10.18130/V3HD7NS3C
Browder, Diane Marie
Diane Marie
Browder
University of Virginia
A comparison of a stimulus prompt and a response prompt with four fading procedures to teach sight words to the moderately and severely retarded
University of Virginia
1981
Dissertation
People with mental disabilities -- Education
Reading -- Aids and devices
Reading -- Research
Snell, Martha
Martha
Snell
University of Virginia
Renzaglia, Adelle M.
Adelle M.
Renzaglia
University of Virginia
Strang, Harold
Harold
Strang
University of Virginia
Ball, Donald W.
Donald W.
Ball
University of Virginia
1981
All rights reserved (no additional license for public reuse)
A comparison was made between a stimulus prompt (picture) and a response prompt (verbal model) to teach functional sight words to 80 institutionalized retarded adults. The four prompting/fading procedures were: 1. Graphic Picture Fading (reducing the brightness and clarity of a picture prompt), 2. Delay Picture Fading (delaying the picture prompt by a few seconds), 3. Delay Word Fading (delaying the verbal model), and 4. Volume Word Fading (reducing the volume of the verbal model). A review of attention theory and errorless learning research supported using prompts with fading procedures with the retarded.
Twenty subjects were assigned to each of the four procedures to teach two lists of four words. An acquisition test was given after training on each list. A retention test was given after training both lists. Also noted were number of errors and instructional time. A mixed design ANOVA (procedures by tests) was employed to test the effect of procedure on acquisition and retention of sight words. Two separate one way ANOVA were used to assess the effect of procedures on errors and instructional time. Tukey's HSD post hoc test was used to test for differences between means. Also, all. possible Pearson Product Moment correlations were computed for pairs of the independent and dependent variables.
The major results obtained were:
1. A significant difference existed between groups on number of sight words acquired and retained (p< .05). The order of this difference was: Delay Word > Delay Picture >,
Graphic Picture and Volume Word (p <..05). Also, all group means were significantly lower on retention than acquisition (p< .05). An interaction existed between procedures and tests because the groups who acquired more words lost more words on the retention test (p < .05).
2. No differences existed between groups in errors.
Errors did not correlate with acquisition but did correlate
with retention (p < .05).
3. A significant difference existed between groups in instructional time (p < .01) and the order of this difference was: Delay Picture > Volume Word and Delay Word '>, Graphic Picture (p < .05). Instructional time negatively correlated with test performance (p < .01).
These results were related to attention theory and errorless learning. Several confounding variables competed with these theories in explaining the results which raised questions for future research. Also, recommendations were given for classroom applications of the Word Delay fading procedure.