1 / 10

Chapter 7

Chapter 7. Single-Subject Designs. Purpose of Single-Subject Designs. to demonstrate experimental control and intervention effects. ideal for teachers who wish to examine a behavior change for a single child or small group. Baseline and Intervention Conditions.

ehorne
Download Presentation

Chapter 7

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 7 Single-Subject Designs

  2. Purpose of Single-Subject Designs • to demonstrate experimental control and intervention effects. • ideal for teachers who wish to examine a behavior change for a single child or small group

  3. Baseline and Intervention Conditions • Baseline condition – condition A • Baseline data are collected on a specific target behavior before an intervention strategy is employed. • Intervention condition – condition B • Data collection continues throughout the intervention condition.

  4. Types of Single-Subject: A-B Design • The A-B design • Simplest single-subject test • Only 2 conditions are used • Condition A: Baseline • Condition B: Intervention

  5. The A-B-A Design • After withdrawing the intervention condition, a second baseline condition is employed • 3 conditions are used • A- Initial baseline • B- Initial intervention • A- Intervention withdrawn and baseline reintroduced

  6. The A-B-A-B Design The intervention condition is used after second baseline - 4 conditions • A- Initial baseline data are collected and recorded • B- Intervention plan is initiated • A- Intervention plan is withdrawn and baseline condition is reintroduced • B- Baseline condition is withdrawn and intervention is introduced a second time

  7. Alternate Treatment Design • To assess the relative effectiveness of two or more treatment conditions • 3 conditions • A- Baseline • B- First intervention • C- First intervention is terminated and a second (different) intervention is introduced

  8. Changing Criterion Design • used to increase/decrease performance of a single behavior by gradually increasing the criterion across several time intervals • the intervention divided into sub-phases • once the criterion achieved, a new criterion is established

  9. Multiple-Baseline Designs • Multiple-baseline-across-subjects • same intervention/different students • Multiple-baseline-across-behaviors • same intervention & child – different behaviors • Multiple-baseline-across-settings design • same intervention & child – different settings

  10. Summary • Single subject designs allow teachers to evaluate intervention effects on a single child or small group of children • Multiple design approaches from simple A-B to more complex • All involve review of baseline & intervention data to determine effectiveness of behavioral change programs

More Related