Aprendizagem e engajamento como função de consequências para o desempenho de crianças em um programa de ensino individualizado de leitura

Detalhes bibliográficos
Ano de defesa: 2014
Autor(a) principal: Veiga, Dhayana Inthamoussu
Orientador(a): Souza, Deisy das Graças de lattes
Banca de defesa: Não Informado pela instituição
Tipo de documento: Tese
Tipo de acesso: Acesso aberto
Idioma: por
Instituição de defesa: Universidade Federal de São Carlos
Programa de Pós-Graduação: Programa de Pós-Graduação em Psicologia - PPGPsi
Departamento: Não Informado pela instituição
País: BR
Palavras-chave em Português:
Palavras-chave em Inglês:
Área do conhecimento CNPq:
Link de acesso: https://repositorio.ufscar.br/handle/ufscar/5996
Resumo: The individualized teaching program for elemental reading and writing skills Learning to Read and Write in Small Steps has been systematically developed and improved for the last 25 years. Anecdotal observations suggested a reduction on the engagement of children in the program, indicating need to study motivational‟ variables in this context. The purpose of the present study was to analyze learning and task engagement of children during the application of Module 1 of the Program: 1) in its standard version (Standard-Procedure) and 2) in a token version, where points were added to a counter in correct trials exchanged for video access as supplementary consequences (Token- Procedure). Two experiments were conducted in an elementary public school with 21 children without or with incipient reading repertoire. In the Experiment 1, participants were nine boys and four girls with 8-10 years of age of the 3rd and 4th grade. Some participants were exposed to Standard-Procedure and others to Token-Procedure. Learning measures provided by the program and systematic observational measures (ten seconds partial interval recording) assessed performance. On-Task and Off-Task behaviors (participants‟) and Task Assistance and On-Task Request behaviors (experimenter‟s) were recorded in five sessions per participant. Results showed that all participants had meaningful gains in reading, spelling and equivalence performance, with teaching and recombination words, and the advancement in the procedure occurred within a number of sessions similarly to programmed teaching steps. An overall reduction trend of average latency to perform task along units was observed. The average latency in Token-Procedure was significantly lower than in Standard- Procedure. More promptness to perform task was interpreted as evidence of its greater evocative effectiveness, probably due its correlation with a more effective consequence. It suggests that the effects of standard consequences were supplemented by the introduction of points. All participants systematically engaged in the task during the teaching sessions and Off-Task behaviors occurred more variably and apparently without interfering in task performance, except in some cases. Off-task behaviors appeared to be mostly an artifact of the discrete-trial procedure, in which the task cannot occur continuously. The results of Experiment 1 led to Experiment 2, in which the parameters of point accumulation and of its exchange were adjusted (Token‟- Procedure). Participants were six boys and two girls, with 6-9 years, of 2nd or 3rd grade, with lower initial repertoire and were only partially exposed to Token‟- Procedure. Their performance differ significantly in relation to other participants, such as a higher number of repetitions of teaching steps and less gains of target repertoires, which impaired the observation of possible effects of Token‟-Procedure. Despite of the limitations of this study, its results indicate important directions for future studies on the determinants of task engagement of children in this Program.
