Abstract

Traditional techniques and pedagogies of higher education institutions often fail to provide students with optimal arrangements for learning. Interteaching introduces a beneficial way to arrange learning in the college classroom and mitigates resistance towards earlier behavior analytic educational systems. A multielement design was used to compare three conditions in an undergraduate research methods class: (a) lecture, (b) interteaching with points available for completion of preparation guides, and (c) interteaching with no points provided for the completion of preparation guides. Results showed that interteaching conditions with or without points produced higher quiz scores as compared to lecture. Approximately three times as many students turned in preparation guides when points were available for doing so. Interteaching conditions also lead to higher rates of student participation.

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