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How to Train, Evaluate and Manage Staff
How many times have you felt the need for better assessing staff or being fairly assessed? Have your expectations always been clearly stated at first? Do leaders have all the right tools to do so? Organizational Behavior Management (OBM) might have some answers. Dr. Byron Wine describes the basis of OBM, its impact on our daily lives, and how to better understand and measure it.
$39.00
Technology and Self-Management for Building Independence
Dr. Newman starts this course by introducing the history of applied behavior analytic principles involved in some self-management strategies that are out there today. In addition to reviewing some history, join Dr. Newman and his colleagues as they take you on a journey of exploring the different processes and methods of self-management.
$19.50
Translational Research: Matching Theory and Its Applications
Translational research typically is understood as the line of research that tries to take findings from basic research and then translates its applications in the applied field of behavior analysis. However, translational research can also take socially significant interests from the applied field and instigate research in the basic field. Translational research helped show that findings from non-human animal research could generalize to humans as well as create behavioral technology.
$39.00
Responsibility, Authority, and Delegating for Supervisors
Working to match authority with responsibility can be done by first understanding the meaning of responsibility and authority.
Janis Allen, BA
$26.00
Performance Scorecards: Design, Implementation, and Reinforcement
No news is not good news. There is no improvement without feedback.
Janis Allen, BA
$32.50
Five Steps to Engage and Motivate Employees
We start knowing our work is important when other people tell us.
Janis Allen, BA
$32.50
Sexuality & Sexuality Instruction with Learners with Autism Spectrum Disorders
… but to have serious, open, honest discussion about human sexuality, it’s something most of us would rather not do.
Peter F. Gerhardt, EdD
$26.00
Best Teaching Practices: Research in the Trenches
Research is certainly the best way for us to improve our already effective teaching tools . . . If we systematically evaluate our practices, across all the individuals we serve, we may identify what the best practices are for clients as a whole.
$39.00
Six Common Teaching Mistakes and What to Do Instead
Research is absolutely unequivocal in demonstrating the tremendously robust relationship between active engagement making responses relevant to the learning objectives in the lesson. Students who make more responses learn more than students who are passive observers.
William L. Heward, Ed.D.
$58.50
Inside the Box: An Interview with Dr. Jack Michael
Released in 2009, in a historically significant interview with Dr. Jack Michael, conducted by Tate McGhee, Dr. Michael recounts his time before behavior analysis as both a student and a soldier, then explains the chance events that moved him into the field of behavior analysis.
$32.50
Increasing the Length of Utterance in Children with Autism
“It’s an analysis of why you say what you say and note that most of your verbal behavior is not vocal”
Vincent Carbone, Ed.D., BCBA-D
Abstract
$39.00
Current Issues with Visual Analysis of Data
Visual analysis is the backbone of our science. By using these skills, we know it will lead to better outcomes.
Salvador Ruiz, PhD, BCBA.
$13.00
Interpersonal Skills for the Behavioral Consultant
“Establish yourself as a conditioned reinforcer. Just be nice, please.”
Stacie Neff, MS, BCBA
$39.00
Relational Frame Theory and Behavioral Flexibility Training
If you have ever worked with vocal-verbal humans, it would be no surprise to hear the differences in complexity between two speakers. B.F. Skinner developed and produced Verbal Behavior attempting to provide a thorough functional account of language that has proved to be imperative in teaching basic verbal operants. However, refinements for more complex behavior may be useful.
$26.00
Conditioning the Behavior of the Listener: Implications for Rule-Governed Behavior
Understanding rules and rule-governed behavior has been a pervasive conceptual issue in behavior analysis since Skinner’s initial analysis in his book, Verbal Behavior (1957). Since then the exact function of rules and verbal stimuli has been a point of conjecture. In this course, Dr. Hank Schlinger, BCBA-D, provides a detailed overview of the history of the analysis of rules and provides a contemporary perspective on rule-governed behavior informed by Blakely and Schlinger (1987a, 1987b).
$26.00