
Adjunctive Behavior
... . An important postulate, sometimes called the postulate of behavior passivity, prevails with respect to all behavior. Behavior happens only as an inevitable reaction. An organism has no capacity to behave initiatively or proactively. It does not initiate a behavior, nor can it do a behavior, nor d ...
... . An important postulate, sometimes called the postulate of behavior passivity, prevails with respect to all behavior. Behavior happens only as an inevitable reaction. An organism has no capacity to behave initiatively or proactively. It does not initiate a behavior, nor can it do a behavior, nor d ...
ptec 155 – developmental disabilities module
... Third, you arrange a change. If you want a behavior to repeat and grow stronger, you follow it with a rewarding consequence (positive reinforcer). If you do not want a behavior to repeat or grow, you make sure that the particular behavior is not reinforced and teach another behavior to replace it. ...
... Third, you arrange a change. If you want a behavior to repeat and grow stronger, you follow it with a rewarding consequence (positive reinforcer). If you do not want a behavior to repeat or grow, you make sure that the particular behavior is not reinforced and teach another behavior to replace it. ...
13-14 Intro to RP Presentation Resource Packet
... cultural differences by offering an equitable process where all members of a community feel valued and heard, and in turn, are more likely to bring their best self to the community. ...
... cultural differences by offering an equitable process where all members of a community feel valued and heard, and in turn, are more likely to bring their best self to the community. ...
VALUE ()
... which stems not from an understanding of connections, but from an ignorance of boundaries. Creative thinking in higher education can only be expressed productively within a particular domain. The student must have a strong foundation in the strategies and skills of the domain in order to make connec ...
... which stems not from an understanding of connections, but from an ignorance of boundaries. Creative thinking in higher education can only be expressed productively within a particular domain. The student must have a strong foundation in the strategies and skills of the domain in order to make connec ...
Annotated Bibliography American Association of School Libraries
... meantime I will encourage my students to use blogs. Ferriter has convinced me to add feed readers to my wikispaces. He notes that RSS (Really Simple Syndication) feed readers “are probably the most important digital tool for today's learner because they make it easy to sift through the amazing amoun ...
... meantime I will encourage my students to use blogs. Ferriter has convinced me to add feed readers to my wikispaces. He notes that RSS (Really Simple Syndication) feed readers “are probably the most important digital tool for today's learner because they make it easy to sift through the amazing amoun ...
From Operant Conditioning to Selection by Consequences
... photographs, Skinner operated the flash as his conditioned reinforcer. In about 20 minutes, he shaped a jump with the dog leaping over a foot off the ground. The article, “Harvard-Trained Dog” came out in 1952 (Look, 1952). As with teaching a pigeon to knock a ball about, “successive approximations” ...
... photographs, Skinner operated the flash as his conditioned reinforcer. In about 20 minutes, he shaped a jump with the dog leaping over a foot off the ground. The article, “Harvard-Trained Dog” came out in 1952 (Look, 1952). As with teaching a pigeon to knock a ball about, “successive approximations” ...
PPT
... • focus on the outcome of reinforcement (strengthening) rather than interpret what each individual views as good and bad • reward is usually not used as a synonym for reinforcer ...
... • focus on the outcome of reinforcement (strengthening) rather than interpret what each individual views as good and bad • reward is usually not used as a synonym for reinforcer ...
CENTRAL TEXAS COLLEGE
... 4. State what a behavioral definition is and how it differs from a label for a behavior. Then give two examples of a behavioral definition and its label (use examples from websites or sources other than your text). 5. Your text lists 5 recording methods. Choose 2, and in a few sentences thoroughly a ...
... 4. State what a behavioral definition is and how it differs from a label for a behavior. Then give two examples of a behavioral definition and its label (use examples from websites or sources other than your text). 5. Your text lists 5 recording methods. Choose 2, and in a few sentences thoroughly a ...
(A) – Behavior
... consistent method for changing behavior that has been derived from one or more basic principles of behavior • Sufficient generality across subjects, settings, and or behaviors to warrant its codification & dissemination ...
... consistent method for changing behavior that has been derived from one or more basic principles of behavior • Sufficient generality across subjects, settings, and or behaviors to warrant its codification & dissemination ...
Journal of Animal Behavior Technology
... First, the rats were introduced to the Skinner box until the rats were moving about the box with no signs of emotional behavior that may be produced by an unfamiliar environment. (They looked comfortable in the box). Skinner made sure that the food pellets were familiar to the rats by mixing the pel ...
... First, the rats were introduced to the Skinner box until the rats were moving about the box with no signs of emotional behavior that may be produced by an unfamiliar environment. (They looked comfortable in the box). Skinner made sure that the food pellets were familiar to the rats by mixing the pel ...
Learning through Inquiry - Public Schools of Robeson County
... showed that university students who completed a semester long introductory biology laboratory designed on inquiry based approaches achieved 6% higher grades on biology content exams as opposed to the control group which completed a more traditional information-transmission modeled laboratory (from W ...