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spelling Veiga, Dhayana InthamoussuSouza, Deisy das Graças dehttp://lattes.cnpq.br/4404800720856419http://lattes.cnpq.br/74110997651093022016-06-02T20:30:10Z2014-12-012016-06-02T20:30:10Z2014-10-17https://repositorio.ufscar.br/handle/ufscar/5996The individualized teaching program for elemental reading and writing skills Learning to Read and Write in Small Steps has been systematically developed and improved for the last 25 years. Anecdotal observations suggested a reduction on the engagement of children in the program, indicating need to study motivational‟ variables in this context. The purpose of the present study was to analyze learning and task engagement of children during the application of Module 1 of the Program: 1) in its standard version (Standard-Procedure) and 2) in a token version, where points were added to a counter in correct trials exchanged for video access as supplementary consequences (Token- Procedure). Two experiments were conducted in an elementary public school with 21 children without or with incipient reading repertoire. In the Experiment 1, participants were nine boys and four girls with 8-10 years of age of the 3rd and 4th grade. Some participants were exposed to Standard-Procedure and others to Token-Procedure. Learning measures provided by the program and systematic observational measures (ten seconds partial interval recording) assessed performance. On-Task and Off-Task behaviors (participants‟) and Task Assistance and On-Task Request behaviors (experimenter‟s) were recorded in five sessions per participant. Results showed that all participants had meaningful gains in reading, spelling and equivalence performance, with teaching and recombination words, and the advancement in the procedure occurred within a number of sessions similarly to programmed teaching steps. An overall reduction trend of average latency to perform task along units was observed. The average latency in Token-Procedure was significantly lower than in Standard- Procedure. More promptness to perform task was interpreted as evidence of its greater evocative effectiveness, probably due its correlation with a more effective consequence. It suggests that the effects of standard consequences were supplemented by the introduction of points. All participants systematically engaged in the task during the teaching sessions and Off-Task behaviors occurred more variably and apparently without interfering in task performance, except in some cases. Off-task behaviors appeared to be mostly an artifact of the discrete-trial procedure, in which the task cannot occur continuously. The results of Experiment 1 led to Experiment 2, in which the parameters of point accumulation and of its exchange were adjusted (Token‟- Procedure). Participants were six boys and two girls, with 6-9 years, of 2nd or 3rd grade, with lower initial repertoire and were only partially exposed to Token‟- Procedure. Their performance differ significantly in relation to other participants, such as a higher number of repetitions of teaching steps and less gains of target repertoires, which impaired the observation of possible effects of Token‟-Procedure. Despite of the limitations of this study, its results indicate important directions for future studies on the determinants of task engagement of children in this Program.O programa de ensino individualizado Aprendendo a Ler e a Escrever em Pequenos Passos vem sendo sistematicamente desenvolvido e aprimorado ao longo de 25 anos. Observações anedóticas sugeriram uma redução do engajamento de crianças, apontando-se a necessidade de se investigar aspectos motivacionais desse contexto. O presente estudo teve como objetivo analisar a aprendizagem e o engajamento de crianças durante a aplicação do Módulo 1 do Programa de Leitura: 1) em sua versão padrão (Procedimento-Padrão) e 2) em uma versão com a produção de pontos trocados por acesso a vídeos como consequência suplementar às consequências de acerto padrão (Procedimento-Ponto ou Ponto‟). Foram conduzidos dois experimentos em uma escola municipal de ensino fundamental com 21 crianças com repertório ausente ou incipientes em leitura. Participaram do Experimento 1 nove meninos e quatro meninas com 8 a 10 anos, do 3º ou 4 ano. Um conjunto de participantes foi exposto ao Procedimento-Padrão e outro conjunto ao Procedimento-Ponto. Analisou-se o desempenho com medidas de aprendizagem fornecidas pelo programa e medidas de observação sistemáticas (registro parcial a intervalos de dez segundos). Foram registrados comportamentos dos participantes de Executar Tarefa e Dispersar-se da Tarefa e comportamentos da Experimentadora de Auxiliar Tarefa e Solicitar Execução da Tarefa em cinco sessões de ensino por participante. Os resultados mostraram que todos os participantes obtiveram ganhos