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Monday
Mar222010

The Maintenance Fallacy

Keith, 

I'm taking the liberty of including the Notes audience in this email, as they will appreciate how articulately you've summarized the maintenance issues and the maintenance fallacy. 

We're running into the maintenance fallacy in our autism work now. It's assumed that the natural or subsequent educational environment will maintain the skills we're teaching the preschool autistic kids. But one of our gang, Nic Weatherly, did a dissertation whose results suggested otherwise, even for kids who stayed in our classroom. So now another student, Tialha Nover, is doing an OBM project to facilitate follow-up maintenance training to ensure that the kids keep their hard-learned skills. 

And I'm starting to think that most of our behavior-analytic autism curricula sort of have the maintenance fallacy built into them. I'm thinking that maybe we shouldn't be teaching any skill (e.g., matching to sample or receptive identification of pictures) unless it is the basis of or a component of the very next skill we're teaching. I'm thinking too often we're teaching skills because they're the skills they typically teach in regular or special-ed classrooms, without concern for the maintenance and immediate functionality of those specific skills. But it's hard to design a curriculum that meets those rigorous requirements--so hard it makes my brain hurt.

Keith, please keep me posted on your thoughts on maintenance etc.

Everyone, I'd really appreciated suggestions about existing autism curricula or parts of curricula where each skill carefully leads to and is a basis for or incorporated in the next skill and/or thoughts about how to design such a curriculum. 

Dick

===============

On Mar 22, 2010, at 10:11 AM, Miller, L Keith wrote:

Hi Dick,

Thanks for the wonderful response!  And sharing with me your Notes... 

I'm glad you brought up again the "Maintenance Fallacy."  You had also
raised the issue with me several years ago after the panel discussion on
survival --- and I promised to share my ideas someday.  

I tried to look up "Maintenance Fallacy" in the 5th Edition of your
textbook --- but without success.  However, I did read what you have to
say about Maintenance.

So help me out.  I think you mean by the Maintenance Fallacy the
assumption that a behavior, once established under researcher-delivered
consequences, will continue in the everyday world of the participant
without researcher-delivered consequences.  You also question the
assumption that the researcher can slowly fade their delivery of
consequences to achieve continued emission of the target behavior with
no researcher-delivered consequences.

At the same time, you leave open the possibility that the real world
might, without further researcher interference, deliver consequences
that will maintain some behaviors established through
researcher-delivered consequences --- that is, that a behavior trap for
that behavior may exist.  

I think that this is a vital issue.  Our field has made the assumption
for decades that all we have to do is establish a behavior that we value
and the world will take care of the rest.  It obviously hasn't worked.

Please correct or refine my understanding as needed.  Then I will see if
you agree that some of my programs have given us an approach to solving
the problem.

Keith

L. Keith Miller, Professor
Applied Behavioral Science
University of Kansas


-----Original Message-----
From: richard.malott@wmich.edu [mailto:richard.malott@wmich.edu] On
Behalf Of Dick Malott
Sent: Tuesday, March 02, 2010 7:03 PM
To: Miller, L Keith
Subject: Thanks

Keith,

I don't think I've ever received such a nice letter. It sure brings back
nice memories. At this point, my earliest memory is our standing on the
balcony of a Roger Ulrich, Division 25, APA hospitality, maybe in DC.
And of course your visit to Kzoo and my visit to your and Ocoee's
wonderful home; maybe Whaley was along on one of those trips. 

Perhaps my favorite thing about ABA is that it's full of a large  number
of dream chasers, chasing dreams in so many different areas. And you are
certainly one of my favorite dream chasers. 

I hope we finally get a chance at the next ABA to discuss how you've
managed to overcome the maintenance fallacy!

Thanks again, for your wonderful letter,

Dick

PS loved your Newsletter to; hope you keep me on your list.

 

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