AN EVALUATION OF THE STIMULUS EQUIVALENCE PARADIGM TO TEACH SINGLE-SUBJECT DESIGN TO DISTANCE EDUCATION STUDENTS VIA BLACKBOARD

The purpose of the current study was to examine the degree to which instruction based on stimulus equivalence procedures could be used to teach single‐subject design methodology to graduate‐level professionals through a Web‐based course management system known as Blackboard (see http:www.blackboard....

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of applied behavior analysis Vol. 45; no. 2; pp. 329 - 344
Main Authors Walker, Brooke D., Rehfeldt, Ruth Anne
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.06.2012
Society for the Experimental Analysis of Behavior
The Society for the Experimental Analysis of Behavior
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ISSN0021-8855
1938-3703
1938-3703
DOI10.1901/jaba.2012.45-329

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Summary:The purpose of the current study was to examine the degree to which instruction based on stimulus equivalence procedures could be used to teach single‐subject design methodology to graduate‐level professionals through a Web‐based course management system known as Blackboard (see http:www.blackboard.com). Specifically, we used the stimulus equivalence paradigm to teach relations among the names, definitions, graphical representations of the designs, and two practical scenarios of when it would be appropriate to implement each design. Most participants demonstrated the emergence of untaught relations, and some participants showed generalization to novel vignettes and graphs. Relations largely were not maintained at follow‐up but were retaught.
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ISSN:0021-8855
1938-3703
1938-3703
DOI:10.1901/jaba.2012.45-329