Summer 2003 Department of Behavior Analysis
Department of Behavior AnalysisBEHV 5250: Advanced Topics in Intervention
Association and Discrimination Learning
Emotional (R
espondent) Behavior
Paired Asso
ciate
and
Discrim
ination Skills
Strateg
ies, &
Rules
Simple Responses
Response Chains
Kinesthetic Repertoires
Motor Skills
Component
Composite
Com
ponent
Com
posite
Paired Associate
Concepts
Sequences & Algorithms
Rules
Principles (applying rules)
Strategies
Emotional (Respondent) B
ehavior
Paired Asso
ciate
and
Discrim
ination Skills
Strateg
ies &
Rules
Simple Responses
Response Chains
Kinesthetic Repertoires
Motor Skills
Component
Composite
Com
ponent
Com
posite
Paired Associate
Concepts
Sequences & Algorithms
Rules
Principles (applying rules)
Strategies
Summer 2003 Department of Behavior Analysis
Department of Behavior AnalysisBEHV 5250: Advanced Topics in Intervention
Two important questions…
• Is the association useful?• Does the learner have to memorize the association?
Summer 2003 Department of Behavior Analysis
Department of Behavior AnalysisBEHV 5250: Advanced Topics in Intervention
2 types of association
• One-way• Two-way
Summer 2003 Department of Behavior Analysis
Department of Behavior AnalysisBEHV 5250: Advanced Topics in Intervention
•Verbal behavior under the control of preceding verbal stimuli with no formal correspondence between the two
•Hear “two plus two”/ Say “four”
•Hear “I pledge allegiance” / Say “to the flag”
•See “Write your name” / Write name
•Hear “Write your name” / Write name
Paired associate responding as intraverbal behavior
Summer 2003 Department of Behavior Analysis
Department of Behavior AnalysisBEHV 5250: Advanced Topics in Intervention
Your turn!
• Generate an analysis of the associations one might teach a child with autism related to things’ names, features, functions, and classes. Be sure you identify the number of associations needed for each name as well as whether each association is 1-way or 2-way.
Summer 2003 Department of Behavior Analysis
Department of Behavior AnalysisBEHV 5250: Advanced Topics in Intervention
name features
function class
picture
Summer 2003 Department of Behavior Analysis
Department of Behavior AnalysisBEHV 5250: Advanced Topics in Intervention
Basic intraverbal associations for every noun• Hear name/Say features• Hear features/Say name• Hear one feature/Say names• Hear name/Say function• Hear functions/Say name• Hear one function/Say names• Hear name/Say class• Hear class/Say names• Hear function/Say class• Hear class/Say function• Hear feature/Say function• Hear function/Say features
Summer 2003 Department of Behavior Analysis
Department of Behavior AnalysisBEHV 5250: Advanced Topics in Intervention
Your turn!
• Given the associations you developed and we discussed, generate a scope and sequence chart to teach those associations. Begin your chart with the See picture/Say name skill.
Summer 2003 Department of Behavior Analysis
Department of Behavior AnalysisBEHV 5250: Advanced Topics in Intervention
Video Example•Hear category/Say Items
•Max (4 years old)
•Kristin
•2 timings
Summer 2003 Department of Behavior Analysis
Department of Behavior AnalysisBEHV 5250: Advanced Topics in Intervention
Multiple discriminations
• Associations where discriminative stimuli share many (easily confused) features
• Group easily confused stimuli together and teach them as a se
Summer 2003 Department of Behavior Analysis
Department of Behavior AnalysisBEHV 5250: Advanced Topics in Intervention
Your turn!
• Generate instructional sets for teaching See/Say alphabet letters. Which letters will you include in each set? How many instructional sets (or slices) will you have?
• Generate instructional sets for teaching a child with autism to identify her family members from their pictures. Let’s assume her family includes a mother, father, sister, brother, a maternal grandmother, and two grandfathers.
Summer 2003 Department of Behavior Analysis
Department of Behavior AnalysisBEHV 5250: Advanced Topics in Intervention
Chain and Sequence Learning
Summer 2003 Department of Behavior Analysis
Department of Behavior AnalysisBEHV 5250: Advanced Topics in Intervention
Tonight’s homework• generate five examples each of one-way and two-way paired associate responses that many children with
autism may need to learn and which are different from the examples Tiemann & Markle use in Chapter 2 (due tomorrow)
• generate five examples of sets of stimuli among which a young child with autism may have difficulty discriminating. Bring these five sets to class in a format you can easily share with Michael and the other students (due tomorrow)
• In-text questions, Analyzing Ch. 3, 4,5 • using the guidelines Tiemann & Markle lay out in appendix 3, complete analyses of three different chain
tasks (due tomorrow) children with autism often need to learn; select one chain task from each of the following areas:
– social skills – self-help skills – leisure skills – note: for each of the steps in at least one of your chain analyses, also list the Big 6+6 motor skills that are components
for that step • once you have completed step analyses of three different chain tasks as described above, develop model
analyses (due tomorrow) for each task (see pages 208-212 for example model analyses) • using the examples Tiemann & Markle provide you in appendix 5, construct flow charts (due tomorrow)
showing the sequence of decisions and consequent operations involved in the following algorithmic tasks on which children with autism often require remedial instruction:
– holding a conversation – using a microwave to heat a frozen meal
Summer 2003 Department of Behavior Analysis
Department of Behavior AnalysisBEHV 5250: Advanced Topics in Intervention
Tonight’s readings• Tiemann, P.W. & Markle, S.M. (1990). Chain and sequence
learning (chapter 3). Analyzing Instructional Content. Champaign, IL: Stipes Publishing Company
• Tiemann, P.W. & Markle, S.M. (1990). Guidelines for Analysis of a Chain Task (appendix 3). Analyzing Instructional Content. Champaign, IL: Stipes Publishing Company
• Tiemann, P.W. & Markle, S.M. (1990). Using a chain analysis to plan instruction (appendix 4). Analyzing Instructional Content. Champaign, IL: Stipes Publishing Company
• Tiemann, P.W. & Markle, S.M. (1990). Examples of algorithm tasks in graphic form (appendix 5). Analyzing Instructional Content. Champaign, IL: Stipes Publishing Company
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