Errorless Academic Compliance Training: Improving Generalized Cooperation With Parental Requests in Children With Autism - 24/08/11
ABSTRACT |
Objective |
Children with autism often demonstrate distress and oppositionality when exposed to requests to complete academic or household tasks. Errorless academic compliance training is a success-focused, noncoercive intervention for improving child cooperation with such activities. In the present study, the authors evaluated treatment and generalization effects of this intervention on four children diagnosed with autism.
Method |
In a multiple baseline across-subjects design, parents delivered a range of academic and nonacademic requests to their children to determine the probability of compliance for each request. A hierarchy of academic requests ranging from those yielding high compliance (level 1) to those yielding low compliance (level 4) was then developed. Treatment began with the concentrated delivery of level 1 requests, with praise and reward for compliant responses. Over several weeks, children were gradually introduced to requests from subsequent probability levels with continued reward for compliance.
Results |
High compliance levels were demonstrated throughout and following treatment. Evidence of generalization to untrained academic requests and nonacademic requests emerged. Treatment gains were maintained up to 6 months after treatment.
Conclusions |
Errorless academic compliance training appears to be an effective intervention for enhancing generalized compliance in children with autism.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Key Words : autism, parent training, generalization, compliance training, errorless approaches
Plan
| The authors thank Leanne Baldwin and the staff of Peel Behavioural Services, Trillium Health Centre, for support of this research. All parents provided written consent for publication. |
Vol 43 - N° 2
P. 163-171 - février 2004 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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