Handbook of Child and Adolescent Assessment


Book Description

A comprehensive presentation of assessment strategies, actual strategies, and a review of specific populations for psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers and mental health social workers who work with children and adolescents. Chapter authors address only those strategies that have a firm empirical base and proceed beyond behavioral assessment to cover those assessment practices that are used more routinely by traditional clinicians.



















The Effects of a Self-management Package on the Independent Academic Performance of Students with Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities


Book Description

Abstract: The current investigation evaluated the effects of a self-management package, which included self-evaluation and self-reinforcement procedures, on the completion and accuracy of independent academic seatwork. Three participants diagnosed with autism and other developmental disabilities were taught self-management skills using a least-to- most prompting procedure following baseline using a multiple-probe baseline across subjects design. Following acquisition of the self-management package, prompts were removed and generalization probes were conducted in untrained settings and with untrained tasks. Results suggested that the self-management skills of self-evaluation and self-reinforcement can be taught to students with developmental disabilities and that those skills can maintain and generalize to other independent seatwork tasks and untrained educational settings. Results are discussed in terms of collateral effects of the self-management package on completion and accuracy of academic and the generalizability of self-management skills.




Using Self-monitoring to Improve On-task Behavior and Academic Performance of High School Students with Attention Deficit/hyperactivity Disorder


Book Description

Abstract: This study used audio-taped chimes and a student checklist for on-task! off-task behavior. The study took place in a high school study hail specifically for students with disabilities. The three participants were tenth graders and had the diagnosis of ADHD. The observers used a 10-second whole interval recording system to record on-task! offtask behavior within an alternating treatment design. The conditions included: Baseline, Self-Monitoring, and Self-Monitoring with Reinforcement. Results indicate self- monitoring alone was effective enough to significantly increase the on-task behavior of two participants. Additional reinforcement was needed to increase the on-task behavior of the third student.