Evaluating the effects of massed and distributed practice on acquisition and maintenance of tacts and textual behavior with typically developing children

This study evaluated the effects of massed and distributed practice on the acquisition of tacts and textual behavior in typically developing children. We compared the effects of massed practice (i.e., consolidating all practice opportunities during the week into a single session) and distributed pra...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied behavior analysis 2015-03, Vol.48 (1), p.85-95
Hauptverfasser: Haq, Shaji S., Kodak, Tiffany
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container_title Journal of applied behavior analysis
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creator Haq, Shaji S.
Kodak, Tiffany
description This study evaluated the effects of massed and distributed practice on the acquisition of tacts and textual behavior in typically developing children. We compared the effects of massed practice (i.e., consolidating all practice opportunities during the week into a single session) and distributed practice (i.e., distributing all practice opportunities across 4 sessions during the week) on the acquisition of textual behavior in English, tacting pictures of common nouns in Spanish, and textual behavior in Spanish using an adapted alternating treatments design embedded within a multiple probe design. We also examined correct responding during probes that (a) excluded prompts and reinforcement and (b) occurred 48 hr after training each week. The results indicated that distributed practice was the more efficient training format. Maintenance data collected up to 4 weeks after training also indicated that the participants consistently displayed higher levels of correct responding to targets that had been trained in distributed format. We discuss implications for practice and potential areas for future research.
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We compared the effects of massed practice (i.e., consolidating all practice opportunities during the week into a single session) and distributed practice (i.e., distributing all practice opportunities across 4 sessions during the week) on the acquisition of textual behavior in English, tacting pictures of common nouns in Spanish, and textual behavior in Spanish using an adapted alternating treatments design embedded within a multiple probe design. We also examined correct responding during probes that (a) excluded prompts and reinforcement and (b) occurred 48 hr after training each week. The results indicated that distributed practice was the more efficient training format. Maintenance data collected up to 4 weeks after training also indicated that the participants consistently displayed higher levels of correct responding to targets that had been trained in distributed format. 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subjects Adolescents
Behavior
Child
Child Development
Child, Preschool
Children
College students
Comparative Analysis
distributed practice
Drills (Practice)
Educational Practices
Emergent Literacy
English
Female
Humans
Instructional Effectiveness
instructional efficiency
Instructional Materials
Maintenance
Male
massed practice
Nouns
Opportunities
Phonics
Practice (Psychology)
Reading Instruction
Responses
Retention
Skill Development
Skills
Spanish
Speech therapy
Stimuli
Studies
Syllables
Teaching Methods
Television
Television news
Time Factors
typically developing children
Verbal Behavior - physiology
Verbal Learning - physiology
title Evaluating the effects of massed and distributed practice on acquisition and maintenance of tacts and textual behavior with typically developing children
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