Shaping: Shaping Behavior, Approximations, Within and Across | ABA Terms | RBT® and BCBA® Exam

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  • Опубликовано: 27 дек 2024

Комментарии • 8

  • @ABAExamReview
    @ABAExamReview  2 года назад +2

    RBT Exam Prep: btexamreview.com
    BCBA Exam Prep: behavioranalyststudy.com

  • @Unmutedentt
    @Unmutedentt 17 дней назад +2

    I love this man!! Past on the first try. Just refreshing

    • @ABAExamReview
      @ABAExamReview  16 дней назад +1

      That's awesome! Congrats

    • @Unmutedentt
      @Unmutedentt 16 дней назад

      @@ABAExamReview thank you! I’ll be buying the BCBA program shortly!!

  • @tinyfleetingsteps3285
    @tinyfleetingsteps3285 4 месяца назад +1

    Very helpful!!! I read the book but I just can’t understand it, thank you for your very clear explanation and for this presentation

  • @heeramin1942
    @heeramin1942 Год назад

    Question: If shaping is good for teaching new behaviors (Cooper pg. 545), why is it that changing criterions are not a good design for behaviors that are not within repertoire? Does this mean that for shaping we should use multiple treatment reversal design?

    • @ABAExamReview
      @ABAExamReview  Год назад +1

      Changing criterion designs are meant for behaviors that are already known by the learner. The reason being, each criterion requires the behavior to be emitted more or less. There is no shaping being done in a changing criterion design, rather, just an increase or reduction of an already known behavior. As for your second question, shaping isn't meant for one particular design; it depends on your goals and the target behaviors.