Title: Weaving the Essential Tapestry
1Weaving the Essential Tapestry
OBM Research to Practice in Training Autism
Personnel On-Line
Richard K. Fleming Beth Sulzer-Azaroff
2Todays Presentation
- Describe the development, evaluation and
dissemination of a comprehensive distance
learning curriculum for personnel and parents of
children with autism. - Discuss the tailored application of OBM theory
and research in this endeavor. - Present results from our field evaluation.
- Discuss future research and dissemination.
3Our Charge
- To design evaluate and disseminate a
behaviorally-based undergraduate level distance
curriculum to train educators and parents to
apply intensive behavioral interventions among
children with autism. - We use the acronym, BIA, which stands for
Behavioral Interventions in Autism - Educators, broadly defined to include
- Regular and special education teachers
- Early intervention personnel
- Speech and language therapists
- And others
4Project Personnel
- UMMS/Shriver
- Charles Hamad, Principal Investigator
- Richard Fleming, Project Manager
- Megan Tupa, Research Associate
- Susan Dyer, Research Associate
- Anncy Graziano, Admin. Asst.
- Robert Bass, NE Index (technology)
- Jay Mavor, NE Index
- John Rochford, NE Index
- Lee Vorderer, Project Coordinator
- The Browns Group of Naples
- Beth Sulzer-Azaroff, Director of Curriculum
Development
- Rockman et al
- Michelle Weissman, External Evaluator
- Other Key Personnel
- Jennifer Crockett, Instructor
- Alicia Perry, Instructor
- The Groden Center
- Marcie Desrochers, St. Lawrence College
- Paul Roselli, Corporate Video Productions
5Our Personal Goals
- To develop a BIA curriculum to
- Effectively teach teachers and parents, to, in
turn become effective teachers of their students - Support their
- participation in and completion of BIA
- satisfaction with the experience
- continuation within the ABA field
- Attract numerous other students in the future
6Learning the Hard Way
- Innovation the OBM/ABA way
- Consider the special contingencies of
reinforcement and punishment affecting personnel
and parents, and how they either support/maintain
or impede progress - internal and external stakeholders
- obvious and subtle reinforcing aversive
stimuli - Negative and Positive examples of stakeholders
and contingencies affecting them - School visits
- Failing to prepare students to supply only
positive feedback - Safety programs union reaction
- Failing to involve them at the start
- Setting up a demonstration program
- Surveying all stake-holders
- You probably have examples of your own
7Identifying and Analyzing Multiple and
Interlocking Critical Contingencies within
Complex Projects
- applied behavior analysts should, when working
in any setting, measure the variables maintaining
behavior before changing the behavior (Austin,
2000, p. 343). - With BIA, that has meant observing our students
performance before, during and after our training - Pre-tests of verbal/conceptual skills
- Baseline performance measures
- Verbal statements about content, coverage,
clarity, style, overall value and so on - And the verbal statements (generally via
questionnaire) of our colleagues and consumers
early and later during our students involvement - Field facilitators
- Administrators
- BIA Instructors
- Parents
- Other constituencies?
8Constituencies Impacted by BIA Program
- Our Consumers
- Our supervisor
- Partners
- Colleagues
- Students
- Mastery of content and rate of progress through
the course sequence - Satisfaction
- Instructors
- Funding agency
- Our Students
- Consumers
- The progress of their students with autism
- Satisfaction of
- Cooperating teachers parents
- ABA in autism colleagues
- Administrators of field setting
- Others?
