Bolstad, O. D., & Johnson, S. M. (1972).
Self-regulation in the modification of disruptive classroom behavior.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
5, 443-454.
This study compared self-regulation and external regulation
procedures in the treatment of children's disruptive classroom
behavior. After baseline data were collected, three of the four
most disruptive children in each of 10 first- and second-grade
classrooms received reinforcement for achieving low rates of
disruptive behavior. The fourth child served as a control subject
throughout the experiment. Two of the three experimental subjects
were then taught to self-observe their own disruptive behavior.
In the final reinforcement period, these subjects were given
control over dispensing reinforcers to themselves, based on their
self-collected behavioral data while subjects in the other
experimental group continued with the externally managed
reinforcement. In extinction, reinforcement was discontinued for
all subjects, but one of the self-regulation subjects in each
classroom continued overtly to self-observe. Results indicated
that both reinforcement programs reduced disruptive behavior. The
self-regulation procedures were slightly more effective in
reducing disruptiveness than was the external regulation
procedure, and this advantage persisted into extinction. These
results suggest that self-regulation procedures provide a
practical, inexpensive, and powerful alternative in dealing with
disruptive behavior in children.