B. F. Skinner (1904- 1990) is considered the father of
Behavior Analysis, the environmental approach that revolutionized the
understanding and treatment of behaviors. Throughout the years I’ve been
gathering some of his assertions regarding the field of behaviorism. Here are
some jewels, in my opinion.
“One can picture a good life by analyzing one’s feelings, but one can achieve it only by arranging environment contingencies.” 1
“The subject is always right.” 2
“Control the environment and you will see order in behavior.”
3
“Responses in relation to environments were precisely the
objects of study for those psychologists who called themselves behaviorists,
and Skinner counted himself among them. For Skinner, behavior was worthy of
study in its own right, not as a symptom to be used as a window on
physiological processes.” 4
“The task of a behavior analyst is to discover all the variables of which probability of response is a function. It is not an easy assignment, but it is at least an explicit one.” 5
This is what the behaviorist meant when she said “We haven’t
found it yet.” A good behaviorist does not rest on the assumption that there is
nothing to do because the child is “broken” or “there is something wrong with
him.”
It’s detective work. Understanding the variables that elicit
the behaviors involves searching the environment for evidence: tight routines
and structure, or lack of; physical setting, such as furniture, lighting,
ventilation, space, big or small groups, etc.; and last but not least the
behaviors of the people who interact with that child. How is the parent/teacher
giving directions? Are caregivers frustrated and reacting violently to the
child (yelling, threatening, punishing)? Are the curriculum, materials and
demands appropriate for this child? Are the tasks the child is expected to
complete too difficult, long and/or boring?
I worked with this family a few years ago. We eventually
discovered the main problem was homework. It used to take hours for this child
to complete his work, and a great deal of nagging and yelling from his mom.
When I asked him why he did not want to do homework, he responded without
hesitation “Because it’s boring.” And it was. Basically, it was “paper-pencil”
work. After consulting with the teacher the student was allowed to do homework
using the computer, a preferred activity of his. The problem was reduced by
about 75% overnight.
Of course it is not always overnight, but oftentimes simple
environmental changes suffice. For more information, see our blog “Behaviors
and Environment” at http://totaleducationsolutions.blogspot.com/search?q=Behaviors+and+the+environment
Ask the detectives, become one yourself. And stay away from
the excuse “nothing works.” Something works. You just haven’t found it yet.
Your child and your family will thank you.
Daniel Adatto, BCBA
1.
Skinner, Notebooks,
p.127 1983
2.
Skinner, 1948, p 240
3.
Skinner, 1967, p. 399
4. J.E.A.B- Nov 1999, 72–461 NUMBER 3. CHARLES CATANIA
AND VICTOR G. LATIES
5. J.E.A.B.- VOLUME 9, MAY, 1966- B. F. SKINNER