在滥用药物的失业成人工作技能培训计划中加强生产力。

Behavior analysis (Washington, D.C.) Pub Date : 2017-05-01 Epub Date: 2017-02-02 DOI:10.1037/bar0000077
Shrinidhi Subramaniam, Jeffrey J Everly, Kenneth Silverman
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引用次数: 8

摘要

长期失业的成年人可能受益于强化的工作技能培训;然而,培训项目并不总是可靠地让参与者掌握技能。本研究考察了在治疗性工作场所的工作技能培训项目中,代金券强化对绩效的影响。参与者是四名失业、滥用药物的成年人,他们通过参加针对打字技能的项目获得了现金券。参与者被暴露在两种不同的支付条件下,在受试者内部反转设计中,支付是否取决于表现。在生产率工资条件下,参与者每小时参加工作可获得8美元,外加绩效奖金。在基本工资条件下,参与者每小时的工资相当于之前的生产力工资条件下的总小时收入。参与者在基础条件下完成的打字程序比在生产力-工资条件下完成的打字程序少,但在工作室花费的时间以及打字的准确性和速度没有受到工资操纵的影响。所有参与者都表示更喜欢基本工资而不是生产力工资。明确加强生产力维持了培训计划的一致性,但生产力薪酬的更多方面需要改进,以便在失业和滥用药物的成年人中有效、高效和社会有效地实施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Reinforcing Productivity in a Job-Skills Training Program for Unemployed Substance-Abusing Adults.

Chronically unemployed adults may benefit from intensive job-skills training; however, training programs do not always reliably engage participants in mastering skills. This study examined effects of voucher reinforcement for performance on a job-skills training program in the therapeutic workplace. Participants were four unemployed, substance abusing adults who earned monetary vouchers for working on programs targeting typing skills. Participants were exposed to two payment conditions that differed in whether or not pay was dependent on performance in a within-subject reversal design. In the productivity-pay condition, participants earned $8.00 per hour for attending the workplace plus a bonus for performance. In the base-pay condition, participants were paid an hourly wage that was equivalent to the total hourly earnings from the previous productivity-pay condition. Participants completed less work on the typing programs in the base- than the productivity-pay condition, but the amount of time spent in the workroom and the accuracy and rate of typing were not affected by the pay manipulation. All participants reported preferring base pay over productivity pay. Explicit reinforcement of productivity maintains consistent work in training programs, but more aspects of productivity pay need to be refined for effective, efficient, and socially valid implementation with unemployed, substance-abusing adults.

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