significativos em leitura, ditado e equivalência, com palavras de ensino e palavras novas e que o avanço no procedimento ocorreu em uma quantidade de sessões próxima ao número de passos de ensino programados. Observou-se uma tendência geral à redução da latência média para a execução da tarefa ao longo das unidades. A latência média apresentada no Procedimento-Ponto foi significativamente inferior àquela no Procedimento-Padrão. A maior prontidão na tarefa no Procedimento-Ponto foi interpretada como uma evidencia de sua maior efetividade evocativa, provavelmente decorrente de sua correlação com uma consequência mais eficaz. Isso sugere indícios de que o efeito de consequências padrão foi suplementado pela introdução de pontos. Todos os participantes engajaram-se sistematicamente na tarefa durante as sessões de ensino observadas e comportamentos chamados de dispersão ocorreram de maneira variável e, aparentemente, sem interferir no fluxo de execução da tarefa, exceto em alguns casos. Comportamentos de dispersão pareceram ser, em sua maioria, um artefato do procedimento por tentativas discretas, no qual a execução da tarefa não pode ocorrer continuamente. Os resultados do Experimento 1 levaram à condução do Experimento 2, no qual os parâmetros de acúmulo e troca de pontos foram ajustados (Procedimento- Ponto‟). Participaram seis meninos e duas meninas, com 6 a 9 anos, do 2º ou 3º ano, os quais apresentavam repertórios de entrada mais reduzidos do que os participantes do Experimento 1 e, além disso, foram expostos a apenas uma parte do procedimento. Isso gerou diferenças importantes entre seus desempenhos em relação aos demais participantes, como um número muito elevado de repetições de passos de ensino e a obtenção ganhos menos expressivos dos repertórios-alvo, o que interferiu na observação de possíveis efeitos do Procedimento-Ponto‟. Apesar das limitações do presente estudo, seus resultados sugerem diretivas importantes para a condução de novos estudos sobre os determinantes do engajamento de crianças no Programa de Leitura.Financiadora de Estudos e Projetosapplication/pdfporUniversidade Federal de São CarlosPrograma de Pós-Graduação em Psicologia - PPGPsiUFSCarBRBehaviorismo (Psicologia)Análise do comportamentoLeitura - ensinoMotivaçãoEngajamento na tarefaCriançasConsequências arbitráriasTeaching programmingReadingMotivationContrived consequencesLearningTask engagementChildrenCIENCIAS HUMANAS::PSICOLOGIAAprendizagem e engajamento como função de consequências para o desempenho de crianças em um programa de ensino individualizado de leituraLearning and task engagement as a function of consequences for the performance of children in an individualized teaching program for readinginfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Institucional da UFSCARinstname:Universidade Federal de São Carlos (UFSCAR)instacron:UFSCARORIGINAL6382.pdfapplication/pdf5681895https://{{ getenv "DSPACE_HOST" "repositorio.ufscar.br" }}/bitstream/ufscar/5996/1/6382.pdf392cae29d834b75a278e647e0ce77447MD51TEXT6382.pdf.txt6382.pdf.txtExtracted texttext/plain0https://{{ getenv "DSPACE_HOST" "repositorio.ufscar.br" }}/bitstream/ufscar/5996/2/6382.pdf.txtd41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427eMD52THUMBNAIL6382.pdf.jpg6382.pdf.jpgIM Thumbnailimage/jpeg6149https://{{ getenv "DSPACE_HOST" "repositorio.ufscar.br" }}/bitstream/ufscar/5996/3/6382.pdf.jpgab87885aed5f43caf3be4a340fe037e2MD53ufscar/59962019-09-11 04:19:35.728oai:repositorio.ufscar.br:ufscar/5996Repositório InstitucionalPUBhttps://repositorio.ufscar.br/oai/requestopendoar:43222023-05-25T12:50:42.068486Repositório Institucional da UFSCAR - Universidade Federal de São Carlos (UFSCAR)false
dc.title.por.fl_str_mv Aprendizagem e engajamento como função de consequências para o desempenho de crianças em um programa de ensino individualizado de leitura
dc.title.alternative.eng.fl_str_mv Learning and task engagement as a function of consequences for the performance of children in an individualized teaching program for reading
title Aprendizagem e engajamento como função de consequências para o desempenho de crianças em um programa de ensino individualizado de leitura
spellingShingle Aprendizagem e engajamento como função de consequências para o desempenho de crianças em um programa de ensino individualizado de leitura
Veiga, Dhayana Inthamoussu
Behaviorismo (Psicologia)
Análise do comportamento
Leitura - ensino
Motivação
Engajamento na tarefa
Crianças
Consequências arbitrárias
Teaching programming
Reading
Motivation
Contrived consequences
Learning
Task engagement
Children
CIENCIAS HUMANAS::PSICOLOGIA
title_short Aprendizagem e engajamento como função de consequências para o desempenho de crianças em um programa de ensino individualizado de leitura
title_full Aprendizagem e engajamento como função de consequências para o desempenho de crianças em um programa de ensino individualizado de leitura
