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Behavioral Skills Training for Supervisors
Effective training is essential when taking on a supervisee. Training on client interactions, data collection, running preference, and prompting procedures are some examples of the necessary skills to teach your supervisees.
$13.00
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
8-hour Supervision Training for Qualified BACB Certificants
Important:
This course fulfills the 8-hour training requirement and is based o
$99.00
Training in Organizational Behavior Management
There is often training that is required to be given.
Byron Wine, PhD, BCBA-D
$45.00
Holding Effective Meetings: Increase the Effectiveness of Your Meetings by Using Organizational Behavior Management Research and Tools
“Previously, we had a course called Holding Effective Supervision Meetings and that course was very specific to the BACB Standards and how to fit supervision into your meetings effectively, and that’s great, but that’s not the only reason we hold meetings.”
Shauna Costello, MA, BCBA
$13.00
The Right to Effective Treatment and Skinner’s “The Ethics of Helping People”
“Really what we’re looking at here is trying to apply our science in the most ethical way possible.”
Bobby Newman PhD, BCBA-D, LBA
$19.50
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
Evaluating the Effects of Supervision
“If supervision is being conducted sufficiently, then supervisees should be performing the skills necessary to achieve client outcomes.”
Tom Freeman, MS, BCBA, LBA-NY, LBA-MA
Important:
$19.50
Teaching Listener Behavior to Children with Developmental Disabilities
Listener skills are a primary focus of intervention for individuals with developmental disabilities. In this course, Dr. Laura Grow describes strategies for effectively teaching listener skills with a specific focus on conditional discrimination procedures. Dr. Grow begins this course by defining listener skills and then describes auditory-visual conditional discrimination contingencies as they appear in clinical settings.
$26.00
The Pyramid Approach to Education: An Overview
This course introduces how the Pyramid Approach in education can be beneficial for learners with autism or related developmental disabilities. The Pyramid Approach describes how to create an effective learning environment through the applications of data collection and data analysis. It systematically implements key elements from applied behavior analysis emphasizing functional communication.
$45.50
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
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
Practical Functional Assessment and Meaningful Treatment for Problem Behavior
In this course, Dr. Hanley invites you to join him on the journey of attaining lasting freedom from tantrums, aggression, or self-injurious behavior without drugs or harsh punishment but with candies, stickers, and/or tokens. It is important to understand why the problem behavior occurs in the first place and then incorporate that understanding into the teaching of transferable communication toleration skills.
$45.50
Teaching a Sequence of Play Actions and Corresponding Vocalizations Using PlayTubs™
Along with its identification as one of the core deficits in children diagnosed with autism, often described as lacking in symbolic qualities and flexibility, Nancy and Melissa developed PlayTubs™ to increase appropriate independent and sociodramatic play skills in children with autism and other developmental or language delays.
$19.50
Repetitive Behavior: Autism, Stereotypy and Anxiety
Stereotypy, repetitive behavior, and anxiety often pose a difficult puzzle for clinicians, especially with clinical research and evidence-based procedures updating at a rapid pace. In an update to his 2013 CE Course, Stereotypy: There Are No Easy Answers, Dr. Bill Ahearn reviews the significant amount of research for treating repetitive and stereotypic behaviors in a clinical, home, or school setting that has furthered our understanding of how and when to treat repetitive and stereotypic behaviors.
$45.50