response 6 - Education
see attachment response 6Guided Response: You are required to substantively respond in writing in the discussion board to at least two of your colleagues by Day 7 (the following Monday). Keep the conversation going! Ask questions and make connections for how the strategy might be applicable across students in your classroom. As you review the posts submitted by your peers, some responses may also consider how your topic may be similar (or different) to others in our class. Consider asking additional clarifying questions or providing sources to extend the discussion.
This forum should be used as a scholarly platform to discuss similar or opposing ideas and career goals and to provide additional sources that you may have found helpful to your own learning and preparation.
Though two replies are the basic expectation, for deeper engagement and application of the material, you are encouraged to provide responses to any comments or questions others have given to you (including your instructor) before Day 7. This ongoing engagement in the discussion will deepen the conversation while providing opportunities to demonstrate your content expertise, critical thinking, and real-world experiences with this topic.
.
Response 1 Maria
How can you identify and evaluate EBP strategies to promote maintenance and generalization of IEP goals and objectives across skills for students with mild to moderate disabilities? How can these concepts be incorporated directly into IEP goals and objectives?
In identifying EBP (Evidence-Based Practice) strategies to ensure that they promote both maintenance and generalization of a student IEP goals and objectives first, we must ask what is it that we are trying to accomplish? According to the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services carefully forming a question helps to focus a literature search on practices intending to achieve particular outcomes (Child Welfare Information Gateway. n.d.). By asking the question, what is it we want from EBS, the better the result. For functional behavior importance, we must focus on both maintenance and generalization.
Maintenance of behavior is when it occurs throughout time. The notion we are teaching only valid if the learners can exhibit mastery of the concept over and repeatedly. Maintenance means that a student performs a response upon a time, even following implemented behavior plans that have been eliminated. Therefore, that means once all prompts and teaching methods have been removed, the skills that are taught will maintain over time. This concept is something all educators need to plan for especially for students with mild to moderate disabilities. Prompt fading is imperative here. This means educators should maintain past their teaching. If all prompts are never fade, then the skills will never get maintenance. For example, maintenance for bathroom skills: The teacher does not have to sequence the steps to go to the bathroom; keep the bathroom door open and the child will be able to use it anytimLearning Disabilities Research & Practice, 28(2), 81–88
C© 2013 The Division for Learning Disabilities of the Council for Exceptional Children
Training for Generalization and Maintenance in RtI Implementation:
Front-Loading for Sustainability
Matthew K. Burns, Andrea M. Egan, Amy K. Kunkel, Jennifer McComas, Meredith M. Peterson,
Naomi L. Rahn, and Jennifer Wilson
University of Minnesota
Response to Intervention (RtI) is being implemented as a new initiative in PK-12 schools
with increasing frequency. However, the model must be sustained at the school level, which
is potentially difficult due to a number of challenges brought about by systems change. This
article applied the Stokes and Baer (1977) framework for programming for generalization and
maintenance of behavior change to suggest specific activities in which schools could engage
to better ensure RtI sustainability. We specifically discussed ways to (1) introduce to natural
maintaining contingencies, (2) train with sufficient exemplars, (3) train loosely, (4) program
common stimuli, (5) mediate generalization, and (6) train to generalize. Directions for future
research are included.
Response to Intervention (RtI) and other multitiered inter-
vention systems are being adopted nationwide with increas-
ing frequency (Berkeley, Bender, Peaster & Saunders, 2009)
to increase student achievement for all students, reduce re-
ferrals to special education, and close existing achievement
gaps (Fuchs, Fuchs & Stecker, 2010). RtI has the potential to
positively affect both systemic and student outcomes (Burns,
Appleton & Stehouwer, 2005), but, some question whether
the RtI movement will sustain over time (Burns, 2007; Ys-
seldyke, 2005). RtI initiatives must ultimately be sustained
at the school level, and organizations adopting a system of
RtI are faced with a multitude of challenges brought about
by systems change (Grimes, Kurns & Tilly, 2006).
Previous research has found that implementation integrity
could be a serious threat to the validity of RtI models (Gansle
& Noell, 2007). For example, school personnel consistently
assessed fidelity of implementation for interventions that oc-
curred at tier 2, but did not assess fidelity at tier 1, and the
alignment between tiers was not explicit (Hill, King, Lemons
& Partanen, 2012). Moreover, implementation integrity of
problem-solving teams (PSTs) was low to the point of po-
tentially affecting student outcomes (Burns & Symington,
2002). Some of the challenges regarding implementation in-
tegrity can be avoided by building on the existing knowledge
of the school personnel, streamlining processes, and using a
clear system of communication between interventionist and
teacher (Johnson, Pool & Carter, 2012). However, implemen-
tation integrity can still wane as the implementation moves
further from the initial supports (Burns & Symington, 2002;
Kovaleski, Gickling, Morrow & Swank, 1999), which further
highlights the need to focus on sustainability.
