Question

Difficulty: medium. Skill: apply. Type: applied scenario.

Child is learning asking for a break, but performance changes depending on prompts and consequences. Which procedure best fits modeling procedures? The case file includes 8 recent sessions, 2 implementers, and 4 settings.

A
Use the descriptive label as the explanation and treatment target
B
Send the written protocol again without observing performance
C
Use modeling, instructions, or rules with practice and data showing the response contacts relevant contingencies in relation to child's asking for a break

Correct answer

D
Proceed informally because the team believes the action will help

Explanation

Answer C

The clue is the combination of caregiver notes plus one direct observation, dropping to the floor when demands are presented, and the required task: Modeling procedures. The case file includes 8 recent sessions, 2 implementers, and 4 settings. Use modeling, instructions, or rules with practice and data showing the response contacts relevant contingencies in relation to child's asking for a break is best because it answers that clue through modeling, instructions, and rules instead of treating the scenario as a generic behavior problem. On exam items like this, name the decision point first, then eliminate options that rely on one report, a label, a familiar protocol, or an action that skips the relevant data check.

Why this question is hard

Clue
Key scenario clue

The clue is the combination of caregiver notes plus one direct observation, dropping to the floor when demands are presented, and the required task: Modeling procedures. The case file includes 8 recent sessions, 2 implementers, and 4 settings.

Trap
Common trap

A label is not enough; the decision should be based on observable behavior and relevant variables.

Next
If you missed it, review Behavioral skills training

Then answer a few related scenarios before moving back to broad practice.

Why the other choices are weaker

A
Choice A

A label is not enough; the decision should be based on observable behavior and relevant variables.

B
Choice B

Written directions alone do not verify performance or correct implementation errors.

D
Choice D

Good intent does not replace consent, documentation, competence, or other safeguards.

Study tags

Modeling, instructions, and rulesModeling proceduresmodelinginstructions

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Question FAQ

What BCBA domain does this question cover?

This practice question is tagged to Behavior-Change Procedures. It also includes study tags for Modeling, instructions, and rules, Modeling procedures, modeling, instructions.

How should I review this practice question?

Answer the scenario before reading the explanation, compare your reasoning with the correct answer, then review why the distractors are weaker.

Is this an official BACB exam question?

No. This is an original study question for BCBA Scenario Tutor and is not an official BACB exam item.

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