Virginia W. Ndoro, Gregory P. Hanley, Jeffrey H. Tiger, & Nicole A. Heal. (2006)
A descriptive assessment of instruction-based interactions in the preschool classroom.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
39, 79-90.
The current study describes preschool teacherchild interactions during
several commonly scheduled classroom activities in which teachers deliver
instructions. An observation system was developed that incorporated
measurement of evidence-based compliance strategies and included the
types of instructions delivered (e.g., integral or deficient directives,
embedded directives, do or dont commands),
the childrens behavior
with respect to the instructions (e.g., compliance, noncompliance, active
avoidance, problem behavior), and the differential responses of the teacher
to the childs behavior following an instruction (e.g., appropriate or
inappropriate provision of attention and escape). After 4 classroom teachers
were observed at least five times in each of five target activities,
simple and conditional probabilities were calculated. Results indicated
that (a) the frequency of instruction and probability of compliance
varied as a function of activity type, (b) do commands and directive
prompts were delivered almost to the exclusion of dont commands and
nondirective prompts, (c) the likelihood of compliance was highest following
an embedded or an integral directive prompt, and (d) although putative social
reinforcers were more likely to follow noncompliance than compliance and were
highly likely following problem behavior, compliance occurred over twice as
much as noncompliance, and problem behavior during instructions was very low.
Implications for using descriptive assessments for understanding and improving
teacher–child interactions in the preschool classroom are discussed.
DESCRIPTORS: descriptive assessment, instructions, compliance, preschool children, teachers