“…Second, other methods such as trial‐based functional analyses may help discrimination and have been tested more because they fit the changing contexts of classrooms better than LFA because each test condition includes control conditions that precede and follow the test condition (Bloom, Iwata, Fritz, Roscoe, & Carreau, ). In response to concerns about poor discrimination, one possible method is to use reversal designs (Iwata & Dozier, ; Rooker, DeLeon, Borrero, Frank‐Crawford, & Roscoe, ; Vollmer, Iwata, Duncan, & Lerman, ). Another way to improve discrimination is to conduct sessions in a prescribed sequence (alone/ignore, attention, play, demand, and tangible; Iwata, Dorsey, Slifer, Bauman, & Richman, ; Hammond, Iwata, Rooker, Fritz, & Bloom, ).…”