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J Appl Behav Anal. 1969 Spring; 2(1): 49–53.
doi: 10.1901/jaba.1969.2-49.
PMCID: PMC1311036
Academic response rate as a function of teacher- and self-imposed contingencies1
Thomas C. Lovitt and Karen A. Curtiss
University of Washington
1Reprints may be obtained from Thomas C. Lovitt, Mental Retardation and Child Development Center, University of Washington, 4701 24th Ave. N.E., Seattle, Washington 98105.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to assess the effects of the contingency manager (teacher or pupil) on a pupil's academic response rate. The results of two such experiments disclosed that higher academic rates occurred when the pupil arranged the contingency requirements than when the teacher specified them. A third study manipulated only reinforcement magnitude to ascertain whether amount of reinforcement had interacted with pupil-specified contingencies to produce the increase in academic response rate. The latter findings revealed that the contingency manager, not reinforcement magnitude, accounted for this subject's gain in performance.
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