Watch the: https://kapextmediassl-a.akamaihd.net/artsSCi/PS385/PS385_1901B/DQLectures/PS385_1_DQLecture.mp4
Read the following scenario
Setting the Scene:
You are a Board Certified Assistant Behavior Analyst (BCaBA) who works for Applied Behavior Associates, a community mental health agency. A group home provider serving adolescent foster children, ages 13-17, has submitted a referral to your agency for staff training in behavior control procedures. You have been assigned to provide training in basic principles of positive behavior intervention for the home. The home previously contracted with a non-credentialed behavior specialist who wrote behavior guidelines for the staff to follow. These guidelines included such recommendations as,Whenever you notice a resident becoming aggressive, tell him to go to the quiet area. If he refuses, implement the two-person transportation procedure to move him to the quiet area. Prevent the resident from leaving the quiet area until he is calm. After the resident has met criteria to leave the quiet area, remove all privileges for the rest of the day. These procedures have failed miserably, and you are being asked to provide some guidance.
Discussion:
Discuss the three-term contingency (antecedent, behavior, and consequence) and its relevance to understanding why behaviors occur. What information pertaining to the three-term contingency needs to be considered in the current scenario?
Discuss the components necessary for an operational definition of a target behavior. Provide an operational definition of the target behavior labeled “aggression†in the scenario that could be used to provide more clarity.
Discuss one of the seven dimensions of Applied Behavior Analysis outlined by Baer, Wolf, and Risley (found in Applied Behavior Analysis, Chapter 1, and beginning on page 16) and describe how the dimension can be applied when considering interventions in the current scenario.
Guided Response Posts:
In your first response to a peer, critique the operational definition that he/she provided for the behavior labeled, aggression. Does the definition meet the criteria for an operational definition (observable, measurable, and repeatable)? Could you easily take data on the occurrence of the behavior based upon the definition? How could you rewrite the definition to increase clarity?