The Importance of Instructional Design – Part I

By Dr. Kerri Milyko, BCBA-D, LBA | CentralReach Director of Clinical Programming

This is the first part of a 2-part blog addressing the importance of instructional design. The first part sets the stage of why instructional design is important. The second part addresses how it is used in ABA and benefits from incorporating it.

Why Should We Care?
Instructional Design is an integral part of the role of a behavior analyst. Whether you are a professor, an organizational consultant, a supervisor of neurodivergent clients, working in the schools or academics, it shows up. It is in nearly everything we need to do in almost all roles we could serve. Instructional design can aid in forming quality undergraduate/graduate classes. It can lead to a robust training for a sales team. Instructional design is the first step in respecting your learner because you are setting them up for success before providing intervention.

Yet, training in instructional design is lacking or at best executed fast and loose. Sparingly, graduate programs address instructional design formally; however, most behavior analysts come into contact with ‘curriculum design’ or ‘program generation’ via supervisory experience. So, some behavior analysts practice pieces of design, but not scientifically, or precisely. And it becomes accessible enough and our learners progress enough that we don’t question the design.

I attended the Illinois Applied Behavior Analysis conference in February of 2020. One of the invited speakers, Dr. Rachel Taylor, mentioned the frightful Tricare study (Department of Defense, 2019). The authors of the study concluded that ABA did not produce any meaningful results. While the study has concerns that have been voiced by other behavior analysts, Dr. Taylor said, “What about the programming? How do we know the clients received quality programming?” (Taylor, 2020). Yes. Exactly. Hold on to this point - we’ll come back to it.

Quality Instructional Design Within A Curriculum
As we observe skills develop, we see how they explode, multiply. As young, early learners, we start with having a few skills. We hold our heads up, we roll over, we can turn our heads and look at things. Eventually, we start to stand alone, walk, point, mand (possibly via different modalities), feed ourselves to some extent, push, pull, laugh, follow some simple directions, respond in some manner (smile, attempt to sing, dance) to familiar songs, shows, people, toys, etc. We then start to pretend, share, engage in behaviors that suggest a notion of ‘ownership’, match and sort, tact, run, jump, climb, explore, catch, draw (without precision), attempt to be independent with some routines (e.g., brushing hair, brushing teeth, dressing), play for an extended period of time in a singular location, etc. As skills develop across a learner, it starts with just a few skills. Yet, as the learner develops and learns new skills, each acquisition yields not to just 1 new acquisition, but multiple skill acquisitions. And these new skills are skills that are across ‘domains’ or ‘content’ areas. We see skills in motor, language, social, adaptive, play, etc. emerge as the skills develop over time. It doesn’t grow as a long list of skills, it expands like a spider’s web.

This web is demonstrated in an element-compound analysis.

-K0j5ZAXGg8nUnHkUv51vbpwnD

In the figure above, the overarching compound (navy) is writes a capital letter with elements under it required to do this skill with accuracy and proficiency. However, we can see the element-compound relationship within the ‘gray’ skills as well. So while pincer grip is an element of writes a capital letter, it is also a compound that is made up of pinch and aim elements.

Yet curricula available to behavior analysts are not often designed in this manner. Many curricula present 2 scenarios: 1) there are no instructions on the progression of implementation or 2) the clinician is to implement programs linearly (sometimes within a content area, sometimes just linearly within the entire programming without regard to the content area). On one hand, these curricula do not want to be prescriptive - they yield the program discretion completely to the behavior analyst working with the client, which is as it should be. No one understands the variables and learning history of that client more than the behavior analyst working with the client. However, it also assumes that the behavior analyst has not only the experience but also the time to conduct element-compound analyses and create individualized programming for all of these programs.

Finally, a linear approach to curriculum generation is not individualized to the learner and dictates for the clinician to follow a linear progression across skills. This linear approach forces an unnatural progression across skills. For example, it forces the jump from motor to language to social skills abruptly without behavioral explanation of the transition or flow. This also proves to be a challenge when some skills require prerequisites across content areas. For example, plays simple ball games requires both motor skills (to manipulate the ball), language skills (tacting), and play skill (listing rules). As such, it requires multiple direct elements across content areas whereas it does not linearly extend from one skill or area.

Take Home Points

  • Instructional design will result in a web-like element-compound analysis instead of a linear progression across skills.
  • This allows for individual and logical flow across multiple curricular content areas to support learner success.
  • If a learner is not successful, evaluate the curriculum and its design.

Stay tuned for Part II of The Importance of Instructional Design!

References
Department of Defense. (2019). The Department of Defense comprehensive autism care demonstration quarterly report to congress second quarter, fiscal year 2019. https://www.altteaching.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/TRICARE-Autism-Report.pdf?fbclid=IwAR2IoxFQDGTAIT3GI-sUiDLlCH7WchjHEapect9zTMvUCyI_sOmWp3wbZsg

Taylor, R. [CABA Consulting]. 2020, February 25. Adult services: Listen up EIBI peeps! By Dr. Rachel Taylor, at ILABA [Video]. YouTube. https://youtu.be/s7bidyjGFaU

About the Author

Dr. Kerri Milyko, BCBA-D, LBA

CentralReach Director of Clinical Programming

As a graduate of the University of Florida and the University of Nevada, Reno, Dr. Kerri Milyko and her husband, Ethan, moved to Tampa, FL to open up Precision Teaching Learning Center in Tampa, FL. Precision TLC serves children of all ages with and without diagnoses and consults with local private schools for their exceptional students.

Through Precision TLC, Kerri is the Director of Development and Outreach in an effort to disseminate “Practical PT” for parents, teachers, and practitioners by providing consultation for training, curriculum, and intervention. She also has started another business venture with friends and business partners in Reno, NV: The Learning Consultants. Here, her role is Director of Research and Development where her team provides behavioral services through precision teaching to children with skill deficits and various diagnoses in home and clinic-based setting. They also provide business to business consultation on system-wide assessment and implementation to transform agencies who want to adopt precision teaching.

In Dr. Milyko’s effort to seek all possible reinforcers, she also teaches ABA-graduate classes at the University of West Florida and assists the director in designing courses to incorporate more PT-based, instructional design content in application and concept learning. She continues to be involved in research by supervising and contributing to masters’ theses and collaborative projects incorporating PT to unique areas of education and psychology. In 2019, she was also elected to serve 3 years on the Board of Directors for the Standard Celeration Society, and appointed by the governor of Nevada to serve on the first-ever Board of Applied Behavior Analysts to create ABA practice regulations for the state. Personally, Kerri values quality time with her three children, her husband, and dear friends. She loves wine and butter, true crime podcasts, and a good sci-fi novel while tinkering in her backyard.