First developed in the 1970s, contingency contracting is a behavior change strategy that identifies a task to be completed and a reward to follow successful accomplishment of the task. Numerous studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of contracting to improve behavior and teach new skills to children with and without disabilities in home, school, and community settings. Using children’s stories, examples of contracts used by families to help children fulfill household responsibilities, learn new skills, get ready for school in the morning, and make friends at school will be presented. Participants will receive materials for developing, implementing, and evaluating contracts that were field-tested by more than 300 families.
Learning Objectives
- State the purpose and give an example of the following parts of a behavior contract: Task, Reward, Task Record, Official Seal, and Signatures.
- Describe a collaborative list-making procedure that parents, behavior analysts, and teachers can use with their children, students, and clients to identify tasks and select rewards for contracts.
- Identify three common reasons behavior contracts fail and describe a behavior analytic-based remedy for each reason.
About the Presenter
The webinar was informative and provided an alternate approach to motivate children to accomplish tasks.
Excellent course, really enjoyed it
Two of the greatest in their fields offer such a great and user friendly resource to help create real behavior change at the home level! Easily adaptable to situation or setting, this book and webinar was very friendly to parents and those who are not directly in the field but need a tool. Great piece of dissemination!
This was one of the best webinar/ CEU opportunities I have had in the last couple of years! Jill and Bill are wonderful people to learn from!
Course information
- Title: Positive Ways to Teach New Skills and Improve Family Dynamics
- Presenter: Jill C. Dardig Ed.D., William L. Heward Ed.D., BCBA-D
- Date: Tuesday, March 26th, 2024
- CEUs: 2 Learning
- Time: 9:00 AM Pacific
- Duration: 1 hour and 40 minutes
- Customer Rating: (31)