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Prompting

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Prompting Chapter 17 (Cooper, et. al) Chapter 4 (MacDuff, et. al) (Demchek, 1990) Correcting Overselectivity Control has to be transferred over to the critical ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Prompting


1
Prompting
  • Chapter 17 (Cooper, et. al)Chapter 4
  • (MacDuff, et. al)
  • (Demchek, 1990)

2
Prompting and Prompt Fading
  • Prompts
  • supplemental stimuli that control the target
    response but are not a part of the natural SD
    that will eventually control the behavior
  • (Touchette Howard, 1984)
  • Prompts are given before or during the
    performance of a behavior
  • they help behavior occur so that the teacher can
    provide reinforcement
  • Only introduced during the acquisition phase of
    instruction

3
Prompting and Prompt Fading
  • Transfer of Stimulus Control
  • technique used to fade response and stimulus
    prompts
  • Prompts should be used only during acquisition
  • Transfer stimulus control from prompt to
    naturally-existing stimuli quickly using fading

4
2 Types of Prompts
  • Response Prompts stimuli added to a childs
    response
  • Verbal Directions
  • Modeling
  • Physical Guidance
  • How else can we say this?
  • Stimulus Prompts Stimuli used in conjunction
    with the task stimuli or instructional materials
  • Movement Cues
  • Position Cues
  • Redundance

5
Response prompts stimuli added to a childs
response
  • Verbal directions
  • can be one word or several in length and are used
    very often in typical classrooms
  • vocal or written
  • e.g., When teaching a child to tie a shoe can
    say remember to make the bows big
  • e.g., remind the student what they need to do
    Remember do your math worksheet and then we can
    go to the party

6
Response prompts stimuli added to a childs
response
  • Verbal directions
  • Can be used with children with autism but..
  • Child must have responding that is rule-governed
    or use familiar language
  • Make sure they are not prompts but critical
    variables of concern
  • E.g., instructions can be taught to respond to
    these often paired with modeling

7
Response prompts stimuli added to a childs
response
  • Modeling prompts
  • a behavior can be modeled by demonstrating the
    desired behavior so that it can be imitated. It
    can be used in combination with other prompts
  • Child must have generalized imitation
  • e.g., words on a card to be copied writing
    activity schedules
  • e.g., videotaping the actions of a play script
  • e.g., drawing the components for an art script
  • e.g., posture and attention

8
Response prompts stimuli added to a childs
response
  • Manual guidance
  • an instructor manually guides a child through the
    entire target response
  • e.g., teaching a child to dress not pulling the
    pants up for a child but putting your hands over
    the childs and guiding them pull them up

9
Response Prompt Fading(Transferring from
Response Prompts to natural cues)
  • Most-to-Least Prompts
  • Graduated Guidance
  • Shadowing and spatial fading
  • Least-to-Most Prompts
  • Time Delay

10
Response Prompt Fading(Transferring from
Response Prompts to natural cues)
  • Most-to-least
  • the instructor initially guides the student
    manually through the entire performance then
    gradually reduces the amount of manual assistance
    provided as training progresses from session to
    session.
  • e.g., dressing
  • Gradually reduce amount of manual assistance
  • Modeling
  • Verbal instruction
  • Natural stimulus
  • When is this hierarchy appropriate?

11
Response Prompt Fading(Transferring from
Response Prompts to natural cues)
  • Graduated guidance
  • is defined as the teacher provides a manual
    prompt only when it is needed and then it is
    faded immediately whenever the student responses
    correctly.
  • Foxx and Azrin (1973) recommend using shadowing
    and spatial fading with the graduated guidance
    procedure as soon as the student is performing
    the skill independently.

12
Response Prompt Fading(Transferring from
Response Prompts to natural cues)
  • Graduated guidance
  • Shadowing
  • has the teacher following the students movements
    with her hands very near but not touching the
    child. The teacher then gradually increases the
    distance of her hands from the student.
  • Spatial fading
  • involves gradually changing the location of the
    manual prompt.
  • e.g., if the manual prompt is used for a hand
    movement, the teacher can move the prompt from
    the hand to the wrist, to the elbow, to the
    shoulder, and then to no manual contact.

