Observing and Recording Behaviour Flashcards Preview

Challenging Behaviour Year 2 > Observing and Recording Behaviour > Flashcards

Flashcards in Observing and Recording Behaviour Deck (23)
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0
Q

Operation definition:

A

Definition of behaviour written in specific, observable terms

1
Q

In order to change behaviour we must specify…

A

Which environmental/other factories are responsible for its emission

2
Q

A good operational definition is… (3 answers)

A

Definition is clear, complete and objective

3
Q

What makes a good operational definition? (3 answers)

A

Clearly describe what behaviour looks like

Use action verbs

Refrain from using labels

4
Q

Once we know what we’re looking for,

A

We need strategies for collecting data

5
Q

The time used to a serve behaviour is called

A

The observation period

6
Q

The time sample needs to be ____ of behaviour

A

Representative

7
Q

If a behaviour occurs frequently, the observation period can be ____

A

Shorter

8
Q

What are repeated measures?

A

Multiple observations of the behaviour ensuring a more representative sample of target behaviour

9
Q

Observations of behaviour can take place in natural or contrived settings. Define each

A

Natural - the environment in which a person would usually emit the behaviour

Contrived - a setting designed specifically for observation e.g. a clinicians room

10
Q

What is reactivity?

A

A change in behaviour as a result of being observed

11
Q

Reactivity can be reduced by making observations as ____ as possible

A

Unobtrusive

12
Q

Reactivity can be reduced by being ____ in the ____ over time so people are used to you

A

Present; environment

13
Q

Videotaping is a good way of reducing ____, provided the cameras themselves are not obvious

A

Reactivity

14
Q

A change in behaviour as a result of being observed is known as

A

Reactivity

15
Q

Why is measuring behaviour important (3 answers)

A

1) Gain info whether treatment is necessary
2) Can choose best treatment
3) Can determine whether treatment had an effect on behaviour

16
Q

What is indirect assessment?

A

Uses interviews, questionnaires and rating scales on target behaviour from the individual or others in his environment e.g. Family, staff

17
Q

What is direct assessment?

A

A person observes and records target behaviour as it occurs

18
Q

Give a disadvantage of using indirect assessment

A

Dependent upon memory, which can be unreliable

19
Q

Give an ad tangle to using direct assessment

A

More accurate as observers are trained to observe the behaviour

20
Q

Observations can be structured or unstructured. What is the difference?

A

Structured - certain events/activities are set to occur

Unstructured - no specific instructions given during this period

21
Q

What is observer drift?

A

When an observer develops their own private definition of behaviour

22
Q

Bandwidth refers to (think data points on graph)

A

The minimum and maximum frequency of behaviour during baseline phase