items and an experimental assignment containing 24 equivalent target…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Validity, Grade 7, Assignments
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Dreisbach, Gesine – Brain and Cognition, 2006
Adaptive action in a constantly changing environment requires the ability to maintain intentions and goals over time and to flexibly switch between these goals in response to significant changes. Dreisbach and Goschke (2004) argued that positive affect modulates these antagonistic control demands in favor of a more flexible but also more…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Cognitive Ability, Goal Orientation, Positive Reinforcement
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Sigler, Ellen A.; Aamidor, Shirley – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2005
There are various opinions concerning the value of positive reinforcement when discussing modifying behaviors of young children. In some cases, individuals considered positive reinforcement difficult to implement and, in extreme cases, even felt it to be detrimental. Educators often use praise interchangeably with positive reinforcement when…
Descriptors: Young Children, Positive Reinforcement, Behavior Modification, Early Childhood Education
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Lopez, Shane L.; Magyar-Moe, Jeana L. – Counseling Psychologist, 2006
The Major Contribution intended to situate positive psychology in counseling psychology's past and future and in the complex world we live and work in today. The four reactions (Frazier, Lee,& Steger; Gerstein; Linley; Mollen, Ethington,& Ridley) provide new insights into how counseling psychology has and will contribute to the study of human…
Descriptors: Counseling Psychology, Social Problems, Social Science Research, Self Efficacy
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