1. Sequencing instructional tasks. A comparison of contingent and noncontingent interspersal of preferred academic tasks.
- Author
-
Noell GH, Whitmarsh EL, VanDerHeyden AM, Gatti SL, and Slider NJ
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Task Performance and Analysis, Choice Behavior, Language Disorders therapy, Teaching methods
- Abstract
This study compared two strategies for increasing accurate responding on a low-preference academic task by interspersing presentations of a preferred academic task. Five children attending a preschool program for children with delayed language development participated in this study. Preferred and nonpreferred tasks were identified through a multiple-stimulus, free-operant preference assessment. Contingent access to a preferred academic task was associated with improved response accuracy when compared to noncontingent access to that activity for 3 students. For 1 student, noncontingent access to the preferred activity led to improved response accuracy, and 1 student's analysis suggested the importance of procedural variety. The implications of these findings for use of preference assessments to devise instructional sequences that improve student responding are discussed.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF