With the hopes of getting involved in the education sector,
but mainly getting involved in education in rural India, I will be faced with
many problems. The most difficult of these to overcome will be to actually get
the students to show up to schools they are enrolled in. This is a common
problem in the rural districts especially among the girl child. This issue can
be resolved by numerous applied behavioral techniques.
These techniques are formed from the belief that behavior is
often affected by what comes after it. Two possibilities of behavior problems
is that behavior either occurs too much or happens too little. Applied behavior
analysis is interested in changing the frequency of a person’s behavior. In this
case, we are looking to increase the behavior, getting more children to come to
school.
Positive reinforcement can be used to increase the
attendance of students. The child eventually builds up a link between the
behavior and the reinforcer and changes behavior accordingly. A study by De Luca and Holborn (1992) showed
the success of using reinforcements by increasing the time spent exercising, by
obese boys, upon implementing a reinforcement schedule.
Studies by Banerjee and Duflo(2011) have shown that providing
incentives to students greatly increases attendance. For example, for every day
the child attends school, she can be given a sticker or a sweet or some small
gift that she likes. The student then knows that every time she comes to school
she will receive the gift. Thus she creates a link between her behavior and the
reinforcer. Eventually, the gift could be provided after a certain amount of
time. For instance, goals could be set for the student where she will receive a
gift if she attends 3 of 5 days in a week. The gift could them be given if her
attendance for the month is 80% or more and so on.
Other reinforcers in rural areas could be providing students
with a nutritious meal in schools. One method that has been proven to be
extremely effective is using money as a reinforcer. In many villages, the
mothers are given a fixed amount of money if they bring their children to
school. By this same logic, giving the student something they would enjoy would
be likely to increase attendance.
Negative reinforcement could also be used but in this case,
it would be easier to implement positive reinforcement. It is commonly the case
that students miss so much school that they find it difficult to catch-up. This
often makes them feel intellectually inferior, resulting in them staying away
from school. However, using positive reinforcement to get them to school and
also using it to increase their productivity in school will surely increase
overall attendance.
Maia Jasubhoy.
References:
Banerjee, A and Duflo, E (2011) Poor Economics.
De Luca, R. V and Holburn, S. W (1992) Effects of a variable-ratio reinforcement schedule with changing
criteria on exercise in obese and nonobese boys, Journal of Applied
Behavior Analysis. 1992, 25(3): 671–679.
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