TY - JOUR
T1 - Effects of Self-Monitoring Interventions on On-task Behaviors in Students with Intellectual Disabilities in Inclusive Classrooms in Türkiye
AU - Sulu, Mehmet D.
AU - Martella, Ronald C.
AU - Kiyak, Uzeyir Emre
AU - Grimmet, Kharon
AU - Bolshokova, Virginia L.J.
AU - Poyrazli, Senel
AU - Ferrell, Amy
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, Council for Exceptional Children. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Research indicates that students with intellectual disability (ID) frequently engage in off-task and disruptive behaviors, which may lead to the exclusion of these students from general education classrooms and school dropouts. In the current study, researchers implemented self-monitoring to improve the on-task behaviors of four participants with ID in inclusive classrooms in Turkey. A concurrent multiple-baseline design across participants was used. Self-monitoring was implemented across three settings (i.e., Turkish-language art, math, social studies), and generalization data were collected in English-language art classes. Additionally, an average of 16-week maintenance data were collected from all the intervention settings. Results of this study indicated that the efficacy of self-monitoring in improving on-task behaviors was immediate, generalized across settings, and maintained over a long time period (i.e., 16 weeks). Implications for practice are discussed.
AB - Research indicates that students with intellectual disability (ID) frequently engage in off-task and disruptive behaviors, which may lead to the exclusion of these students from general education classrooms and school dropouts. In the current study, researchers implemented self-monitoring to improve the on-task behaviors of four participants with ID in inclusive classrooms in Turkey. A concurrent multiple-baseline design across participants was used. Self-monitoring was implemented across three settings (i.e., Turkish-language art, math, social studies), and generalization data were collected in English-language art classes. Additionally, an average of 16-week maintenance data were collected from all the intervention settings. Results of this study indicated that the efficacy of self-monitoring in improving on-task behaviors was immediate, generalized across settings, and maintained over a long time period (i.e., 16 weeks). Implications for practice are discussed.
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M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85210567105
SN - 2154-1647
VL - 59
SP - 443
EP - 459
JO - Education and Training in Autism and Developmental Disabilities
JF - Education and Training in Autism and Developmental Disabilities
IS - 4
ER -