Field effectiveness of stimulus equivalence for teaching reading skills to children with autism


Autoria(s): Giewercer, Lisa
Contribuinte(s)

Center for Applied Disability Studies

Data(s)

26/10/2010

26/10/2010

26/10/2010

Resumo

Stimulus equivalence involves teaching two conditional discriminations that share one stimulus in common and testing all possible conditional discriminations not taught (Saunders & Green, 1999). Despite considerable research in the laboratory, applied studies of stimulus equivalence have been limited (Vause, Martin, Marion, & Sakko, 2005). This study investigated the field-effectiveness of stimulus equivalence in teaching reading skills to children with Autism. Participants were four children with Autism receiving centre-based intensive behavioural intervention (lBI) treatment. Three of the participants, who already matched pictures to their dictated names, demonstrated six to eight more emergent performances after being taught only to match written words to the same names. One participant struggled with the demands of the study and his participation was discontinued. Results suggest that stimulus equivalence provided an effective and efficient teaching strategy for three of the four participants in this study.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10464/3061

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Brock University

Palavras-Chave #Pattern perception #Autistic children -- Education #Reading -- Remedial teaching
Tipo

Electronic Thesis or Dissertation