2013
DOI: 10.1002/pits.21679
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Using Self‐management Interventions to Address General Education Behavioral Needs: Assessment of Effectiveness and Feasibility

Abstract: A comprehensive self‐management intervention was utilized to increase the on‐task behavior of three African American students within an urban middle‐school setting. The intervention was designed to necessitate minimal management on the part of the general education classroom teacher by utilizing an electronic prompting device, as well as a centralized intervention coordinator for the management of training, implementation, and progress monitoring. Results suggested that implementation of the intervention resul… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…School reinforcement of this message-through supporting parents and empowering children to engage in self-management-can yield impressive results without large expenditures in time, money, or personnel (Briesch & Daniels, 2013). Future studies should evaluate school-based self-management for healthy weight and expand programming by integrating more holistic outcome measures and longer-term follow-up.…”
Section: Implications For School Psychologistsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…School reinforcement of this message-through supporting parents and empowering children to engage in self-management-can yield impressive results without large expenditures in time, money, or personnel (Briesch & Daniels, 2013). Future studies should evaluate school-based self-management for healthy weight and expand programming by integrating more holistic outcome measures and longer-term follow-up.…”
Section: Implications For School Psychologistsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…In the third session, the SM components were implemented. Students participated in self‐monitoring training, which was based on training procedures used in previous studies (e.g., Briesch & Daniels, ; Young, West, Smith, & Morgan, ). The group leader defined each academic enabling behavior, described the response options, and provided examples.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given that previous research has found SM to be effective in improving both classroom preparatory behaviors (e.g., Gureasko‐Moore et al., ) and academic engagement (e.g., Smith, Young, West, & Morgan, ), it was hypothesized that a SM intervention delivered within a GC context would be effective in improving academic enabling behaviors, such as staying on task, completing work, participating in class discussions, and critically evaluating work. In addition, it was hypothesized that the SM intervention in this study would be considered feasible and acceptable by students, given previous work highlighting high levels of acceptability within a middle school population (e.g., Briesch & Daniels, ; Gureasko‐Moore et al., ).…”
Section: Purpose Of Current Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
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