The purpose of this study was to compare reciprocal peer tutoring with a group contingency to a traditional vocabulary program in a regular middle-school classroom. The participants were 20 seventh and 12 eighth-grade students enrolled in a private parochial school. A counter-balanced time-series de
Increasing tootling: The effects of a peer-monitored group contingency program on students' reports of peers' prosocial behaviors
โ Scribed by Christopher H. Skinner; Tammy H. Cashwell; Amy L. Skinner
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 45 KB
- Volume
- 37
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0033-3085
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
In most educational ecologies, attention and consequences are focused on inappropriate behavior. Often students observe and report peers' antisocial behavior (i.e., tattle) and teachers investigate and consequent (i.e., punish) those behaviors. In the current study, a withdrawal design was used to investigate a corollary system. Fourth-grade students were trained to observe and report peers' prosocial behaviors (i.e., tootle), and interdependent group contingencies and public posting were used to reinforce those reports. Although the first intervention phase showed much variability, subsequent phases showed that an intervention composed of public posting and interdependent group contingencies increased prosocial behavior reports. Results are discussed in terms of using this system to increase student and teacher awareness of and reinforcement for incidental prosocial behaviors.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The eects of bonus points contingent on 80% accuracy in math with four middle-school special education students with behavior disorders were examined. A multiple-baseline design across students was used to evaluate the eects of bonus points. The overall results indicated that higher accuracy was fou