Isaacs C D, Embry L H, Baer D M
J Appl Behav Anal. 1982 Winter;15(4):505-20. doi: 10.1901/jaba.1982.15-505.
This study implemented and evaluated a training program (a written manual, videotaped models, rehearsal, role plays, and performance feedback) designed to teach five subjects the skills to become effective family therapists. The study examined the therapists' use of three target behaviors: instructing, informing, and praising. The therapists, each paired with a parent and a preschool-aged child (2 1/2-4 1/2 yr old), were trained in the clinic to use, and to teach to the parents, several behavioral skills (e.g., praising, planned ignoring, and time-out) relevant to teaching children compliance to parental instructions. A multiple-baseline design across triads (therapist/parent/child) demonstrated that after the training program was instituted, the therapists increased their rates of instructing, praising, and informing the parents; all parents increased attention to compliance, decreased attention to noncompliance, and increased rates of praise to their children; and all children increased their compliance and decreased their noncompliance.
本研究实施并评估了一项培训计划(包括一本书面手册、录像示范、排练、角色扮演和绩效反馈),旨在教授五名受试者成为有效家庭治疗师的技能。该研究考察了治疗师对三种目标行为的运用:指导、告知和赞扬。治疗师们每人与一名家长和一名学龄前儿童(2.5至4.5岁)配对,在诊所接受培训,学习并向家长传授几种与教导儿童遵守父母指令相关的行为技能(如赞扬、有计划地忽视和暂停)。跨三人组(治疗师/家长/儿童)的多基线设计表明,在实施培训计划后,治疗师对家长的指导、赞扬和告知频率增加;所有家长增加了对孩子顺从行为的关注,减少了对不顺从行为的关注,并增加了对孩子的赞扬频率;所有孩子的顺从行为增加,不顺从行为减少。