4.8 • 648 Ratings
🗓️ 22 August 2024
⏱️ 78 minutes
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Whether one calls it Procedural Fidelity, Treatment Integrity, or any combination of those, and/or many other related terms, this is an important and often overlooked issue when it comes to implementing behavior analytic interventions.
Think about it for a minute: as practitioners, we spend all this time obsessing about what assessment strategy to use and what interventions we think are the best fit for the individuals we serve. As you'll come to find out, we spend comparatively less time on ensuring that the programs we write are being implemented correctly.
So it is with this in mind that I'm grateful that Dr. Claire St. Peter returned to the podcast to discuss her research in this area of procedural Fidelity.
In this episode, we talk about why she prefers the term "Procedural Fidelity," the types of behavior plans that are difficult for teachers to implement, the different types of procedural errors one can make, the impact these different errors have, what types of intervention plans are more vs. less resistant to reductions in procedural fidelity, why this is a topic that practitioners should care about, whether to measure procedural fidelity via rate or percent correct, and regardless of method, how behavior analysts can start tracking procedural fidelity right away.
We also talk about Claire's research in this area, going back to the work she did as part of her dissertation. We also talk about the state of reporting procedural fidelity in the behavior-analytic research literature.
Lastly, I think it's important to point out that this topic is replete with ethical implications, which is why I titled this episode the way I did. When I listened to the show, I kept track of the various code elements that were indirectly outlined or addressed. For the mentors in the audience, this might be a fun exercise to do with your supervisees.
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0:00.0 | Hey, everyone, welcome to session 272, the behavioral observations podcast. You know, whether one calls |
0:05.3 | a procedure fidelity, treatment integrity, or something else, this is an important and often |
0:10.8 | overlooked issue when it comes to implementing behavior analytic interventions. Think about it for a |
0:16.6 | minute. As practitioners, we spent all this time obsessing about what assessment strategy to use |
0:22.1 | and what interventions we think are the best fit for the individuals we serve. |
0:26.9 | As you come to find out, we spend comparatively less time on ensuring that the programs we write |
0:32.0 | are being implemented correctly. |
0:34.5 | So it's with this in mind that I'm grateful that Dr. Claire St. Peter returned to the |
0:38.8 | podcast to discuss her research in this area of procedural fidelity. In this episode, we talk about |
0:45.7 | why she prefers the term procedural fidelity over other options. We talk about the types of |
0:51.0 | behavior plans that are difficult for teachers to implement, The different types of procedural errors one can make. |
0:56.3 | The impact these different errors have. |
0:58.7 | We talk about what types of intervention plans are more versus less resistant to reductions in procedural fidelity. |
1:05.7 | We talk about why this is a topic that practitioners should care about. |
1:10.0 | Towards the very end of the episode, we talk about two really important topics within |
1:14.7 | procedural fidelity. |
1:15.8 | We talk about how best to measure it and the differences between measuring procedural fidelity |
1:21.4 | using rate versus percent. |
1:24.8 | And then we also talk about how to get started in measuring procedural fidelity, and |
1:30.9 | not to be a spoiler here, but it's not as difficult as you think, and there's many, many ways to do |
1:36.0 | that. So if you find this whole prospect daunting, again, listen to the very end, and you'll probably |
1:43.1 | come away with some direction to move forward. |
... |
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