ACHIEVEMENT PLACE: EXPERIMENTS IN SELF‐GOVERNMENT WITH PRE‐DELINQUENTS1
- 1 March 1973
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis
- Vol. 6 (1), 31-47
- https://doi.org/10.1901/jaba.1973.6-31
Abstract
One of the goals of many treatment programs for pre-delinquent youths is the development of the skills involved in the democratic decision-making process. At Achievement Place, one aspect of the treatment program is a semi-self-government system whereby the seven pre-delinquent youths can democratically establish many of their own rules of behavior, monitor their peers' behavior to detect violations of their rules, and conduct a “trial” to determine a rule violator's guilt or innocence, and to determine the consequences for a youth who violates a rule. Two experiments were carried out to determine the role of some of the procedures in the boys' participation in the self-government system. Experiment I showed that more boys participated in the discussion of consequences for a rule violation when they had complete responsibility for setting the consequence during the trials than when the teaching-parents set the consequence for each rule violation before the trial. An analysis of the rule violations in this experiment indicated that the boys in Achievement Place reported more of the rule violations that resulted in trials than reported by the teaching-parents or school personnel. The boys reported rule violations that occurred in the community and school as well as at Achievement Place, including most of the serious rule violations that came to the attention of the teaching-parents. In Experiment II, the results indicated that more trials were called when the teaching-parents were responsible for calling trials on rule violations reported by the peers than when the boys were responsible for calling trials. When the youths earned points for calling trials the average number of trials per day increased, but more trivial rule violations were reported. These results suggest that aspects of the democratic decision-making process in a small group of pre-delinquents can be studied and variables that affect participation can be identified and evaluated.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- ACHIEVEMENT PLACE: THE RELIABILITY OF SELF‐REPORTING AND PEER‐REPORTING AND THEIR EFFECTS ON BEHAVIOR1,2Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1972
- MODIFICATION OF ARTICULATION ERRORS OF PRE‐DELINQUENTS BY THEIR PEERS1,2Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1971
- ACHIEVEMENT PLACE: MODIFICATION OF THE BEHAVIORS OF PRE‐DELINQUENT BOYS WITHIN A TOKEN ECONOMY1,2Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1971
- HOME‐BASED REINFORCEMENT AND THE MODIFICATION OF PRE‐DELINQUENTS' CLASSROOM BEHAVIOR1Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1970
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- ACHIEVEMENT PLACE: TOKEN REINFORCEMENT PROCEDURES IN A HOME‐STYLE REHABILITATION SETTING FOR “PREDELINQUENT” BOYS1Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1968