title_fullStr Aprendizagem e engajamento como função de consequências para o desempenho de crianças em um programa de ensino individualizado de leitura
title_full_unstemmed Aprendizagem e engajamento como função de consequências para o desempenho de crianças em um programa de ensino individualizado de leitura
title_sort Aprendizagem e engajamento como função de consequências para o desempenho de crianças em um programa de ensino individualizado de leitura
author Veiga, Dhayana Inthamoussu
author_facet Veiga, Dhayana Inthamoussu
author_role author
dc.contributor.authorlattes.por.fl_str_mv http://lattes.cnpq.br/7411099765109302
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Veiga, Dhayana Inthamoussu
dc.contributor.advisor1.fl_str_mv Souza, Deisy das Graças de
dc.contributor.advisor1Lattes.fl_str_mv http://lattes.cnpq.br/4404800720856419
contributor_str_mv Souza, Deisy das Graças de
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Behaviorismo (Psicologia)
Análise do comportamento
Leitura - ensino
Motivação
Engajamento na tarefa
Crianças
Consequências arbitrárias
topic Behaviorismo (Psicologia)
Análise do comportamento
Leitura - ensino
Motivação
Engajamento na tarefa
Crianças
Consequências arbitrárias
Teaching programming
Reading
Motivation
Contrived consequences
Learning
Task engagement
Children
CIENCIAS HUMANAS::PSICOLOGIA
dc.subject.eng.fl_str_mv Teaching programming
Reading
Motivation
Contrived consequences
Learning
Task engagement
Children
dc.subject.cnpq.fl_str_mv CIENCIAS HUMANAS::PSICOLOGIA
description The individualized teaching program for elemental reading and writing skills Learning to Read and Write in Small Steps has been systematically developed and improved for the last 25 years. Anecdotal observations suggested a reduction on the engagement of children in the program, indicating need to study motivational‟ variables in this context. The purpose of the present study was to analyze learning and task engagement of children during the application of Module 1 of the Program: 1) in its standard version (Standard-Procedure) and 2) in a token version, where points were added to a counter in correct trials exchanged for video access as supplementary consequences (Token- Procedure). Two experiments were conducted in an elementary public school with 21 children without or with incipient reading repertoire. In the Experiment 1, participants were nine boys and four girls with 8-10 years of age of the 3rd and 4th grade. Some participants were exposed to Standard-Procedure and others to Token-Procedure. Learning measures provided by the program and systematic observational measures (ten seconds partial interval recording) assessed performance. On-Task and Off-Task behaviors (participants‟) and Task Assistance and On-Task Request behaviors (experimenter‟s) were recorded in five sessions per participant. Results showed that all participants had meaningful gains in reading, spelling and equivalence performance, with teaching and recombination words, and the advancement in the procedure occurred within a number of sessions similarly to programmed teaching steps. An overall reduction trend of average latency to perform task along units was observed. The average latency in Token-Procedure was significantly lower than in Standard- Procedure. More promptness to perform task was interpreted as evidence of its greater evocative effectiveness, probably due its correlation with a more effective consequence. It suggests that the effects of standard consequences were supplemented by the introduction of points. All participants systematically engaged in the task during the teaching sessions and Off-Task behaviors occurred more variably and apparently without interfering in task performance, except in some cases. Off-task behaviors appeared to be mostly an artifact of the discrete-trial procedure, in which the task cannot occur continuously. The results of Experiment 1 led to Experiment 2, in which the parameters of point accumulation and of its exchange were adjusted (Token‟- Procedure). Participants were six boys and two girls, with 6-9 years, of 2nd or 3rd grade, with lower initial repertoire and were only partially exposed to Token‟- Procedure. Their performance differ significantly in relation to other participants, such as a higher number of repetitions of teaching steps and less gains of target repertoires, which impaired the observation of possible effects of Token‟-Procedure. Despite of the limitations of this study, its results indicate important directions for future studies on the determinants of task engagement of children in this Program.
publishDate 2014
dc.date.available.fl_str_mv 2014-12-01
2016-06-02T20:30:10Z
dc.date.issued.fl_str_mv 2014-10-17
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