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The Behavioral Observations Podcast with Matt Cicoria

The Roles of Bias Formation and Disproportionality in the Context of Racism: Session 197 with Bruce Tinor and Merrill Winston

The Behavioral Observations Podcast with Matt Cicoria

Matt Cicoria

Science, Mental Health, Skinner, Behaviorism, Behaviorconsultant, Aba, Behavioralpsychology, Health & Fitness, Appliedbehavioranalysis, Autism, Acceptanceandcommitmenttherapy, Fba, Social Sciences, Verbalbehavior, Bcba, Functionalassessment, Discretetrial

4.8648 Ratings

🗓️ 19 August 2022

⏱️ 101 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The full title of Merrill's talk is, "Whitesplaining Racism: Part Deux! Logic, Disproportionality, Avatars, Hate Crimes, and Uncomfortable Feelings."

As you'll learn in this episode, Bruce was in the audience for most of Merrill's talk, and was so enthused with it, he wanted him to review its main points here on Behavioral Observations. So we did just that, and Bruce was kind enough to join us as a discussant. 

But in the first segment of the show, we get to know a little about Bruce and his background. It turns out that he's had quite a bit of success reducing the overall rates of restraint in the school he worked in, so we spend a some time discussing how he was able to create that change. Bruce also closed out the show with some great advice for BCBAs, so you'll definitely want to stick around for that.

This episode is quite long, even by Behavioral Observations' standards, so I'm going to keep these opening comments short. For your convenience, I tracked down most of the links and references we discussed below:

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, everyone. Thank you for joining me in session 197 of the behavioral observations podcast. I'm

0:03.9

joined today by Dr. Bruce Tenure and Merrill Winston to discuss the talk that Merrill gave at the

0:08.7

recent Baba conference that was held in Detroit. The full title of Merrill's talk is

0:14.8

Whitesplaining Racism, Part Due, Logic, Disproportionality, Avataratars, hate crimes, and uncomfortable feelings.

0:23.0

As you'll learn in this episode, Bruce was in the audience for most of Merrill's talk,

0:26.8

and he was so excited about the subject matter.

0:29.6

He wanted Merrill to come on this podcast to share the presentation with the audience.

0:35.8

So here we are doing just that, and Bruce was kind enough to join us as a

0:39.7

discussant. But in the first segment of the show, we get to know a little bit about Bruce and his

0:44.5

background. It turns out that he's had quite a bit of success reducing the overall rates of restraint

0:49.6

in the school he worked in, so he spent some time discussing how he's able to make such an incredible

0:55.7

change. Bruce also closed out the show with some great advice for BCBAs, so you'll definitely

1:01.4

want to stick around for that. And again, somewhere in the middle we go through some of the main

1:05.6

points of Merrill's talk. As you'll learn, it was pretty well received, and I think it's thought-provoking as many of Merrill's

1:14.5

talks are. So I hope you enjoy the content as much as I did. This episode is pretty long,

1:22.8

even by behavioral observation standards. So I'm going to try to keep my opening comments

1:26.5

brief here. I do want to direct to keep my opening comments brief here.

1:33.2

I do want to direct your attention that I have a lot of things in the show notes for today's episode, so there's lots of links there. I also have the graph of the reduction in restraints that

1:41.2

Bruce and his team was able to affect.

1:44.9

You can find this and all the other links, et cetera,

1:48.9

over at the show notes at behavioral observations.com.

1:52.1

And I should also mention, you know, if you're at the website,

...

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