Karina Rasmussen & Robert E. O’Neill. (2006)
The effects of fixed-time reinforcement schedules on
problem behavior of children with emotional and behavioral
disorders in a day-treatment classroom setting.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
39, 453-457.
The current study assessed the effects of fixed-time reinforcement
schedules on problem behavior of students with emotional–behavioral
disorders in a clinical day-treatment classroom setting. Three
elementary-aged students with a variety of emotional and behavioral
problems participated in the study. Initial functional assessments
indicated that social attention was the maintaining reinforcer for
their verbally disruptive behavior. Baseline phases were alternated
with phases in which attention was provided on fixed-time schedules
in the context of an ABAB design. The results indicated that the
provision of attention on fixed-time schedules substantially reduced
the participants’ rate of verbal disruptions. These decreases were
maintained during initial thinning of the schedules. The results
provide one of the first examples that such an intervention can be
successfully implemented in a classroom setting.
DESCRIPTORS: emotional–behavioral disorders, fixed-time schedules, noncontingent reinforcement