5 research outputs found
Enhancing Treatment Integrity Through Systematic Fading with Indiscriminable Contingencies
Frequently school psychologists are asked to develop treatments for teachers to remediate students' academic skills or social behaviors. When teachers implement them with high levels of treatment integrity they are beneficial to students. Treatment integrity has been increased by using direct training, performance feedback, and negative reinforcement procedures. Still, treatment integrity maintenance has not received the same amount of systematic inquiry. This study investigated treatment integrity maintenance over time after a systemic fading procedure with indiscriminable contingencies was implemented. The results showed that the teachers continued to implement treatment protocols at a high level after performance feedback was faded out. Students also fared better when treatment integrity was high.Educatio
Child and Parent Report of Parenting as Predictors of Substance Use and Suspensions from School
This study examined how child and parent reports of parenting were related to early adolescent substance use and school suspensions. Data were from two time points six months apart on 321 families with an eighth grade student attending one of five schools in the Pacific Northwest. Child- and parent-report measures of family management practices were moderately correlated (r = .29). Child report, but not parent report, of more positive family management practices uniquely predicted a lower likelihood of adolescent substance use. Also, discrepancies between child and parent report of parenting predicted substance use, with child positive report of family management losing its protective association with adolescent substance use when parents had negative reports of their parenting. Parent report, but not child report, of better parenting predicted lower likelihood of suspensions, suggesting that the salience of child and parent report may depend on the type of behavioral outcome
Child and Parent Report of Parenting as Predictors of Substance Use and Suspensions from School
This study examined how child and parent reports of parenting were related to early adolescent substance use and school suspensions. Data were from two time points six months apart on 321 families with an eighth grade student attending one of five schools in the Pacific Northwest. Child- and parent-report measures of family management practices were moderately correlated (r = .29). Child report, but not parent report, of more positive family management practices uniquely predicted a lower likelihood of adolescent substance use. Also, discrepancies between child and parent report of parenting predicted substance use, with child positive report of family management losing its protective association with adolescent substance use when parents had negative reports of their parenting. Parent report, but not child report, of better parenting predicted lower likelihood of suspensions, suggesting that the salience of child and parent report may depend on the type of behavioral outcome