Challenging Behaviours Flashcards
what is a challenging behaviour?
anything that challenges the system in which the child is exhibiting the behaviour.
…hitting themselves or other staff
…excessively noisy
challenging behaviours occur at high frequency with disability.
- challenging/ problem behaviours serves a function for the person, even if it looks pointless or not self-serving.
what components produces a challenging behaviour?
interaction between system that they’re living in and the child’s attributes somehow come together to produce a challenging behaviour.
how do we deal with challenging behaviours?
- change system
- give them new skills that enables them to achieve the same ends.
what is behaviour analysis?
behaviour analysis has greater emphasis on empirically backed methods and philosophical approaches.
- positive behaviour support exists in parallel with behaviour analysis today.
what is positive behaviour support?
Positive behaviour support (PBS) is a behaviour management system used to understand what maintains an individual’s challenging behaviour. based off the principles of ABA.
what is the basis for challenging behaviours?
People’s inappropriate behaviours are difficult to change because they are functional; they serve a purpose for them.
These behaviours are supported by reinforcement in the environment. In the case of children, often adults in a child’s environment will reinforce his or her undesired behaviours because the child will receive objects and/or attention because of his behaviour.
problems with choice in children with disability?
- people that the child interacts with are people they choose to interact with, and have choice in the activities they want to engage in.
- however there is restricted choice for those with disability. only people that interact with child are those who are paid to do it.
- fundamental choice in who you interact with and their reasoning for interaction (if they are paid).
- closed society, as person is placed in centres with paid interactions.
what is ABA/ Applied Behaviour Analysis?
Applied behaviour analysis is a scientific discipline concerned with applying techniques based upon the principles of learning to change behaviour of social significance.
- The ABA approach utilises two, well-researched learning theories. These are: 1) classical conditioning and 2) operant conditioning.
- In its most basic form, ABA is very simple and common sense. It rewards a person for making a correct choice. Incorrect choices are ignored, or not rewarded. Therefore, students learn by making simple associations between cause and effect. With repetition, a student learns to associate a correct action with a reward. As such, this correct choice will be repeated. An incorrect action does not earn a reward. When not rewarded, behaviours begin to slowly fade away. This process is known as extinction.
- within ABA, the only function of a behaviour is to get reinforcement.
what are positive reinforcers?
when introduced after a behaviour, it increases the frequency of a behaviour (smiling= pos. reinforcer)
what is stimulus control?
- behaviour gets reinforced in presence of of another stimulus (asking for sweets in a shop setting when parent is preoccupied and distracted)..
- such behaviour is not reinforced in a kitchen setting.
- people can be a stimulus control too, the child behaves in a certain way in presence of person A than with person B.
what are antecedents of behaviour?
things that precede behaviour in presence of a particular stimulus. the behaviour being reinforced is the fundamental idea of ABA.
what is negative reinforcement?
a behaviour that increases in frequency that leads to the removal of something.
- loud fan in a room can be annoying and aversive, child can either leave room or ask someone to turn it off.
- many behaviours can be reinforced to remove such stimulus.
example of avoidance and escapism?
child with autism and their aversion towards pop songs on the radio. children with autism can hear high frequencies with such songs that we cannot hear.
- child picked up radio and smashed it.
- trained himself to know what songs emitted such sounds.
- learned to escape and avoid sound.
avoidance?
Avoiding the stimulus that they find aversive
harder to see in clinical settings as they avoid the things they find aversive, we never get to see the thing that annoys them!
- the function of a problem behaviour is to either get something positive or to avoid something.
- the context they’re in determines whether the behaviour is reinforced or not…stimulus control.
what does Functional assessment aim to do?
FA aims to find the function of a behaviour.
the goal of the interaction is to find new ways of achieving the same goal:
1) make function redundant
2) give child new ways of achieving the goal, i.e. giving them a card for the activities they desire.