13
Response Prompt Fading(Transferring from
Response Prompts to natural cues)
  • Least to most prompts
  • Provide participant with an opportunity to
    perform the response with the least amount of
    assistance on each trial
  • Participant receives greater degrees of
    assistance with each successive trial without a
    correct response
  • Advantages
  • the student always has an opportunity to response
    and the students behavior determines the level
    of prompting needed for a correct response
    increasing assistance as necessary.
  • Disadvantages
  • multiple errors

14
Example
  • Joe point to the number 8
  • no response
  • Joe point to the number 8. Its the one between
    7 and 9 on your number line.
  • No response
  • Joe watch me point to the number 8 on your
    paper. Now you point to the number 8.
  • He points to the 9
  • Joe point to the number 8. The tutor placed his
    hand on top of Joes and moves his hand close to
    the number 8
  • He points to 9
  • Joe, point to the number 8. The tutor guides
    Joes fingers to the number 8

15
Response Prompt Fading
  • Time delay
  • Varying the time interval between presentation of
    a natural stimulus and the presentation of a
    response prompt
  • Constant time delay
  • Begin with a 0-sec delay
  • Then use a fixed delay (e.g., 3 sec)
  • Progressive time delay
  • Begin with a 0-sec delay
  • Gradually and systematically increase delay
    (e.g., in 1-sec intervals) according to some rule

16
Recommendations when using response prompt fading
methods (Demchek, 1990)
  • Important to consider instructional time to
    criterion, trial to criterion and errors to
    criterion.
  • Procedures that lead to less instructional time
    or fewer trial should be used

17
Recommendations when using response prompt fading
methods (Demchek, 1990)
  • Procedures that result in fewer errors should
    also be considered
  • Once an error is made it tends to be repeated
  • Errors involve time and further decrease
    instructional time
  • Some individuals display non-productive responses
    when engaged in difficult tasks
  • Should errorless learning be the fading strategy
    of choice for all students?

18
Recommendations when using response prompt fading
methods (Demchek, 1990)
  • If the focus of instruction is acquisition, the
    more efficient prompt fading method is most to
    least in terms of errors to criterion

19
Recommendations when using response prompt fading
methods (Demchek, 1990)
  • If instruction is focusing on fluency, least to
    most is more efficient
  • If teaching discrete responses time delay appears
    to be more efficient than least to most
  • If teaching chained response, constant time delay
    is more efficient than least to most.
  • Constant time delay may be easier to use than
    progressive time delay and result in higher
    procedural reliability when teaching discrete
    responses

20
Stimulus prompts stimuli added to an SD prior
to a child emitting a response.
  • Movement prompts
  • pointing to or looking at the target stimulus.
  • e.g. when teaching a student to discriminate a
    penny from a dime you might point to correct
    coin.
  • Positional prompts
  • moving the target stimulus closer to a child.
  • e.g., if asking for a dime move it closer

21
Stimulus prompts stimuli added to an SD prior
to a child emitting a response.
  • Redundance
  • when additional dimensions (e.g., color, size
    shape) of the target stimulus are exaggerated
  • e.g. prompt is exaggerating the lettering on a
    dime criterion related
  • e.g., placing the correct coin on a white sheet
    of paper non-criterion related

22
Stimulus Prompt Fading(Transferring from
Stimulus Prompts to natural cues)
  • Stimulus prompts are faded through errorless
    learning procedures such as
  • Stimulus shaping
  • Transposition
  • Stimulus fading
  • (LaBlanc Etzel, 1981)

23
Stimulus Prompt Fading(Transferring from
Stimulus Prompts to natural cues)
  • -Stimulus fading
  • highlighting a manual dimension (e.g., color,
    size, position) of a stimulus to increase the
    likelihood of a correct response.
  • The highlighted or exaggerated dimension is faded
    gradually in or out.
  • e.g., fully highlighting a letter A to teach
    handwriting criterion related prompt
  • e.g., 17 and 71 in puzzles give them a one and
    have them place the one in the correct position
    to make 17 or 71 eventually fade this to a
    writing task
  • criterion related prompts ensure that the child
    is attending to the relevant dimension of the
    stimulus.

24
Stimulus Prompt Fading(Transferring from
Stimulus Prompts to natural cues)
  • Superimposition of stimuli is
  • Frequently used with stimulus fading.
  • Two specific classes of stimuli are presented to
    prompt a response.
  • In one instance the transfer of stimulus control
    occurs when one stimulus is faded out in another
    application one stimulus is faded in as the other
    stimulus is faded out.

