Title: Self-Management
1Self-Management
2Self-Management
- The personal application of behavior change
tactics that produces a desired change in
behavior - Examples???
- Why not self-control?
3Applications of Self-Management
- Living a more effective and efficient daily life
- e.g., shopping list
- Breaking bad habits and acquiring good ones
- Baum (2005) impulsivity, bad habits, and
procrastination result from reinforcement traps - Immediate but smaller consequences control our
behavior rather than delayed but more significant
consequences - Malott (1984) being able to state a rule about
the long-term consequences does not always
control our behavior why? - Weak rules describe outcomes that are delayed,
incremental, and/or unpredictable - Self-management is a way to provide short term
outcomes that will control behavior when weak
rules and delayed outcomes do not!
4Applications of Self-Management
- Accomplishing Difficult Tasks
- e.g., thesis, lit review
- Achieving Personal Goals
- e.g., exercise, relaxation
5Benefits of Self-Management
- Can be used to change
- thoughts and feelings
- behaviors that cannot be easily observed by
others - behaviors that might go unnoticed by others
- Can be used to promote generalization and
maintenance of behavior change - People with diverse abilities can learn
self-management skills - Self-selected tasks performance criteria may lead
to better performance
6Benefits of Self-Management
- Its an ultimate goal of education
- The development of independent, self-directed
people who are capable of behaving appropriately
and constructively without the supervision of
others (p. 583) - Dewey (1939) the ideal aim of education is the
creation of self-control - Expected, but not often specifically taught!
- Benefits society by foregoing immediate
reinforcers in favor of very delayed outcomes
(e.g., global warming) - Helps a person feel free (not bound by immediate
consequences)
7Self-Management Software for Children
- KidTools and KidSkills
- Developed with partial funding by the DOE OSEP
- Download for free at
- http//kidtools.missouri.edu
- Kidspiration
8Antecedent-Based Self-Management
Tactics
- Manipulating MOs
- Person behaves in a way that creates an MO
- The MO then evokes or abates behavior
- e.g., eating before grocery shopping
- e.g., drinking tea to quit smoking
- Providing Response Prompts
9Antecedent-Based Self-Management
Tactics
- Performing the Initial Steps of a Chain
- e.g., leaving the open bag on the counter
- Removing Items Necessary for an Undesired
Behavior - Limiting Undesired Behavior to Restricted
Stimulus Conditions - e.g., reducing stereotypy or sexual behavior in
public - Dedicating a Specific Environment for a Desired
Behavior - e.g., studying with the peach candle
10Self-Monitoring
- AKA Self-recording, self-observation
- Person observes his behavior systematically and
records the occurrence or nonoccurrence of a
target behavior - Monitoring alone can change behavior!
- Can be combined with Self-Evaluation
- Compares performance with a goal or standard
- Can be combined with contrived consequences for
meeting or not meeting goals - Why does self-monitoring work?
- Covert statement I did well! self-reinforces
performance - Performing below standard produces guilt that can
be avoided by improving your performance
11Guidelines for Self-Monitoring
- Provide materials that make it easy
- Wrist counters, timers, stop watches
- Simple datasheets
- Provide supplementary cues or prompts
- Tones, MotivAider
- Use more prompts in the beginning and gradually
decrease - Self-monitor the most important dimension of the
target behavior - Frequency, rate, latency, interresponse time,
duration - Productivity more effective and preferred than
on-task - Self-monitor early and often
- Record as soon as possible but dont interrupt
the behavior to do it - Use permanent products if possible
- Record the first step in the chain if possible
- Monitor more in the beginning
- Reinforce accurate self-monitoring
- Spot check and reinforce accuracy
- But perfect accuracy may not be necessary!
12Self-Administered Consequences
- To Increase Desired Behavior
- Positive Reinforcement
- Examples tokens, points, mins of free time,
self-recruited SR, - Negative Reinforcement
- Avoid token loss, paying money, exercise, chores
- To Decrease Undesired Behavior
- Positive Punishment
- Examples snap rubber bands, sit-ups, bad taste
on nails, overcorrection - Negative Punishment
- Response cost pay a fine, lose tokens
- Time-out dont allow yourself to engage in a
behavior for a period of time (e.g., dont talk
for 2 min)
13Guidelines for Self-Administered Consequences
- Select small, easy-to-deliver consequences
- Set a meaningful but easy-to-meet criterion for
reinforcement - Eliminate bootleg reinforcement
- If necessary, put someone else in control of
delivering consequences - Keep it simple
14Other Self-Management Tactics
- Self-Instruction
- Self-generated verbal responses, covert or overt,
that function as response prompts for a desired
behavior - e.g., student is taught to say to himself, If I
wait, Ill get to have _________. - Habit Reversal
- Self-directed Systematic Desensitization
- Substituting one behavior, usually relaxation,
for the unwanted behavior, fear/anxiety
15Guidelines for Conducting an Effective
Self-Management Program
- Specify a goal and define the target behavior
- Begin self-monitoring the behavior to obtain
baseline - And to observe effects of self-monitoring alone
- Create contrived contingencies that will compete
with ineffective natural contingencies - Go public
- Get a self-management partner
- Continually evaluate and redesign program as
needed - A-B and changing criterion designs
16http//dick-malott.com/home/