... showed that university students who completed a semester long introductory biology laboratory designed on inquiry based approaches achieved 6% higher grades on biology content exams as opposed to the control group which completed a more traditional information-transmission modeled laboratory (from W ...
Thorndike
... (a term Thorndike wouldn't use but quite clearly defined). (p. 130) This must all take place with the use of authentic activities designed so that the child will be able to apply the knowledge (or reactions in behavioral terms) in similar real life situations (pp. 131132). From this perspective, Tho ...
... (a term Thorndike wouldn't use but quite clearly defined). (p. 130) This must all take place with the use of authentic activities designed so that the child will be able to apply the knowledge (or reactions in behavioral terms) in similar real life situations (pp. 131132). From this perspective, Tho ...
Solange Amato - International Mathematical Union
... memorised the algorithm only by rote. She gave an example concerning 38 x 47: “I would do 8 x 7, 8 x 4, jump a place, 3 x 7 and 3 x 4. I did not interpret the three in the tens’ place as 30 times and the four as 4 tens or 40”. The STs had memorised symbolic ways of performing operations which seemed ...
... memorised the algorithm only by rote. She gave an example concerning 38 x 47: “I would do 8 x 7, 8 x 4, jump a place, 3 x 7 and 3 x 4. I did not interpret the three in the tens’ place as 30 times and the four as 4 tens or 40”. The STs had memorised symbolic ways of performing operations which seemed ...
operant behavior1
... extent that it maximizes or minimizes certain ef- Thorndike was closer to the principle of natural fects. The teleological problem is, of course, not selection than the above statement of his law. He solved until we have answered certain questions: did not need to say that a response which had been ...
... extent that it maximizes or minimizes certain ef- Thorndike was closer to the principle of natural fects. The teleological problem is, of course, not selection than the above statement of his law. He solved until we have answered certain questions: did not need to say that a response which had been ...
Protective and Risk Factors
... In the Minnesota Community Voices and Character Education project, Narvaez, Bock, Endicott and Lies (2004) tested experimental and control schools with measures of school climate and the CBS. In a subsequent analysis, a MANOVA was conducted with 3 School Groups (control, high implementing of school ...
... In the Minnesota Community Voices and Character Education project, Narvaez, Bock, Endicott and Lies (2004) tested experimental and control schools with measures of school climate and the CBS. In a subsequent analysis, a MANOVA was conducted with 3 School Groups (control, high implementing of school ...
Protective and Risk Factors
... In the Minnesota Community Voices and Character Education project, Narvaez, Bock, Endicott and Lies (2004) tested experimental and control schools with measures of school climate and the CBS. In a subsequent analysis, a MANOVA was conducted with 3 School Groups (control, high implementing of school ...
... In the Minnesota Community Voices and Character Education project, Narvaez, Bock, Endicott and Lies (2004) tested experimental and control schools with measures of school climate and the CBS. In a subsequent analysis, a MANOVA was conducted with 3 School Groups (control, high implementing of school ...
Rethinking Homework
... backpacks wish they could help teachers understand how the cons overwhelmingly outweigh the pros. And teachers who have long harbored doubts about the value of homework feel pressured by those parents who mistakenly believe that a lack of afterschool assignments reflects an insufficient commitment t ...
... backpacks wish they could help teachers understand how the cons overwhelmingly outweigh the pros. And teachers who have long harbored doubts about the value of homework feel pressured by those parents who mistakenly believe that a lack of afterschool assignments reflects an insufficient commitment t ...
Guide to Lesson Study
... Planning a research lesson differs from the lesson planning familiar to most of us. The following basic questions guide planning of a research lesson. 1. What do students currently understand about this topic? 2. What do we want them to understand at the end of the lesson (and unit)? 3. What's the ...
... Planning a research lesson differs from the lesson planning familiar to most of us. The following basic questions guide planning of a research lesson. 1. What do students currently understand about this topic? 2. What do we want them to understand at the end of the lesson (and unit)? 3. What's the ...
THE ALTERNATIVE PAPER TO SCHOOL BASED ASSESSMENT
... The IEB provides extensive guidance on how various issues should be addressed, including the frequency, timing, venue and dates for meetings within schools and between schools. The adoption of similar measure by CXC will contribute, significantly, to the improvement of procedures for quality assuran ...
... The IEB provides extensive guidance on how various issues should be addressed, including the frequency, timing, venue and dates for meetings within schools and between schools. The adoption of similar measure by CXC will contribute, significantly, to the improvement of procedures for quality assuran ...
Selections from Science and Human Behavior
... psychic thirst; and (3) a kind of behavior -for example, drinking. Independent information about the second link would obviously permit us to predict the third without recourse to the first. It would be a preferred type of variable because it would be nonhistoric; the first link may lie in the past ...
... psychic thirst; and (3) a kind of behavior -for example, drinking. Independent information about the second link would obviously permit us to predict the third without recourse to the first. It would be a preferred type of variable because it would be nonhistoric; the first link may lie in the past ...
