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Peer reviewedAnd Others; Petersen, Gail A. – American Journal of Mental Deficiency, 1979
In a single-subject design with replication across Ss, teacher prompts were used in an attempt to increase the rate of social behavior of three severely and profoundly retarded adolescents who were legally blind. Training took place in the classroom on successive school days with the teacher prompting each S to engage in positive social…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Blindness, Cues, Exceptional Child Research
Peer reviewedWatson, T. Steuart – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1996
This study assessed the effectiveness of posting signs for reducing graffiti in three men's restrooms on a college campus. Immediately following the intervention, no marks were made, and results were maintained at three-month follow-up. A possible explanation for the results is that the signs specified an altruistic contingency. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Altruism, Antisocial Behavior, Behavior Change, Behavior Modification
Peer reviewedHall, Laura J.; And Others – Education and Training in Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, 1995
This study aimed to increase the independent engagement of integrated elementary students with disabilities, by decreasing prompts from aides and using pictorial activity schedules to diminish dependence on adult support. A nonconcurrent multiple-baseline design, replicated across three aide-child pairs, revealed that the intervention resulted in…
Descriptors: Cues, Elementary Secondary Education, Inclusive Schools, Inservice Education
Peer reviewedBannerman, Diane J.; And Others – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1991
Prompting, modeling, and differential reinforcement were used to teach three nonverbal adults with severe to profound mental retardation to exit their group homes at the sound of the house fire alarm. All three learned to exit independently in less than two minutes in all or the majority of surprise fire drills. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Adults, Alarm Systems, Daily Living Skills, Fire Protection
Peer reviewedWolery, Mark; And Others – Research in Developmental Disabilities, 1992
Reports of 36 studies using the constant time delay procedure with discrete behaviors of special needs students were analyzed. Results are described in terms of demographic variables (e.g., type of subjects, settings, behaviors, instructors, and instructional arrangements), the procedural parameters of the strategy, strategy effectiveness, and…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Elementary Secondary Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Intervention
Peer reviewedCherkes-Julkowski, Miriam; And Others – Learning Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 1991
This study investigated the effects of prompting, or directing/controlling attention, during a reasoning task on the performance of 68 children with attention deficit disorders, learning disabilities, or no handicaps, in grades 1-12. All groups benefited from prompting, and prompting was related to a different set of cognitive processes in each…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Attention Control, Attention Deficit Disorders, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedNeuman, Susan B.; And Others – Journal of Educational Research, 1990
In this study, the effects of previewing on children's (N=87) comprehension of a televised story were investigated. Results indicate that previewing may be an effective mediational technique for enhancing children's comprehension and retention of plot-essential information from a televised story. (Author/IAH)
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Analysis of Variance, Comprehension, Critical Viewing
Peer reviewedReamer, Robin B.; Brady, Michael P.; Hawkins, Jacqueline – Education and Training in Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, 1998
A study examined the effects of a video-based intervention combining self-assessment, self-modeling, discrimination training, and behavioral rehearsal on two sets of parents' interactions with their children with autism during self-care tasks and social play with their siblings. The intervention increased parents' social prompts and altered…
Descriptors: Autism, Family Life, Instructional Effectiveness, Intervention
Hannafin, Michael; And Others – 1986
The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of behavioral and cognitive organizing strategies and varied processing intervals on factual and inferential learning. A total of 49 upper-division undergraduate and graduate students, who were randomly assigned to either a cognitive, behavioral, or individual orienting strategy group, received…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Behavioral Objectives, Cognitive Objectives, Comparative Analysis
Jason, Leonard A.; Frasure, Susan – 1979
The use of prompting to increase peer-tutoring skills in an entire third grade classroom was investigated. A multiple baseline design was used in establishing three tutoring components: praise corrective feedback, and re-presenting the question. Results indicated that all three tutoring behaviors increased after prompting. During the last…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Classroom Research, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
STOLUROW, LAWRENCE M. – 1963
A STATUS REPORT WAS MADE OF THE ACTIVITIES PURSUED IN A 3-MONTH PORTION OF PHASE 1 OF A LARGER 10-YEAR PROJECT PLANNED TO STUDY THE PSYCHOLOGICAL AND EDUCATIONAL FACTORS INVOLVED IN TRANSFER OF TRAINING BY USE OF PROGRAMED SELF-INSTRUCTION PRESENTED BY TEACHING MACHINES. THIS MEDIUM WAS CHOSEN BECAUSE IT PROVIDES LABORATORY-LIKE CONDITIONS SUCH AS…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Learning Processes, Logic
Seitz, Sue; Merryman, Sandra – 1970
Using 48 educable mentally handicapped students (ages 12-18) as subjects, a study investigated the effect of prompted and trial-and-error procedures on the learning of a paired-associate task, when items (concrete nouns of less than six letters) in one list were drawn from the same categories (animals, food) and in a second list, from different…
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Exceptional Child Research, Instructional Materials, Learning Theories
Bjerstedt, Ake – 1971
In this second volume of a three-volume series on the construction of self-instructional systems, the system synthesis phase is described and directions are given for the construction of a preliminary system version. In order to aid the program constructor in establishing the correct sequence of instruction, various models of programing are…
Descriptors: Branching, Constructed Response, Covert Response, Feedback
Peer reviewedGoetz, L.; Gee, K. – Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness, 1987
A 3-year-old (severely retarded and visually impaired) was trained in a program emphasizing functional, age-appropriate visual motor tasks requiring use of vision for successful task completion. Use of a repeated prompting procedure was successful in establishing visual attention, and generalization of visual attention to untrained tasks was…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Case Studies, Generalization, Motor Development
Peer reviewedBrowder, Diane M.; And Others – International Journal of Rehabilitation Research, 1986
In a study designed to improve vocational productivity in five moderately/severely retarded adults, reinforcement and self-monitoring were compared to self-monitoring with movement training (prompting the most efficient task performance movement). Four subjects responded minimally to trainer-initiated reinforcement or self-monitoring but showed…
Descriptors: Adults, Job Analysis, Job Performance, Job Training


