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Using Brief Experimental Analysis to Select Oral Reading Interventions: An Investigation of Treatment Utility
Authors:Tracy L. VanAuken  Sandra M. Chafouleas  Tracy A. Bradley  Brian K. Martens
Affiliation:(1) Department of Psychology, North Carolina State University, College of Humanities and Social Sciences, 640 Poe Hall, Campus Box 7650, Raleigh, NC 27695-7650, USA;(2) University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68588, USA;(3) University of Nebraska Medical Center—Munroe-Meyer Institute, Omaha, NE, USA
Abstract:This study examined the treatment utility of brief experimental analysis for selecting skill-based oral reading interventions that targeted acquisition and fluency. Two second and one third grade student served as participants. The potentially most and least effective instructional packages identified from the brief experimental analysis for each student were alternated during an extended analysis phase. The instructional components that were compared were based on an ease of implementation hierarchy, with the brief experimental analysis used to select the hypothesized most effective instructional package for oral reading. Visual analysis of extended analysis data revealed that the hypothesized most effective combination of instructional components identified from the brief analysis produced greater initial gains in reading for two children (i.e., over 29 and 21 intervention days) and greater gains in reading throughout the extended analysis phase for the third child. Thus, the investigation provided preliminary evidence for the treatment utility of using brief experimental analysis to select effective and efficient oral reading instructional interventions. Implications, limitations, and future research topics are discussed.
Keywords:brief experimental analysis  functional analysis  reading assessment  oral reading intervention
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