1st Edition

Behavior Therapy with Children Volume 1

Edited By Anthony M. Graziano Copyright 1971
    472 Pages
    by Routledge

    472 Pages
    by Routledge

    This consummately well-organized survey brings together the latest and most meaningful writings in behavior therapy with children. Dealing with a variety of childhood behavior problems, it includes theory, evaluation, and application of behavior therapy in terms relevant to the interests of students and professionals in psychology, social work, psychiatry, and education.

    Individual sections that focus on psychotic children, anti-social or delinquent behavior, mild behavior problems, and the training of parents and other nontraditional therapists follow a historical perspective on the concept of behavior therapy. Specific behavioral approaches are provided, with evaluation of the techniques involved.

    Ranging from the applied clinical level to critical reviews of the field of behavior therapy, this book provides an authoritative and totally up-to-date discussion of the major behavior modification approaches as applied to children. Intended as a textbook in advanced undergraduate and graduate courses in psychology, psychiatry, social work, and education, it will be equally valuable to all professional and paraprofessionals working with the young and seeking definitive information on the use of behavior modification techniques in their work.

    Animism and Modern Psychotherapy; 1: From the Laboratory to the Clinic; 1: Transition from Animal Laboratory to Clinic; 2: Arbitrary and Natural Reinforcement; 3: What Behavioral Engineering Is; 4: A Program of Research in Behavioral Electronics; 5: Behavior Therapy with Children: A Review and Evaluation of Research Methodology; 2: Behavioral Approaches to Mental Retardation; 6: Operant Conditioning of Social Behaviors in Severely Retarded Patients; 7: Operant Conditioning in Toilet Training of Severely Retarded Boys; 8: Operant Learning Theory and Nursing Care of the Retarded Child; 9: Teaching of Self-help Skills to Profoundly Retarded Patients; 10: Stair Ascending-Descending Behavior in Trainable Retarded Preschoolers; 11: Behavior Therapy with High Level, Institutionalized, Retarded Adolescents; 3: Modification of Psychotic Behavior; 12: Behavior Modification and Childhood Psychoses; 13: Aversive Control of Self-injurious Behavior in a Psychotic Boy; 14: Acquisition of Imitative Speech by Schizophrenic Children; 15: Teaching Speech to an Autistic Child through Operant Conditioning; 16: Behavior Therapy for Stuttering in a Schizophrenic Child; 17: A Social Learning Therapy Program with an Autistic Child; 18: Programmed Psychotherapy; 19: Programmed Relaxation and Reciprocal Inhibition with Psychotic Children; 20: Operant Conditioning of Schizophrenic Children; 4: Modification of Antisocial Behavior; 21: Systematic Socialization: A Programmed Environment for the Habilitation of Antisocial Retardates; 22: Short-Term Operant Conditioning of Adolescent Offenders on Socially Relevant Variables; 23: An Operant Conditioning Program in a Juvenile Detention Facility; 24: Use of Behavioral Techniques in a Case of Compulsive Stealing; 25: Comments on Wetzel’s Treatment of a Case of Compulsive Stealing; 26: The Use of Stimulus Satiation in the Elimination of Juvenile Fire-Setting Behavior; 5: Behavioral Approaches to School and Mild Conduct Problems; 27: A Nontalking Child in Kindergarten; 28: Classical and Operant Factors in the Treatment of a School Phobia; 29: A Comparison of Conditioning and Psychotherapy in the Treatment of Functional Enuresis; 30: Behavior Modification for a Child with Multiple Problem Behaviors; 31: A Behavior Modification Technique for the Hyperactive Child; 32: Effects of Social Reinforcement on Operant Crying; 33: Token Reinforcement to Increase Singing Participation in Nursery School Children; 6: Some Implications of Behavior Modification Concepts: The New Therapists; 34: The Major Concepts Taught to Behavior Therapy Trainees; 35: Training Behavior Therapists; 36: Teaching Behavioral Principles to Parents of Disturbed Children; 37: Mothers as Behavior Therapists for their own Children; 38: Eliminating a Child’s Scratching by Training the Mother in Reinforcement Procedures; 39: Behavior Therapy Treatment Approach to a Psychogenic Seizure Case

    Biography

    Anthony M. Graziano