4.8 • 648 Ratings
🗓️ 13 July 2022
⏱️ 108 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
If you've been tuning into one of the many Inside JABA Series I've done over the last few years, you're undoubtedly familiar with today's guest, Dr. Claire St. Peter. Claire is a Professor as well as the Director of Graduate Training at West Virginia University.
According to her university bio, Claire's "primary research interest is the assessment and intervention of challenging behavior. She is particularly interested in the development of effective interventions for challenging behavior displayed in school contexts (including the effects of degraded integrity on intervention efficacy) and with the dissemination of behavioral approaches to caregivers (teachers, parents, etc.)."
And we do get to this very important topic of supporting typically developing individuals with behavior problems in school settings... but we get there in a roundabout way.
Before getting there, we talk about how she got into behavior analysis, and we spent a little more time on this than usual, because as it happens, Claire was doing her graduate training at The University of Florida at a time when many other prominent researchers and practitioners in Behavior Analysis were going through that program. I won't spoil the story here, but it's worth checking out because in my opinion it provides an interesting window into the development of an incredibly productive cohort of people.
We then transition into a primer of sorts in what's known as the "Constructional Approach" to behavioral treatment, intervention, and so forth. This approach was first described by Dr. Israel Goldiamond, and I highly recommend reading his seminal paper on this topic that was published in 1974. This topic has been getting a lot of attention in our field as of late, and I was thrilled to have Claire walk us through the basics of this perspective.
Towards the end of the podcast, Claire shares a fascinating case study in which she and her colleagues used this constructional approach to develop a novel behavioral intervention for a child who was exhibiting behavior problems in a school setting.
Again, if you're familiar with Claire's contributions to the Inside JABA Series, you know she loves a good soapbox, and in keeping with that, she offers some great advice for the newly minted at the close of the show.
Lastly, I don't want to forget to mention that Claire is the Editor in Chief of the journal, Education and Treatment of Children, which I think we mention briefly. There's a lot of good work being published there, so check it out if you get a chance. Also, Claire has made significant contributions in the area of treatment integrity (aka procedural fidelity), and I look forward to having her back on the show for a deep dive into that important topic.
Here are links to some of the resources we mentioned:
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0:00.0 | Hey, everyone, if you've been tuning into one of the many Inside Java series that we've done over the last few years, |
0:05.5 | no doubt you're familiar with today's guest, Dr. Claire St. Peter. |
0:08.8 | Claire is a professor as well as director of graduate training in the Department of Psychology at West Virginia University. |
0:16.0 | According to her university bio, her primary research interest is the assessment and intervention of |
0:23.2 | challenging behavior. And Claire is particularly interested in the development of effective interventions |
0:27.8 | for challenging behaviors displayed in school contexts. And she's also passionate about treatment |
0:33.9 | integrity and dissemination of behavioral approaches to caregivers like teachers, parents, and so forth. |
0:41.3 | And we do very much so get into this in topic of supporting typically developing individuals with behavior problems in school settings, but we get to that in a roundabout way. |
0:52.6 | And before we actually get into that topic, we talk about how she got into behavior analysis |
0:57.9 | in the first place. |
0:59.4 | And we spent a little bit more time than usual, I suppose, at the stage of the interview. |
1:04.8 | Because as it happens, Claire was doing her graduate training at the University of Florida |
1:09.3 | at a time when many other prominent |
1:11.3 | researchers and practitioners and behavior analysis were going through that program. |
1:15.7 | I won't spoil the story here, but it's worth checking out, in my opinion, because it provides, |
1:20.8 | I suppose, an interesting window into the development of an incredibly productive cohort of people. |
1:26.0 | So I hope you find that piece of, I guess, |
1:29.2 | behavior analytic history or culture as interesting as I did. But we spend quite a bit of time |
1:35.4 | talking about the constructional approach to behavioral treatment. I know this is getting a lot of |
1:40.9 | attention these days. I see it posted on a lot on social media. |
1:46.5 | This approach was first described by Dr. Israel Gold Diamond, and I highly recommend reading |
1:53.1 | his seminal paper on this topic that was published in 1974. |
... |
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