In recent years there has been a renewed interest in the assessment of treatment
integrity. Current studies have examined means by which to increase treatment
integrity but may be limited by an overreliance on indirect measures of
treatment integrity and failure to address multiple training methods within one
study. The present study was conducted to investigate the relationship between
training procedures and treatment integrity. Participants first read a case
description and intervention plan for a client (confederate) exhibiting a facial
tic. Participants were trained using one of three procedures (didactic,
modeling, or rehearsal/feedback) to implement the treatment protocol and then
conducted a treatment session with the client. Treatment sessions were coded for
accuracy of implementation (integrity). Higher levels of treatment integrity
were associated with direct training procedures (i.e., modeling and
rehearsal/feedback training). Implications of the results for treatment planning
and the potential ramifications for consultants working in the schools are
discussed.
Active student responding is often required to remedy computation skill deficits
in students with learning disabilities. However, these students may find
computation assignments unrewarding and frustrating, and be less likely to
choose to engage in assigned computation tasks. In the current study, middle
school students with learning disabilities worked on control assignments
containing 15 four-digit minus four-digit target computation problems and
interspersal assignments containing 15 similar problems and five additional
one-digit minus one-digit problems. Results showed that interspersing the brief
problems did not reduce target problem accuracy levels or opportunities to
respond to target problems. Students did complete more total problems (i.e.,
target and single-digit problems) on the interspersal assignment. Even though
the interspersal assignment contained more work, significantly more students
rated it as requiring less effort to complete and selected it for homework.
Discussion focuses on applied implications, causal mechanisms, and future
research related to the interspersal procedure and the discrete task completion
hypothesis.
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