Using Self-monitoring and Accuracy Checks to Increase On-task Behavior in the Classroom

Using Self-monitoring and Accuracy Checks to Increase On-task Behavior in the Classroom
Author: Kimberly R. Vitale
Publisher:
Total Pages: 118
Release: 2017
Genre: Attention in children
ISBN:

"Self-monitoring is an intervention technique that allows students with and without disabilities to take responsibility for observing and recording one's own behavior. Self-monitoring involves two processes: self-observation and self-recording. Self-observation requires a student to pay attention to a specific aspect of behavior and determine if the behavior being monitored occurred. Then the students record whether the behavior being monitored occurred (Amato-Zech, Hoff, & Doepke, 2006)"--Leaf 1. "My research questions are: 1. How does the use of student-teacher accuracy checks with reinforcement when using self-monitoring behavior ratings affect student accuracy with self-monitoring and on-task behavior for a third grade student that displays off-task behavior? 2. What are student perceptions of their behavior and the use of self-monitoring before and after the intervention?"--Leaf 22. "The results of this research project encourage me to believe and advocate that self-monitoring with accuracy checks and reinforcement is a useful strategy for improving students' on-task behaviors"--Leaf 48.

Improving On-Task Behaviors in the Classrooms

Improving On-Task Behaviors in the Classrooms
Author: Dr. George N. Ohakamnu
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
Total Pages: 80
Release: 2015-05-30
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1503574288

The present-day students (regular and special education) have some difficulties remaining on task in the classroom, especially the students classified as the at-risk (learning disabled, behavioral disordered, etc). Therefore, it becomes imperative to design a proactive methodology or strategy that may create on-task behavior while teaching and learning are taking place in the classroom. Note that no one strategy is enough to contain behavior-problem students; hence, the partner-check self-recording strategy was designed to induce on task behavior for a considerable amount of time among elementary school children.

Activity Schedules for Children with Autism

Activity Schedules for Children with Autism
Author: Lynn E. McClannahan
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2010
Genre: Autism
ISBN: 9781606130032

"A revolutionary teaching tool, an activity schedule is a set of pictures and/or words that cue children and adults to perform tasks, engage in activities, or enjoy rewards. For example, activity schedules can help a person do laundry, talk to a classmate, or play with toys. This new edition of the bestselling guide for families and professionals covers all the exciting successes and far-reaching impacts of using activity schedules--increased independence, social interaction, self-management--and provides the reader with step-by-step guidance for creating and implementing them"--Cover, p. 4.

Conducting School-Based Assessments of Child and Adolescent Behavior

Conducting School-Based Assessments of Child and Adolescent Behavior
Author: Edward Steven Shapiro
Publisher: Guilford Press
Total Pages: 340
Release: 2002-07-25
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9781572308220

This hands-on guide is designed to help school practitioners conduct effective multidimensional assessments of a wide range of emotional and behavioral difficulties. Each chapter focuses on a particular method, describes its applications in the school setting, and offers clear guidelines for implementation, illustrated with realistic case examples. Approaches discussed include direct observation, analogue assessment, child self-reports, teacher and parent interviewing, informant reports, and self-monitoring procedures. Recommendations for working with culturally and linguistically diverse children and adolescents are also provided. The theoretical and empirical underpinnings of the assessment strategies demonstrated here are thoroughly reviewed in the companion volume, Behavioral Assessment in Schools, Second Edition: Theory, Research, and Clinical Foundations (see other side for more information).

Behavior Change in the Classroom

Behavior Change in the Classroom
Author: Edward Steven Shapiro
Publisher: Guilford Press
Total Pages: 220
Release: 1994-02-25
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9780898623666

One of the primary goals of education is to ensure that children learn varied and complex self-management skills to become more self assured, more self reliant, and responsible for their own behavior, as well as to succeed academically. Although learning experiences designed to actively teach self-management techniques are usually directed toward children with severe academic and behavior problems, these skills are also extremely beneficial for the general student population. An excellent resource for school-based practitioners who wish to address the needs of all school-aged children and adolescents, this book presents practical approaches for designing and implementing self-management interventions in school settings.

