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Help Your Staff Be the Best They Can Be: Behavioral Skills Training
Onboarding staff is important in all job settings, both inside and outside the field of behavior analysis. Gaps in training can stem from several issues. Perhaps training for an entry-level position includes training videos, but no real-life component, or perhaps supervisors teach the necessary skills once and do not ensure that these skills are mastered.
$26.00
Ethics in the Real World
As you have gone into the “real world,” you probably found yourself in situations that you never thought you would encounter. Uninformed parents? Pseudoscientific treatments? Facilitated communication? Work-life balance?
$32.50
Behavioral Approaches for Designing Instruction
To train or not to train, what should you do? This lecture takes a behavior analytic perspective of instructional design. Dr. Bucklin overviews the common assumptions of instructional designs and which ones are true or false. Upon review of the assumptions, Dr. Bucklin describes Skinner’s contribution to instructional design. Dr. Bucklin then describes the identification of whether training is appropriate and the important principles to use for effective instructional design. She ends the lecture on how to ensure maintenance of training.
$26.00
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
Examining Independent and Sociodramatic Pretend Play Skills in Typically Developing Children
Pretend play skills start to develop around 2½ to 5 years old, but how are these skills taught if they are not naturally occurring? How can pretend play impact other areas of learning? Nancy Champlin and Melissa Schissler overview their research on independent and sociodramatic play in relation to other developmental domains.
$19.00
A Critical Look at the Concept of Reinforcement
“Reinforcement is a verbal operant. Our challenge is to identify which verbal operant it is at any given time.”
Hank Schlinger Jr, PhD, BCBA-D
$32.50
Getting to Know Children in Foster Care
“I believe completely that Applied Behavior Analysis is and has been a huge influence in the child welfare arena for many years in the state of Florida. Our positive and productive gains are promising, and we need to compel more behavior analyst clinicians to go out there and replicate this work nationwide.”
Karin Torsiello, MS, BCBA
$32.50
The Behavior Analyst in Schools: Ethics, Rules and Reinforcement
Interdisciplinary teams devise and implement educational plans for children with special learning challenges. Sometimes, these involve a behavior analyst. Whether you are a behavior analyst thinking about working in schools, currently working in schools, or working alongside a school’s behavior analyst, you know schools have teams of several people who contribute to each child’s education plan.
$39.00
Function-Altering Effects of Verbal and Nonverbal Stimuli
In this course, Dr. Eb Blakely and Dr. Hank Schlinger describe function-altering operations and detail how function-altering interpretations can be used to explain the effects of respondent and operant conditioning. Other examples of function-altering operations including observational learning and imprinting are then described. The presentation concludes with a discussion on the implications of taking a function-altering approach to explaining behavior in applied and conceptual contexts.
$39.00
B.F. Skinner and His Involvement in Humanism: An Underappreciated Aspect of ABA History
“Skinner’s work is squarely within the tradition of Humanistic Philosophy. This is accurate despite the objections of others. What we know of as Behavior Analysis is much more in keeping with Humanistic Philosophy and Skinner’s place should not be argued.”
$19.50
Some Instructional Dos and Don’ts
We have to think in terms of accomplishments. What is the product? What is it that the student will actually do as a result of the instruction?
Joe Layng, PhD
$26.00
Understanding the Why Behind the Rule: Ethical Frameworks and Practice Guidelines
“Trying to get behind the mere black and white . . . we can’t think in bumper stickers.”
Bobby Newman, PhD, BCBA-D, LBA
$19.50
Do Punishment Contingencies Belong in Functional Treatment?
We worry so much about how to make the replacement behavior more functional, but you also have to make the target behavior less functional.
Ennio Cipani, PhD
$39.00
8-hour Supervision Training for Qualified BACB Certificants
Important:
This course fulfills the 8-hour training requirement and is based o
$99.00
Train the Practitioner: The Next Level
I have a bunch of material, but when do I apply it? To whom? To what scale? How? Karin Torsiello discusses the need to refine our interactions with all parties involved in the treatment of a client, emphasizing the steps needed to ensure an effective intervention. By considering successful and unsuccessful outcomes, this CE will provide you with the skillset to identify when an intervention is needed and to what degree.
$32.50