RequeO S N E S & L I E B L E I N
AN EXPLICIT TECHNOLOGY OF GENERALIZATION
Pamela G. Osnes & Tara Lieblein
University of South Florida
The publication of the now classic article on generalization, “An Implicit Technology of
Generalization” (Stokes & Baer, 1977), spurred interest in generalization as an active process rather
than a passive process consisting primarily of a failure to discriminate between training and
nontraining settings. Following their description of nine areas in which the extant behavioral
research addressed generalization issues, a new interest in generalization of behavior change was
borne. More than a decade later, their description of categories of techniques that purportedly
could be used to produce generalization was refined in “An Operant Pursuit of Generalization”
(Stokes & Osnes, 1989). Stokes and Osnes described 12 generalization-promoting strategies that
were classified within three broader areas. Their description assisted the field in continuing to focus
interest on the fundamental need for the results of behavioral interventions to generalize effectively
and to be durable and for behavioral research to actively address generalization. Now, more than a
decade following the publication of “An Operant Pursuit of Generalization” and a quarter century
after “An Implicit Technology of Generalization” was published, the time has arrived to address the
status of generalization-promotion by behavior analysts, both in their conceptual and empirical
investigations.
The publication of “An Implicit
Technology of Generalization” (Stokes & Baer,
1977) resulted in a groundswell of interest in
generalization as an active process that is
important for behavior analysts to pursue
directly to validate the effectiveness of
behavioral programming. This classic article
embedded in behavior analysis the realization
that our work is functional not only when it
produces immediate effects in the immediate
environment that is targeted for change, but
more importantly, when the effects are more
widespread. Baer, Wolf, and Risley (1968)
included generality of behavior change as one of
the seven dimensions of applied behavior
analysis, and concluded that, “in general,
generalization should be programmed, rather
than expected or lamented” (p 97). Their
description of generality is consistent with the
description provided by Stokes and Baer: “A
therapeutic behavioral change, to be effective,
often (not always) must occur over time,
persons, and settings, and the effects of the
change sometimes should spread to a variety of
related behaviors” (p. 350). While
acknowledging that their conceptualization of
generalization was not consistent necessarily
with the traditional understanding and
descriptions of the phenomenon, they proceeded
to provide a description of generalization as
“...the occurrence of relevant behavior under
different, non-training conditions (i.e., across
subjects, 1977, 10, 349-367
AN IMPLICIT TECHNOLOGY OF GENERALIZATION
TREVOR F. STOKES AND DONALD M. BAER
THE UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA AND THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Traditionally, discrimination has been understood as an active process, and a technology
of its procedures has been developed and practiced extensively. Generalization, by con-
trast, has been considered the natural result of failing to practice a discrimination
technology adequately, and thus has remained a passive concept almost devoid of a
technology. But, generalization is equally deserving of an active conceptualization and
technology. This review summarizes the structure of the generalization literature and
its implicit embryonic technology, categorizing studies designed to assess or program
generalization according to nine general headings: Train and Hope; Sequential Modifi-
cation; Introduce to Natural Maintaining Contingencies; Train Sufficient Exemplars;
Train Loosely; Use Indiscriminable Contingencies; Program Common Stimuli; Mediate
Generalization; and Train To Generalize.
DESCRIPTORS: generalization, treatment-gain durability, followup measures, main-
tenance, postcheck methodology
Traditionally, many theorists have considered
generalization to be a passive phenomenon. Gen-
eralization was not seen as an operant response
that could be programmed, but as a description
of a natural outcome of any behavior-change
process. That is, a teaching operation repeated
over time and trials inevitably involves varying
samples of stimuli, rather than the same set
every time; in the same way, it inevitably evokes
and reinforces varying samples of behavior,
rather than the same set every time. As a conse-
quence, it is predictable that newly taught re-
sponses would be controlled not only by the
stimuli of the teaching program, but by others
somewhat resembling those stimuli (Skinner,
1953, p. 107ff.). Similarly, responses resembling
those established directly, yet not themselves ac-
tually touched by the teaching procedures, would
appear as a result of the teaching (Keller and
Preparation of this paper was supported in part by
PHS Training Grant 00183, Program Project Grant
HD 00870, and Research Grant MH 11739. Reprints
may be obtained either from T. F. Stokes, Department
of Psychology, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg,
Manitoba, Canada R3T 2N2, or D. M. Baer, Depart-
ment of Human Development, University of Kansas,
Lawrence, Kansas 66045.
Schoenfeld, 1950, p. 168ff.). Thus, generaliza-
tion was something that happened, not some-
thing produced by procedures specific to it.
If generalization seemed absent or insignifi-
cant, it was simply to be assumed that the teach-
ing process had managed to maintain unusually
tight control of the stimuli and responses in-
volved, allowing little sampling of their varie-
ties. This assumption was strongly supported by
the well-known techniques of discrimination: by
differential reinforcement (in general, by any
differential teaching) of certain stim
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