Tuesday, March 31. 2009
Effective, Individualized Behavioral Treatment – 4. Incidental Teaching
Posted under: Research
Question 8:
What is incidental teaching?
My Answer:
Incidental teaching is a precise procedure that builds off of discrete trial teaching and mand training. If you recall, discrete trial training is a potentially five-part unit of instruction consisting of:
- the discriminative stimulus (i.e., what the instructor says or does)
- a prompt (i.e., any help the instructor gives to the child)
- a response (i.e., what the child does)
- a consequence (i.e., whether or not the response is reinforced)
- an inter-trial pause (i.e., the few seconds before the next discriminative stimulus is presented).
Mand training is a potentially four-part unit of instruction consisting of:
- establishing operations (i.e., environment is created in which objects become valuable)
- a prompt (i.e., any help the instructor gives to the child)
- a behavior (i.e., what the child does)
- a consequence (i.e., whether or not the behavior is reinforced)
Incidental teaching is not the same as mand training. Incidental teaching can include mand training, discrete trial teaching, or both. In incidental teaching, mand training or discrete trial teaching are implemented in a specific way. That specific way is as follows:
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