Motivational Interviewing for Effective Classroom Management

Motivational Interviewing for Effective Classroom Management
Author: Wendy M. Reinke
Publisher: Guilford Press
Total Pages: 241
Release: 2011-07-13
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1609182588

Highly accessible and user-friendly, this book focuses on helping K–12 teachers increase their use of classroom management strategies that work. It addresses motivational aspects of teacher consultation that are essential, yet often overlooked. The Classroom Check-Up is a step-by-step model for assessing teachers' organizational, instructional, and behavior management practices; helping them develop a menu of intervention options; and overcoming obstacles to change. Easy-to-learn motivational interviewing techniques are embedded throughout. In a large-size format with lay-flat binding to facilitate photocopying, the book includes 20 reproducible forms, checklists, and templates. This book is in The Guilford Practical Intervention in the Schools Series.

Self-instruction Pedagogy

Self-instruction Pedagogy
Author: Dennis E. Mithaug
Publisher: Charles C Thomas Publisher
Total Pages: 242
Release: 2007
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0398077231

This book describes a method of teaching that fosters autonomous learning in all students, including students with disabilities. The pedagogy is based on decades of research on strategy instruction as well as on a theory of learning that claims these four conditions promote self-determined learning in all learners: (1) opportunities to choose expectations for gaining something from a learning challenge, (2) strategies that regulate responses to meet those expectations, (3) comparisons between results and expectations that provoke additional adjustment in expectations and responses, and (4) persistent engagement and adjustment until results match expectations. The pedagogy of self-instruction described in this book anchors these conditions in everyday instruction so students can learn by adjusting to their own expectations. Chapter 1 compares this approach to the teacher-directed methods of direct instruction that require teachers to set expectations for students, control how students respond to them, evaluate the outcomes they produce, and then prescribe adjustments students must make to improve. Chapter 2 provides evidence that too much of special education instruction reflects this teacher-directed approach and as a consequence discourages students from learning how to learn on their own. Chapters 3-6 identify four ways to shift learning control from teachers to students and Chapters 7 and 8 identify the obstacles to achieving this instructional shift in special education. The appendices of the book provide a bibliography of research on self-instruction and direct instruction pedagogies and a validated self-assessment that can evaluate the directedness of your teaching.

The Use of a Signal Device to Teach Self-monitoring to Improve On-task Behavior of Special and General Education Students

The Use of a Signal Device to Teach Self-monitoring to Improve On-task Behavior of Special and General Education Students
Author: Casey L. Allie
Publisher:
Total Pages: 31
Release: 2011
Genre:
ISBN:

Research has shown that self-monitoring can increase on-task behavior with students in the classroom setting. This project examined the use of a signal device to teach self monitoring to increase on-task behavior of special education students with behavioral problems. Participants were two elementary school para-educators and two K-4th grade students. During a two part process, baseline and intervention was conducted by the researcher with each student evaluating his/her on-task behavior. The researcher examined the reliability of the data on the student's on-task behavior. The researcher found that the student's on-task behavior increased with implementation of the signal device self-monitoring program. The implications from the success of this project for the use of self-monitoring programs to increase students' on-task behavior are discussed.

Effective School Interventions, Second Edition

Effective School Interventions, Second Edition
Author: Natalie Rathvon
Publisher: Guilford Press
Total Pages: 481
Release: 2008-08-14
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1606237918

This highly practical resource and text presents 70 interventions that have been demonstrated to improve the classroom learning environment, academic achievement, and student behavior and social competence. Each intervention is presented in a brief, standardized format with step-by-step procedures that can easily be implemented by Pre-K-12 teachers and other school-based professionals. The volume includes best-practice guidelines for designing, implementing, and evaluating evidence-based school interventions, as well as strategies for combining multiple interventions to create a comprehensive program at the individual, class, or schoolwide level.