4.8 • 648 Ratings
🗓️ 6 October 2017
⏱️ 94 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
How do you get parents to become effective agents of change as it relates to their children's problem behavior? If you're like me, you've struggled to explain the complexities of the functional nature of problem behavior to lay people. Clearly, avoiding our technical language helps with this, but working with parents in particular, it can be difficult to teach how to reinforce desired responses, what behaviors to attend to, what disruptive events to ignore, and so on. As Pat Friman and I discussed in Session 10, sometimes we as Behavior Analysts have trouble applying our training to our own parenting as well. Thankfully, Brandon Franklin stops by the podcast to talk about the parent training program he and his colleagues at Clinical Behavior Analysis are using. They've developed a program called RAPID training (not to be confused with Rapid Prompting ;-) ) that they've found great success with (click here for their handout on this program). This program was adapted from a book by Drs. Rex Forehand and Nicholas Long called Parenting the Strong-Willed Child: The clinically proven five week program for parents of two to six year olds. I had the chance to read much of it before the interview, and I think it's a great book that most parents will get a lot out of. In the interview, we even joked about handing the book out to random people in the street, in grocery stores, certain friends who struggle with parenting, and so forth. Not to turn this post into a review per se, but the book is well worth checking out. In this episode, you will learn the specific steps to the RAPID program, specifically the components of Rewarding, Attending, Providing Breaks, Ignoring, and Direction Giving. You will also learn about the various populations and settings in which the folks at CBA have used this intervention. Because parent training is such a hot topic in our field right now, I received tons of listener questions, so Brandon and I spend some time going through those as well. I hope you enjoy this conversation as much as I did. Brandon and his colleagues at CBA are doing some really great things in our field. They're expanding quite a bit right now, so if you're wondering what it would be like to work CBA, you can reach out to them here (for transparency sake, there is no sponsorship arrangement here). Speaking of sponsors though, this podcast is sponsored by Britton Behavioral Consulting. Dr. Lisa Britton, BCBA-D specializes in providing independent fieldwork supervision in a remote context. If you listen to Session 29, you'll learn that she has a wealth of experience in both the practice of Behavior Analysis, as well some great processes in place for mentoring soon-to-be BCBA's. I have corresponded with previous mentees of hers, and to a person, they sang her praises as a supervisor. Also, if you need BACB Type 2 continuing education, why not earn them while you're on the go? How does this work? Glad you asked. Click here to find out more.
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0:00.0 | This is the Behavioral Observations podcast with Matt Secoria, session number 36. |
0:12.5 | Welcome to the Behavioral Observations podcast, stimulating talk for today's behavior analysts. |
0:19.8 | Now here's your host, Matt Sequoria. |
0:23.9 | Hey, everyone, it's Matt Secoria, and this is session 36 of the behavioral |
0:27.2 | Observations podcast, and this is like take 500 of this introduction, so I apologize. |
0:34.2 | I sound a little ragged here. |
0:36.5 | For some reason, another, the phone keeps on ringing or the dog barks or I get tongue-tied or what have you. |
0:43.8 | So I'm going to try to finish this in one final take and get going. |
0:50.1 | So I've got a fun show today about parent training, and I am joined by Brandon Franklin from |
0:56.5 | clinical behavior analysis, and they are doing some really innovative stuff with parent training. |
1:02.7 | They've got a unique protocol that they're using, and Brandon is here to kind of share it with us. |
1:07.0 | So this is something I think we're all going to come out learning something new with, |
1:11.8 | and I think it'll be an episode that you'll really enjoy. So before we get to that episode, |
1:19.2 | I do want to let you know that we are sponsored by Britain Behavioral Consulting.com. That is |
1:25.8 | the independent fieldwork supervision services of one Dr. Lisa Britton. |
1:30.9 | And, you know, it's really hard to find quality supervision sometimes, especially if you |
1:35.7 | are in an area where there's not a lot of behavior analysts. |
1:39.1 | So for those of you in places like Massachusetts and Florida and California, where, you know, we're not exactly a dime a dozen, but we're certainly more dense than, say, North Dakota. |
1:50.3 | You know, it might be a little bit easier finding good supervision, but, you know, with the advent of online programs and things like that, people, you know, in all parts of the world starting to become behavior |
2:02.0 | analysts, it requires us to find other types of supervision outlets, if you will. And so Lisa has |
2:10.8 | made it her job to provide high quality independent field work supervision in a distance context. |
2:17.2 | So if you want to find out if |
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