Guest guest Posted December 8, 2007 Report Share Posted December 8, 2007 , I think that I would approach this as three skills to teach: Stopping on command Walking in tandem Staying in a defined area Does the child stop on command? If not you could teach " stop " as a command. This behavior could be shaped: Stops when instructed with instructor 2 feet away and facing learner Stops when instructed with instructor 5 feet away and facing learner Stops when instructed with instructor 10 feet away and facing learner Stops when instructed with instructor 2 feet away and behind learner Stops when instructed with instructor 5 feet away and behind learner Stops when instructed with instructor 10 feet away and behind learner Stops when instructed with instructor 20 feet away and behind learner And so on. This does not stop the attempt at running, but will decrease the safety risk. Each trial could be reinforced with a tangible item or activity, then the reinforcment schedule is slowly thinned. For public places it is worth teaching walking in tandem in a controlled environment, then generalizing to stores, parks, etc. In stores we found it easiest to start with those stores which have carts. This allowed us to teach walking next to the adult and holding onto the cart. Initially, we did not even shop, just went in, got a cart, walked a short distance and left. Then we increased the time in the store, added placing items in cart, checking out. We would put one reinforcing item in cart, go to express checkout, then leave. Now we can do all our shopping without incident and can go to any store. We did take tangible reinforces with us, used behavior specific social praise. We started with stores at the least busy time to avoid long check outs! We actually had to start with sitting in the parking lot without behaviors since our daughter found even approaching a store aversive. We took a DVD player in the car to reinforce this and actually used it in the shopping cart for the first few trips inside. For the park we actually started teaching in our backyard which is fenced and then generalized this. I have not found the RDI data compelling, but their " social referencing " goals/exercises are actually quite helpful when analyzed and implemented behaviorally. We have padlocks on our backyard gates and keyed deadbolts on all doors for safety. The other thing to consider is why escape is so motivating. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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