Foundational Principles and Empirical Basis of Behaviour Analysis
Overview
The following global ideas guide the design and delivery of this course:
- The philosophy of behaviourism is grounded in observable facts.
- The overarching goal of ABA is to enrich the quality of people’s lives.
- Before implementing behavioural principles and procedures on others, students of behaviour analysis should first be able to identify behavioural principles and procedures in their own everyday behaviour.
- Students employ direct observation methods to collect data on their own everyday behaviour.
- Students relate the causes of their own behaviour as embedded within environmental events.
- A personal understanding of ABA procedures and their effects on individuals informs subsequent professional ethical practice.
- Contemporary best-practice behaviour analysis is predicated on:
- Peer-reviewed, evidenced-based research.
- Interventions that are thoroughly individualized via detailed assessment processes.
- A contextual “Goodness of Fit” with families, schools and other clients.
- Contemporary professional ethics.
- Applied behaviour analysis is the most evidenced-supported clinical methodology for individuals with disabilities.
- Lecture, discussion boards, video, guest speakers, group activities, readings, self-directed online learning.
- Online: any combination of online methods such as but not limited to discussion boards, readings, video, video lectures, zoom/telephone consultations etc.
This is a graded course. Course assessment may include the following: Class presentations, quizzes, exams, fluency tests, and literature reviews.
Instructors may use a student’s record of attendance and/or level of active participation as part of the student’s graded performance. Expectations and grade calculations regarding class attendance and participation will be clearly defined in the instructor's course outline/syllabus.
Upon successful completion of this course, the student will be able to:
- Articulate the philosophical foundation of behavior analysis including assumptions, dimensions, and goals.
- Ethically select and operationally define behaviours in need of change.
- Define, differentiate, and provide everyday examples of behavioural concepts, principles, and procedures including reinforcement and punishment (and their schedules), extinction, shaping, chaining, contingency contracting, token economy, and group contingencies.
- Conduct mock functional assessments using indirect, direct, and experimental procedures.
- Develop individualized interventions using reinforcement and extinction procedures.
- Articulate situations in which aversive procedures may and may not be ethically appropriate, best-practice, and clinically warranted procedures.
- Summarize single-subject research and visually analyze single-subject data including comparison, withdrawal/reversal, and multiple baseline designs.
- Identify data collection methods and accurately collect data using event, outcome, interval, and time sample recordings.
- Plot data and make data-based decisions using the standard celeration chart.
Textbooks and materials to be purchased by students. Consult the swagÂé¶ą Bookstore for the latest required textbooks and materials. Examples of textbooks and materials include individually assigned readings and/or books.
Requisites
Prerequisites
None
Corequisites
None
Equivalencies
None
Course Guidelines
Course Guidelines for previous years are viewable by selecting the version desired. If you took this course and do not see a listing for the starting semester / year of the course, consider the previous version as the applicable version.
Course Transfers
These are for current course guidelines only. For a full list of archived courses please see
Institution | Transfer details for DACS 4122 |
---|---|
Athabasca University (AU) | AU PSYC 3XX (3) |
Coast Mountain College (CMTN) | No credit |
Kwantlen Polytechnic University (KPU) | No credit |
LaSalle College Vancouver (LCV) | LCV SOC 4XX (3) |
Selkirk College (SELK) | No credit |
Trinity Western University (TWU) | TWU PSYC 3XX (3) |
University Canada West (UCW) | UCW SOSC 4XX (3) |
University of Northern BC (UNBC) | UNBC SOSC 4XX (3) |
Yorkville University (YVU) | YVU GES 3XXX (3) |
Course Offerings
Fall 2025
CRN | Days | Instructor | Status | More details |
---|---|---|---|---|
CRN
36622
|
Instructor last name
Athens
Instructor first name
Elizabeth
|
Course status
Open
|
DACS 4122 090 is an online asynchronous course restricted to DABA students. Other students admitted with department approval. It is recommended that students have access to a computer and high speed Internet. Live sessions to TBD.