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Dive into the research topics where Richard M. Kubina is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard M. Kubina.


Intervention In School And Clinic | 2006

Developing Reading Fluency With Repeated Reading

William J. Therrien; Richard M. Kubina

Repeated reading has gained popularity as a technique for helping students achieve reading fluency. It is widely implemented and can be used for students with and without disabilities. Repeated reading has several components that make it more efficient. This article shares those components and provides a framework for setting up and using repeated reading in the classroom.


The Analysis of Verbal Behavior | 2005

Using Transfer Procedures to Teach Tacts to a Child with Autism

Mary L Barbera; Richard M. Kubina

This applied study attempted to evaluate a combination of transfer procedures commonly used to teach tacts to children with autism. A receptive to echoic to tact transfer and an echoic to tact transfer procedure were combined during 5-min instructional sessions to teach tacts to a seven-year-old vocal child with autism. A multiple baseline design across three sets of ten tacts was used. Without the teaching procedure, the child acquired no target tacts. With the 5-min teaching procedure implemented first with Set 1 then with Sets 2 and 3, respectively, the child acquired thirty new tacts over sixty teaching sessions. The results have wide application for children with and without autism who need instruction to learn tacts.


Archive | 2010

Persuading students with emotional disabilities to write: a design study

Margo A. Mastropieri; Thomas E. Scruggs; Yojanna Cuenca-Sanchez; Nancy Irby; Sara Mills; Linda H. Mason; Richard M. Kubina

An exploratory study was undertaken to examine the implementation of strategy instruction in persuasive writing with a class of 10 adolescent students with severe emotional/behavioral disabilities (EBD). Several learner characteristics were observed to interact with curriculum and instructional variables. Modifications were made, on an ongoing basis, to respond to these student characteristics. After approximately four months of instruction, findings indicated that all students had mastered the components of effective persuasive essay writing, and performed competently on criterion writing measures, greatly different from performance at the beginning of instruction. Although the design of this investigation does not allow for definitive causal explanations, insights were gained regarding the interaction between EBD characteristics and strategy instruction. Implications for further research are discussed.


Exceptionality | 2005

Potential Applications of Behavioral Fluency for Students With Autism

Richard M. Kubina; Pamela S. Wolfe

Curricula for students with autism do not take into account levels of learning such as behavioral fluency. Behavioral fluency addresses accuracy as well as speed of response. We posit that fluency increases the functionality of skills for students with autism and should be systematically programmed into a curriculum. To discuss the application of fluency for students with autism, we present background related to response competence, critical learning outcomes associated with behavioral fluency, and how fluency fits into a hierarchy of learning. We apply the concept of behavioral fluency to individuals with autism and suggest that research continue.


The Analysis of Verbal Behavior | 2009

General Outcome Measures for Verbal Operants

Richard M. Kubina; Pamela S. Wolfe; Douglas E. Kostewicz

A general outcome measure (GOM) can be used to show progress towards a long-term goal. GOMs should sample domains of behavior across ages, be sensitive to change over time, be inexpensive and easy to use, and facilitate decision making. Skinner’s (1957) analysis of verbal behavior may benefit from the development of GOM. To develop GOM, we conducted a review of the literature on mands, tacts, echoics, and intraverbals. The four areas reviewed included (a) an examination of the participant’s response form (i.e., vocal or nonvocal), (b) the type of prompt used, (c) types of materials used, and (d) timing of responses or sessions. Based on the review of the literature, we developed GOM for mands and tacts. This paper attempts to bridge the concept of GOMs with Skinner’s analysis of verbal behavior.


Behavior and Social Issues | 2000

Fluency in Education

Richard M. Kubina; Rebecca S. Morrison


Reading Improvement | 2004

Multiple Baseline Designs: The Use of a Single-Case Experimental Design in Literacy Research

Richael Barger-Anderson; Joseph W. Domaracki; Nedra Kearney-Vakulick; Richard M. Kubina


Reading Improvement | 2007

The Importance of Context in Repeated Reading.

William J. Therrien; Richard M. Kubina


The behavior analyst today | 2004

Learning Channels and Verbal Behavior.

Fan-Yu Lin; Richard M. Kubina


Archive | 2011

Developing writing fluency for adolescents with disabilities

Linda H. Mason; Richard M. Kubina

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Fan-Yu Lin

Robert Morris University

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Linda H. Mason

Pennsylvania State University

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Pamela S. Wolfe

Pennsylvania State University

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Sara Mills

George Mason University

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