Abstract

The current study describes the use of a procedure called the party, an all-day toilet training method using basic learning principles of “errorless” discrimination with 3 children with incontinence diagnosed with autism. At the start of treatment days, each participant was greeted and prompted to request the bathroom. After the child requested the bathroom, they were taken to the restroom, pants and underpants were removed, the child was seated on the toilet. While on-seat, participants were given liquids, less-preferred reinforcers and engaged in typical daily activities such as discrete trial training. When the child voided in the toilet, specific verbal praise and highly preferred edible reinforcers were delivered. The child was also given time off the toilet with their most preferred toys or items/activities. Time off-toilet subsequently increased with each in-toilet urination until the participants were spending the same amount of time off-toilet, out-of-bathroom, and in the classroom as their peers. Results for all three participants using 3 non-concurrent A-B phase designs indicated that the potty party procedure was effective in decreasing accidents to zero levels for all three participants and increased in-toilet urination for two. Future directions for research in toileting are discussed.

Highlights

  • Learning to use the toilet is a critical life skill (Francis, Mannion, & Leader, 2017; Kroger & Soren-Burnworth, 2009)

  • Almost all modern toileting protocols are based on the Rapid Toilet Training (RTT) method developed by Azrin and Foxx (1971)

  • It should not be surprising that an effective method for training discriminated responding from basic research (Terrace, 1963), would be effective for teaching discriminated responding in applied situations such as toilet training children with autism

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Summary

Introduction

Learning to use the toilet is a critical life skill (Francis, Mannion, & Leader, 2017; Kroger & Soren-Burnworth, 2009). Almost all modern toileting protocols are based on the Rapid Toilet Training (RTT) method developed by Azrin and Foxx (1971). In the RTT method, Azrin and Foxx describe toilet training as “a complex and lengthy chain of responses that includes social, physical and physiological stimuli and requires strong positive and negative operant consequences for its maintenance in that chain, rather and considering it as a simple associative muscular reflex to internal stimuli” These protocols generally include graduated guidance, reinforcement, scheduled sittings, hydration, and stimulus control procedures involving changing controlling antecedents from “other” (e.g., diapers) to toilet (Kroeger & Sorensen-Bunworth, 2009)

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