25
Stimulus Prompt Fading(Transferring from
Stimulus Prompts to natural cues)
  • Examples of Superimposition of stimuli
  • e.g. Terrace (1963)
  • colored lights (red green)
  • Lines superimposed on lights
  • Lights faded out
  • e.g., 5 2 7
  • 1-2-3-4-5- 6-7
  • E.g., Pg 406 407criterion related?

26
Stimulus Prompt Fading(Transferring from
Stimulus Prompts to natural cues)
  • Stimulus shape transformations
  • Use an initial stimulus shape that will prompt a
    correct response
  • This shape is gradually changed to form the
    natural stimulus, while maintaining correct
    responding
  • e.g., picture of a car gradually changing to the
    written word car criterion related

27
Another Way to Look at Things.MacDuff, 2001
  • Classification of prompts are not really
    necessary..in reality we use them as packages
  • Although Stimulus and Response prompt
    classification can be useful

28
Additional promptsStimulus or Response Prompts?
  • Gestural prompts
  • Photographs and line drawings
  • Textual prompts
  • Tactile
  • Tones/alarms

29
Prompt-fading systemsWays to fade Stimulus or
Response Prompts?
  • Most-to Least
  • Least-to Most
  • Time Delay
  • Graduated Guidance
  • Stimulus Fading
  • Stimulus Shaping

30
Questions to answer when selecting a prompt
  • What is the target response?
  • Does my prompt lead to the target response?
  • What is the natural stimuli that should control
    this behavior?

31
Questions to answer when selecting a prompt
  • Does my prompt lead to that stimuli controlling
    the behavior?
  • Order your SDs in a hierarchy from the most
    natural to the most artificial and select from
    there
  • E.g. eye contact why you wouldnt say look or
    hands down
  • E.g., teaching a student to discriminate b and
    d
  • Extra stimulus prompt-non-criterion related
    prompts
  • Within-stimulus prompts criterion related
    prompts magnified critical features

32
Information to remember when fading prompts
  • Am I producing a shift in attention from my
    prompt to the relevant discriminative stimuli?
  • Am I decreasing the likelihood of prompt
    dependency while preventing errors?
  • -e.g., fading prompts in a timely fashion
  • Am I using an error-correction procedure if the
    child makes a mistake?
  • Am I reinforcing only when I reduce my level of
    prompt - giving the child an incentive to
    independently perform the response?

33
Coping with stimulus overdependence and
overselectivity
  • Children with autisms behavior may be controlled
    by a limited number of even just one often
    non-relevant stimulus -of the complex stimulus
  • E.g., placement of an object, its color, person
    doing the teaching
  • Can recall someones name when they are sitting
    in their seat in the classroom pass them on the
    street and Im in trouble
  • How do you fix this?

34
Correcting Overselectivity
  • Control has to be transferred over to the
    critical features of the SD
  • Alternate trials involving single components of
    the complex stimulus with trials containing the
    intact complex stimulus

35
Stimulus Control Research focusing on Techniques
that are Designed to Fade Adult Prompts very
Rapidly (Green, 2001)
  • Activity Schedules
  • (MacDuff, Krantz McClannahan, 1993)
  • Independent/ skills leisure skills
  • Script/script fading procedures
  • (Krantz McClannahan, 1998) (Stevenson, Krantz
    McClannahn, 2000)
  • Textual or audio prompts
  • Words embedded in an activity schedule
  • Initiate and respond to verbal statements
  • Tactile Prompts
  • (Taylor Levin, 1998)
  • Verbal initiations

36
Stimulus Control Research focusing on Techniques
that are Designed to Fade Adult Prompts very
Rapidly (Green, 2001)
  • Video Modeling
  • (Charlop Milstein, 1989) (Reeve, et al., 2007)
  • Purchasing skills, helping skills
  • Lots of additonal research questions
  • Priming
  • (Schreibman, Whalen Stahmer, 2000)
  • Decreasing disruptive behavior
  • Lots of additional research questions
  • Incidental Teaching or Naturalistic Techniques
    Natural Language Paradgm
  • (Hart Risley, 1968) (Koegel, 1995)
  • Verbal initiations
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