Ecological Assessment of Child Problem Behavior: A Clinical Package for Home, School, and Institutional Settings discusses sampling methods to assess the problem child's behavioral interactions in the environment of the real world. The book focuses on the following facets of ecological assessment: (1) format of interview for the stage during the observational sampling procedures; (2) use of an observational procedure by adult members of the child's natural community; and (3) the employment of a standardized category coding system. In general, the book deals with devising a standardized category codes that will be used in direct observations of a clinical nature. The book shows that investigators of various theoretical merits attempt to construct category systems to systematize coding behavior such as those of Heyns and Lippit (1954), of Baker and Wright (1955) or of McGrew (1972). The authors enumerate the category codes to describe different aspects of children's social environments and their common behaviors that result from these settings. Behavioral scientists, psychiatrists, child psychologists, students and professors in the sciences of human behavior, particularly concerning children, are encouraged to read this book.



Inhalt

Introduction
Category Codes

Training of the Clinician-Observer

Practice Scenarios

Clinical Use of the Package

Reliability and Validity Data for the Standardized Category Codes

Conclusion

Bibliography

Appendix

Titel
Ecological Assessment of Child Problem Behavior: A Clinical Package for Home, School, and Institutional Settings
Untertitel
Pergamon General Psychology Series
EAN
9781483187662
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
22.10.2013
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Wasserzeichen
Dateigrösse
9.32 MB
Anzahl Seiten
100