9Sources of Contingency Control for Our BIA
Students and Their Associates
- Individual child with autism
- Progress rate
- Side effects
- Families
- Need for care-giving
- Educating
- Enabling self sufficiency
- Interacting with and gaining affection from child
- Avoiding melt-downs
- Tantrums and self-injury
- Principal
- Seeing student progress, learning inclusion
- Avoiding irate parents teachers
- Teachers and associates
- Seeing student progress
- Maintaining health and safety of student and
others - Satisfying team members, supervisors, families
- Relations friends
- Interacting with and gaining affection from child
- Avoiding melt-downs tantrums and self-injury
- Other instructional specialists (OT, PT, SLP)
- Seeing student progress, e.g., functional
communication - Gaining positive, supportive feedback
- Better able to assist educators and caregivers
10Other Sources of Contingency Control
- Project Personnel Managers
- Maximizing performance of personnel
- Retaining effective personnel
- Boosting child performance within managers unit
- Minimizing human effort and material resources
Administrator(s) - Training investment
- Retention and advancement of personnel
- Project Production Staff
- Satisfaction with product
- Efficiency
- New skills
- Funding Agency (DOE, FIPSE)
- Publicity
- Product
- Completion
- Favorable evaluation by consumers
- Meet mission
- Dissemination Plan an mechanism for broad
dissemination - Project Administrators
- Recognition
- Future grants
- Minimizing resources
11Still Other Sources of Contingency Control
- Curriculum developers
- BIA student progress
- Ours and theirs
- Approval
- PI
- Funding agency
- Colleagues within ABA/autism field
- Opportunity to learn and be creative
- Outside evaluators
- Data for
- Granting agency
- Partners
- Future business
- Parent, other advocacy groups
- ABA constituency
- BA Certification Board
- Quality assurance
- Recognition
- Attracting candidates
- Passing exam
- Colleagues
- Methods based on sound scientific data
- Training students to mastery of ABA conceptual
and applied skills - Interest and participation from other countries
12Still More . Disseminators of Program
- Instructors other direct service providers
- Satisfaction with student progress
- Satisfaction with rewards of job
- Interaction with students colleagues
- Associations with academia
- Positive feedback from managers, peers, parents,
data - Others
- Institutions of higher education
- Satisfied students
- Students subsequently successful on job
- Managers of service delivery programs (schools,
workshops, day programs etc.) - Effective student learning
- Smoothly operating delivery systems
- Dedicated, enthusiastic, skilled teaching staff
13A Sample Letter to the Administrator of the
Organization
- Your address
- Date
- Dear (Senior Administrator),
- I want to tell you of an exciting opportunity you
may find beneficial to your program as well as to
me. I am enrolled as a student at _____________
in a course entitled Practicum in Behavioral
Interventions in Autism (BIA). It is designed
to enable students to gain proficiency in the
practice of applied behavior analysis (ABA) among
youngsters with autism spectrum disorder. As you
probably know, scientific studies have
demonstrated these methods to be especially
effective with this population. - Although we have solid knowledge of many
important ABA concepts, now we need to begin to
put that knowledge into practice. Consequently,
we have been asked to locate a program serving
children with autism spectrum disorder, and to
volunteer to participate in specific ways. Under
the supervision of our BIA instructor, a person
with advanced training and considerable
experience in this field, we are asked to spend a
minimum of six hours a week at the site for
purposes of - 1. identifying a student
- 2. selecting a constructive instructional goal or
objective suited to the student and approved by
his or her primary educator (and/or parent). - 3. using an all positive approach to design and
teach the student to progress toward - the objective.
- 4. collecting performance data to track the
students progress and as a basis for - making sound revisions in the process.
- 5. making data-based revisions in the plan
- 6. preparing a report summarizing the project
- 7. submitting the report to our instructor
- 8. assisting in other ways, as mutually
determined - The program asks little of you and your staff,
other than for your assistance in helping us
identify a child to work with and an adult (i.e.,
a field facilitator) to handle local
arrangements related to our weekly assignments.
While, as Im sure you know, we cannot guarantee
of success with a student, we do promise to make
our best efforts. - I shall follow up this letter with a telephone
call during the next few days. - Sincerely yours,
14Field Facilitator Agreement
- I agree to allow _______________________ (name of
BIA practicum student) to attend our program for
a minimum of ____ hours a week for ___ weeks and
in keeping with the programs schedule. During
that time s/he will conduct an instructional
program with a student1 and possibly
participate in our activities in other ways, to
be mutually determined. I understand this
practicum students Behavioral Interventions in
Autism (BIA) instruction will be supervised
directly or from a distance by ___________________
(name of BIA instructor), a qualified
Instructor associated with _______________________
___________ - (name of college or university).
- Further, I understand this BIA student will
adhere to professional confidentiality policies
in reference to his or her student. Although
s/he may discuss aspects of the instruction with
her/his instructor privately or classmates during
formal group discussions, s/he will withhold any
identifying information, such as names, addresses
and so on. -
- I also agree to help this student identify a
child in our program to teach a specific learning
objective acceptable to the childs regular
teacher and parent(s), record and report on
progress in writing to his or her instructor and
to obtain appropriate permissions for
video-taping and sharing these videos in
confidence with his or her instructor. - Further, I agree to complete an interim and final
rating form that includes a set of the practicum
students professional skills, such as
friendliness, attendance, timeliness, helpfulness
and cooperation. - _____________________ __________________
____________ - Print Name
Signature Date - Please add any questions or comments below
- 1 More advanced practicum students may elect
to develop a program for staff, parents or other
service providers.
