EFFECTS OF REINFORCEMENT ON CHILDREN'S ACADEMIC BEHAVIOR AS A FUNCTION OF SELF‐DETERMINED AND EXTERNALLY IMPOSED CONTINGENCIES1
- 1 June 1973
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis
- Vol. 6 (2), 241-250
- https://doi.org/10.1901/jaba.1973.6-241
Abstract
This experiment was designed to compare the effects of contingent reinforcement under conditions of self-determined and externally imposed performance standards. A major purpose was to examine the maintenance of self-imposed performance standards over time. Children in one contingent reinforcement condition self-determined their academic performance standards. The same performance standards were externally imposed upon children in a second contingent reinforcement condition who were yoked to subjects in the first condition. Children in a no-reinforcement control condition performed in the absence of external reward. Behavioral productivity of the self-determination condition was greater than that of the no-reinforcement condition. Further, no attenuation of the efficacy of contingent reinforcement occurred when performance standards were self-determined rather than externally imposed. Over six sessions, children became progressively more lenient in their self-imposed performance demands in the absence of social surveillance.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Effects of the value of contingent self-administered and noncontingent externally imposed reward on children’s behavioral productivityPsychonomic Science, 1970
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