Developing positive social-emotional behaviors: a study of training and generalization effects.
TL;DR: Both trained and untrained subjects generally maintained their increased rates of smiling, sharing, and positive physical contacting across four weeks of follow-up observations.
read more
Abstract: Four handicapped children were taught four positive social-emotional behaviors: smiling, sharing, positive physical contacting, and verbal complimenting, using instructions, modelling, and praise. Rates of these behaviors were shown to increase in four trained subjects using a within-subject multiple-baseline experimental design. The generality of the behavior change was investigated by integrating three untrained subjects with the trained subjects in a setting free of adult-imposed contingencies and through a series of follow-up observations. Three trained subjects evidenced collateral increases in the generalization setting on at least one other behavior when training in smiling was conducted. One trained subject showed generalization session increases for each behavior when training was conducted to increase that behavior. All three untrained subjects demonstrated increased rates of smiling and sharing when interventions were conducted to increase those behaviors with the trained subjects. There was no appreciable generalization of verbal complimenting by either the trained or the untrained subjects. Both trained and untrained subjects generally maintained their increased rates of smiling, sharing, and positive physical contacting across four weeks of follow-up observations.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
•Book
Peer Rejection: Developmental Processes and Intervention Strategies
Karen L. Bierman
- 23 Oct 2003
TL;DR: In this paper, the developmental importance of peer relations and the role of peers in developing self-awareness and self-confidence is discussed. But, the authors do not consider the impact of peer intervention on the development of self-esteem.
445
Mainstreaming Students with Mild Handicaps: Academic and Social Outcomes
Nancy A. Madden,Robert E. Slavin +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of placing students with mild academic handicaps in full-time special education classes, part-time regular classes with resource support, and full time regular classes were reviewed.
405
Children's peer relations : issues in assessment and intervention
Barry H. Schneider,Kenneth H. Rubin,Jane E. Ledingham +2 more
- 01 Jan 1985
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define the realm of social competence and assess children's social skills in the context of social interaction and intervention with children in the setting of social problem solving.
372
Social Skills Training with Handicapped Children: A Review
TL;DR: In this paper, behavioral techniques derived from social learning theory to training social skills are reviewed. But, the focus of the review was on the use of cognitive-behavioral techniques.
345
Misguided Mainstreaming: The Case for Social Skills Training with Handicapped Children
TL;DR: This paper asserts that mainstreaming is based in part upon three faulty assumptions, and an alternative approach is suggested whereby handicapped children would be taught the requisite social skills for effective social interaction and peer acceptance.
336
References
•Book
Principles of behavior modification
Albert Bandura
- 01 Jan 1969
TL;DR: In psychotherapy, the subject matter is the person's behavior as mentioned in this paper, which is the only class of events that can be altered through psychological procedures, and therefore it is a meaningful subject matter of psychotherapy.
4.9K
•Book
Case studies in behavior modification
Leonard P. Ullmann,Leonard Krasner +1 more
- 01 Jan 1965
TL;DR: Ullman and Price as discussed by the authors presented a theoretical frame of reference in the form of several historically important articles, whereas the present editors have written their own introduction, whereas Eysenck's book, Behavior Therapy and the Neurosis, was published.
899
•Book
Behavior change : methodology, concepts, and practice
Leo A. Hamerlynck,Lee C. Handy,Eric J. Mash +2 more
- 01 Jan 1974
563
Current behavior modification in the classroom: be still, be quiet, be docile
TL;DR: It is argued therefore, that behavior modification has supported rather than changed the questionable status quo and the role of behavior modification in the development of open classrooms is discussed.