15Teaching Contract
- As a student of Behavioral Interventions in
Autism I, (your name) ________________, have been
assigned to work with ____________________
(student pseudonym). His or her teacher (/or
parent) and I have conferred about an appropriate
instructional objective for me to try to teach
this child. We have agreed that under my BIA
Instructors supervision, the objective of this
teaching is as follows - __________________________________________________
_____________________________________________ - __________________________________________________
_____________________________________________ - Our reasons for selecting this objective are
- __________________________________________________
_____________________________________________ - __________________________________________________
_____________________________________________ - __________________________________________________
_____________________________________________ - __________________________________________________
_____________________________________________ - I plan to measure __________________s progress
toward reaching this objective and report the
results weekly to my course instructor. From
time to time, I also plan to send video
recordings of our teaching interactions for my
instructors review. These and any other
identifying information will be kept
confidential, except in the case of the parent(s)
and teachers future written agreement to share
them with specifically designated others. -
- Parent _______________________
__________________________ __________ - Print name
Signature
Date - Teacher _______________________
__________________________ __________ - Print name
Signature
Date - BIA student ___________________
__________________________ __________ - Print name
Signature
Date
16Resolution
- Cannot satisfy all
- e.g., current suitability for professional level
staff. Adapt curriculum - up (BCBA)
- down (how-to for specific behavioral procedures
to satisfy others - Set priorities Pareto 8020 rule
- Features of reinforcing contingencies
- Value power
- Time schedule (fixed or variable)
- Frequency (ratio)
- Dependability (fixed or variable)
- Immediacy - delay
- Discriminated- signaled by clear S-Ds
-
Biggest Bang for the Buck
17Which Ones Did Program Choose to Emphasize? Why?
- Funding agency (DOE, FIPSE)
- Future Grants
- Powerful but delayed
- Personnel managers administrators
- Powerful more immediate
- Especially with regular reports and inquiries
- Production staff
- Bigger bang for the Buck
- Immediate
- Efficient affects
- progress of project
- quality of material
- ABA constituency
- Delphi
- Requested their input
- BACB input
- Our own priorities
18Curriculum Developers Priorities
- ABA- Peer supported content
- Evidence-based content
- ABA-based shaping of both knowledge and skills
- Mastery learning - PSI
- Advantages
- Fosters student progress
- Data demonstrate superior student learning and
retention - Though the response cost is high
- Early dropouts
- Labor and technology costs
- Our own repertoires
- Basic and applied research
- Conceptual systems analysis
- Research to practice
- Behavioral instruction, PSI Research
- Pear Crone-Todd (1999), PSI in Cyberspace,
JABA. - Burton, Moore Magilaro (2002). Behaviorism and
Instructional Technology. - Johnson Ruskin (1977). Behavior instruction An
instructive review. APA. - JOBM JABA publications on staff and parent
training, reinforcement and feedback, systems
analysis, etc.
19Methodological Sequence
- Analyze the contingencies operating
- Adjust to those contingencies and/or develop new
one - possible antecedents and consequences and do an
armchair analysis (as in the Step 4 of Daniels
A-B-C Analysis) of the most powerful variables at
play - Obvious
- Subtle
- Similar to Brethowers Total Performance System
- Input
- Process
- Product
- Followed by feedback on any discrepancies
-
20Methods
- Choose content
- Delphi survey
- Select curriculum
- Choose methods
- Based on behavior analytic research and
development - Mastery Instruction
- Active participation
- Discussions
- Simulations
- Actual field experiences
- Rapid feedback and reinforcement
- Develop curriculum for four courses
- 1. Introduction to Behavioral Intervention in
Autism - 2. Positive Teaching and Behavior
- 3. Behavioral Intervention Program Models in
Autism - 4. Behavioral Intervention Practicum in Autism
21Methods (continued)
- Prepare study questions, quizzes, annotated
answer keys - Design laboratory and field experiences
- Discussion topics
- Prepare instructor guidelines
- Recruit students
- Distance
- Face-to-face
- Implement curriculum
- Evaluate learning and satisfaction
- Revise content and methods
- Disseminate
22ResultsDelphi Practitioner Skills
23Results of Field TrialsData on Student
Performance
- Student demographics
- Pre- and post-test measures, three courses
- Student retention
- Profiles of retakes on mastery assessments
- Participant satisfaction (external evaluation)
24Demographics Education Level
- Beginning of BIA sequence
- Introduction to BIA
- Two sections
- 1a n16
- 1b n17
- Total reporting N 32 (of the 33)
P E R C E N T
HS
V/T
BS/ BA
MA/ MS
MD/ PhD
25Reasons for EnrollingCourse 1, two sections,
percent rating each reason as very important
26ABA Activities Prior to EnrollmentCourse 1, two
sections, percent rating each activity as very
important
27Pre- and Post-Test MeansCourses 1-3
C O R R E C T
N 26
N 14
N 11
Pre/Post
Pre/Post
Pre/Post
28Participant RetentionEntire Sequence Courses
1-4(Typical retention in distance courses lt 50)
P A R T I P A N T S
(74)
(75)
(73)
(81)
29Courses 1 2 Satisfaction with Content
Assignments (Mean rating, 5 most satisfied)
30Helpfulness of Study Questions(n19, Course 1)
How did the study questions help you?
