Publication | Closed Access
Acquisition of Conversation Skills and the Reduction of Inappropriate Social Interaction Behaviors
88
Citations
19
References
1988
Year
DisabilityEducationCommunicationAcceptable Communication MeansSocial ImpairmentPsychologyConversation AnalysisVerbal InteractionConsentBehavioral SciencesConversation SkillsSocial SkillsSocial InteractionSocial CognitionSpeech CommunicationInappropriate BehaviorsSocial Skill TrainingInterpersonal CommunicationSocial Skill AssessmentHuman InteractionSpecial EducationArts
Three students with severe disabilities were taught to independently initiate a conversation and participate in conversation turntaking throughout a 10-min session across a variety of school and community settings with at least four nondisabled peers as partners. Inappropriate social interaction behaviors that were present at high rates during baseline sessions were observed to decrease as conversation skills were acquired. This finding is discussed in terms of the hypothesis that inappropriate behaviors can serve a variety of communicative functions and may be reduced as functionally equivalent, socially acceptable communication means are acquired.
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