渐进式预演对自闭症和认知障碍学生视觉词和字母习得的影响

IF 1.1 Q4 PSYCHOLOGY, EDUCATIONAL
C. Finn, S. Ardoin, K. Ayres
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引用次数: 2

摘要

摘要增量排练(IR)是一种抽认卡干预,涉及先前掌握的目标的间隙和即时纠错。先前的研究表明,IR是教授离散技能的有效干预措施。然而,现有的许多研究都是针对典型的发展中的学生进行的。目前的研究旨在扩展文献,率先在独立的特殊教育环境中对被诊断为自闭症谱系障碍和智力残疾的学生实施IR。在三名患有自闭症和认知障碍的早期小学生中,采用跨刺激组的多探针设计来评估IR对视觉单词和字母习得的有效性。结果表明,IR对所有参与者都有效。此外,该结果提供了IR可以与来自不同于从中提取未知刺激的刺激类别的刺激类别中的已知刺激一起使用的证据。未来的研究应该将IR与该学生群体中经常使用的其他抽认卡干预措施进行比较。公共意义声明本研究表明,IR是向发育障碍学生教授视觉单词的有效干预措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Effects of Incremental Rehearsal on Sight Word and Letter Acquisition among Students with Autism and Cognitive Impairment
Abstract Incremental rehearsal (IR) is a flashcard intervention that involves the interspersal of previously mastered targets and immediate error correction. Previous research indicates IR is an effective intervention for teaching discrete skills. Much of existing research, however, was conducted with typically developing students. The current study aimed to extend the literature by being the first to implement IR with students diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder and an intellectual disability receiving instruction in a self-contained special-education setting. A multiple probe design across sets of stimuli was used to evaluate the effectiveness of IR on sight word and letter acquisition among three early elementary students with autism and cognitive impairment. Results indicated that IR was effective for all participants. Further, the results provided evidence that IR can be used with known stimuli from a stimulus class other than the stimulus class from which unknown stimuli are being drawn. Future research should compare IR to other flashcard interventions regularly employed with this student population. PUBLIC SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The present study suggests that IR is an effective intervention for teaching sight words to students with developmental disabilities.
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来源期刊
Journal of Applied School Psychology
Journal of Applied School Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, EDUCATIONAL-
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
10.00%
发文量
7
期刊介绍: With a new publisher (Taylor & Francis) and a new editor (David L. Wodrich), the Journal of Applied School Psychology will continue to publish articles and periodic thematic issues in 2009. Each submission should rest on either solid theoretical or empirical support and provide information that can be used in applied school settings, related educational systems, or community locations in which practitioners work. Manuscripts appropriate for publication in the journal will reflect psychological applications that pertain to individual students, groups of students, teachers, parents, and administrators. The journal also seeks, over time, novel and creative ways in which to disseminate information about practically sound and empirically supported school psychology practice.
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