Special educators' understanding of challenging behaviours in children with learning disabilities: sensitivity to information about behavioural function
Special educators' understanding of challenging behaviours in children with learning disabilities: sensitivity to information about behavioural function
Social psychological models of reasoned action, and behavioural models of verbal behaviour, predict that caregiver beliefs and attributions partially determine their responses to challenging behaviours. The present study examined the relationship between special educators’ causal attributions and the underlying function of challenging behaviours in children with learning disabilities. Sixty special school staff were presented with two questionnaire vignettes describing attention seeking and task avoidance behaviour. They were then asked to identify the likely causes of the behaviours. Only a small proportion of participants made accurate causal attributions about the two examples of challenging behaviour. In addition, staff experience had little effect on the accuracy of attributions. Implications for future research, for staff training, and analysis of challenging behaviours are discussed.
learning disabilities, challenging behaviour, functional analysis, special education
43-52
Morgan, Georgina M.
f34a1820-ce6e-4e89-bf5d-a03f6342a916
Hastings, Richard P.
4fd1ea2a-233f-461b-94c0-769e7d9e2c3c
January 1998
Morgan, Georgina M.
f34a1820-ce6e-4e89-bf5d-a03f6342a916
Hastings, Richard P.
4fd1ea2a-233f-461b-94c0-769e7d9e2c3c
Morgan, Georgina M. and Hastings, Richard P.
(1998)
Special educators' understanding of challenging behaviours in children with learning disabilities: sensitivity to information about behavioural function.
Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 26 (1), .
(doi:10.1017/S1352465898000058).
Abstract
Social psychological models of reasoned action, and behavioural models of verbal behaviour, predict that caregiver beliefs and attributions partially determine their responses to challenging behaviours. The present study examined the relationship between special educators’ causal attributions and the underlying function of challenging behaviours in children with learning disabilities. Sixty special school staff were presented with two questionnaire vignettes describing attention seeking and task avoidance behaviour. They were then asked to identify the likely causes of the behaviours. Only a small proportion of participants made accurate causal attributions about the two examples of challenging behaviour. In addition, staff experience had little effect on the accuracy of attributions. Implications for future research, for staff training, and analysis of challenging behaviours are discussed.
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Published date: January 1998
Keywords:
learning disabilities, challenging behaviour, functional analysis, special education
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Local EPrints ID: 57972
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/57972
ISSN: 1352-4658
PURE UUID: 610f1ae3-0b5d-48b5-85fc-8dd2fa021049
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Date deposited: 18 Aug 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 11:09
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Author:
Georgina M. Morgan
Author:
Richard P. Hastings
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