31Sample Mastery Assessment Item with Feedback
- 7. Which of the following describes the greatest
benefit to intervening in the childs natural
environment? - More time-efficient, given you can target
multiple students behaviors at one time. - Less transfer of training required
- Better generalization to other natural
environments - Correct! - Better ability to spot other children with
intervention needs 7Solution or
ExplanationAlthough each of the options could
occur through natural context interventions, the
greatest benefit is providing the child with
skills that will generalize. (SQ 12)
32Mastery Assessments Course 1Mean of takes for
successful students (N12)
Course 1 -----
---- Course 2
Successive Mastery Assessments
33Satisfaction with Mastery Assessments (Mean
rating, 5 most satisfied)
34Perceived Competence
- Perceived competence to teach children with
autism as a function of new knowledge and skills
acquired in the online courses - End of Course 1 mean, n15 4.53
- (4 somewhat more competent, 5 considerably
more competent) - End of Course 2 mean, n10 4.40
- End of Course 3 mean, n9 4.67
- Perception versus behavior The need for direct
measurement of performance
35Course 4 Practicum Mid-term Ratings Scale of 1
to 5, with 5 being the most satisfied
36Data from Student Project Learning to Mand
37The Picture Postcard
- I would collect all of the people who have
benefited or developed a better understanding of
the "nuts and bolts" of behavioral intervention
and autism, because of the information shared
during the 4 BIA courses. That group would
include parents, my fellow SLP's, sped teachers,
instructional aides, volunteers, regular ed
teachers, student interns, group home staff,
their other clients, day program staff, ...the
list is endless...AND...we can't know the
people that they've shared information with, who
have also shared. -
38Overall Results to Date
- All four courses disseminated relatively smoothly
- Considerable support and Satisfaction from the
many constituencies mentioned - Many future offshoots
39Lessons Learned
- Building a distance, mastery training personnel
training program in ABA has been a real challenge
requiring - Analysis of critical metacontingencies
- Coordinated teamwork
- Persistence to incorporate behavioral instruction
methodology - The investment of major financial and personal
resources - The need is enormous, if not differentiated
- We seem to have demonstrated some successes and a
good perspective on future directions
40More Lessons Learned
- Distance learning courses that utilize behavioral
instruction are an effective means of educating
students, personnel and parents interested in
behavioral intervention in developmental
disabilities. - But verbal learning is not enough!
- Running field, practicum and other direct
experiences with the assistance of
telecommunications technology holds great promise
of becoming an effective method of distance
training. Research is needed!
41What Did We Overlook?
- Higher Education Disseminators
- Failed to explore with disseminators the mastery
learning method in advance - Quizzing as instructional method and as
assessment method - Concept of mastery learning foreign
- Current approaches and solutions
- Identifying other programs to handle portions of
the curriculum - Graduate programs
- Undergraduate programs
- Continuing education
- Collaboration with programs and universities to
deliver field practicum -
42Dissemination A Lesson in Generality across
Participants and Settings
- Adjusting the curriculum content level
- Graduate-level, BACB-approved version
- Suite of practical modules for paraprofessionals
- Parent education in ABA
- Educating Parents Behavioral Intervention in
Autism (NIH) underway. - International market?
- Participation interest from Philippines,
England, Japan, Nigeria - Panel discussion ABA Beijing, 2005
- Implications?
43Current and Future Changes
- Continuing Education
- Completed
- Undergraduate course credit
- In the works
- Revision suitable for graduate level
- In process
- Others
44Conclusion
- Building a distance, mastery training personnel
training program in ABA has been a real challenge
requiring the investment of major financial and
personal resources - But the need is enormous
- And we seem to have demonstrated some successes
and a good perspective on future directions
45Additional Data Follow
46The tapestry is nearly complete!
47Data on Student Performance
- Pre mid-term post-assessment measures
- Number of retakes (?)
- Student retention
- New enrollees
- External evaluations
- Behavioral change
- First versus last teaching tape
- Also loose data in the form of anecdotal
evidence and comments from parents and teachers.
48Pre vs. Post-Test ScoresIndividual Students,
Matched Items, Course 1b
49Knowledge and Skills
50ABA Technology
51Personal and/or Work Interest?
- Course 1
- Introduction to BIA
- Two sections
- 1a n16
- 1b n17
- Total reporting 33
Parents/ Relatives
Employees
52Satisfaction with Threaded Discussion (mean
rating, 5 most satisfied)
53Mastery Assessments Course 2Cumulative takes
for 3 students who dropped and 3 who finished
Drop
Drop
Drop
54Other Possibly Important Sources of Contingency
Control in this Program
- How many sources of contingency control can you
think of in a case like this? - Hint Think of all the stakeholders and their
reinforcers and punishers