Sample pages 1 PDF
... the behavior. Skinner identified these consequences as reinforcements and punishments. According to Skinner (1953), “The strengthening of behavior which results from reinforcement is appropriately called ‘conditioning’. In operant conditioning we ‘strengthen’ an operant in the sense of making a resp ...
... the behavior. Skinner identified these consequences as reinforcements and punishments. According to Skinner (1953), “The strengthening of behavior which results from reinforcement is appropriately called ‘conditioning’. In operant conditioning we ‘strengthen’ an operant in the sense of making a resp ...
The Commandments of Test Item Writing - LeBlanc
... about achievement, capabilities, behavior, attitudes, and dispositions To put teachers, students, and parents/guardians in touch with one another about progress over time To provide guidance for educational and vocational choices To report learning achievement to school authorities such as sch ...
... about achievement, capabilities, behavior, attitudes, and dispositions To put teachers, students, and parents/guardians in touch with one another about progress over time To provide guidance for educational and vocational choices To report learning achievement to school authorities such as sch ...
Incorporating critical pedagogy in the classroom
... type of knowledge can then be applied to the outside world and other social situations. • Emancipatory Knowledge: This type of knowledge allows individuals to be aware of how social relationships are changed or influenced by a higher power and brings the understanding that oppression can be overcome ...
... type of knowledge can then be applied to the outside world and other social situations. • Emancipatory Knowledge: This type of knowledge allows individuals to be aware of how social relationships are changed or influenced by a higher power and brings the understanding that oppression can be overcome ...
Applied Behavior Analysis II 6.1 Concepts: Applied behavior
... The conditioning of operant behavior is the result of reinforcement and punishment. Operant conditioning applies to so-called "voluntary" responses, which an organism emits and increase or decrease in frequency as a function of the consequences which follow. The term operant emphasizes this point: t ...
... The conditioning of operant behavior is the result of reinforcement and punishment. Operant conditioning applies to so-called "voluntary" responses, which an organism emits and increase or decrease in frequency as a function of the consequences which follow. The term operant emphasizes this point: t ...
Classroom management
.jpg?width=300)
Classroom management is a term used by teachers to describe the process of ensuring that classroom lessons run smoothly despite disruptive behavior by students. The term also implies the prevention of disruptive behavior. It is possibly the most difficult aspect of teaching for many teachers; indeed experiencing problems in this area causes some to leave teaching altogether. In 1981 the US National Educational Association reported that 36% of teachers said they would probably not go into teaching if they had to decide again. A major reason was ""negative student attitudes and discipline"".According to Moskowitz & Hayman (1976), once a teacher loses control of their classroom, it becomes increasingly more difficult for them to regain that control. Also, research from Berliner (1988) and Brophy & Good (1986) shows that the time a teacher has to take to correct misbehavior caused by poor classroom management skills results in a lower rate of academic engagement in the classroom. From the student’s perspective, effective classroom management involves clear communication of behavioral and academic expectations as well as a cooperative learning environment. Douglas Brooks (1985) reports seminal research on the first day of school activity selection and sequence of novice middle school teachers compared with experienced, successful classroom managers. Brooks reports that effective classroom managers organized their activities on the first day of school consistent with the emerging needs of the students. These middle school student needs were the following: 1. Am I welcome? 2. What are we going to do today? 3. Am I in the right room? 4. Is the teacher interested in me? 5. What are the rules for this classroom? 6. What are the goals, instructional methods and assessment systems for the class? 7. Is the teacher interested in how I learn best? 8. What interests does the teacher have that I can relate to? 9. What are we expected to do for tomorrow? and finally 10. Will the teacher answer a question I have after class? In response to these emerging and sequential student needs effective middle school teachers organize the first day activities in the following sequence: 1. Personally greet students 2. Advance organizer for the session at the bell, 3. Roll and Seating 4. Student Information cards 5. Introduce 5 core rules ( entry, listening, raising hands, leaving other's stuff alone and finally exiting the class) 6. Describe class goals, instructional methods and grading system, 7. Assess preferred learning styles, 8. self-disclosure 9. Preview of next session and finally 10 Access after class. Middle school teachers that meet these 10 student needs with specific activities tend to communicate competence and effectively communicate behavioral and academic expectations. Classroom management is closely linked to issues of motivation, discipline and respect. Methodologies remain a matter of passionate debate amongst teachers; approaches vary depending on the beliefs a teacher holds regarding educational psychology. A large part of traditional classroom management involves behavior modification, although many teachers see using behavioral approaches alone as overly simplistic. Many teachers establish rules and procedures at the beginning of the school year. According to Gootman (2008), rules give students concrete direction to ensure that our expectation becomes a reality.They also try to be consistent in enforcing these rules and procedures. Many would also argue for positive consequences when rules are followed, and negative consequences when rules are broken. There are newer perspectives on classroom management that attempt to be holistic. One example is affirmation teaching, which attempts to guide students toward success by helping them see how their effort pays off in the classroom. It relies upon creating an environment where students are successful as a result of their own efforts. By creating this type of environment, students are much more likely to want to do well. Ideally, this transforms a classroom into a community of well-behaved and self-directed learners.