Lesson Starters

Video Modeling to Teach Home Maintenance Skills: Cleaning the Living Room

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Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of an iPad as a prompting device for teaching how to clean a living room to young adults with disabilities.

Settings and Materials

Settings

Two apartments in a living facility

Settings and Materials

iPad, Task analysis, Cleaning supplies, Dust rag

Content Taught

  • Using a task analysis, students will be taught how to properly clean a living room.

Teaching Procedures

  • Create a video using a video model to show the steps for completing the home maintenance task on and iPad (see Kellems et al., 2016 below).
  • Use the iPad video to teach each step of the task analysis.
  • Prompt students to turn on the iPad and watch the corresponding video (e.g., cleaning the living room).
  • Allow students to choose whether they would like to watch a video for all steps or just the steps they need extra support learning.
  • Guide students to complete the steps in the task analysis to ensure the home maintenance task is complete.
  • If the student does not begin the step within 5 seconds of viewing the video, verbally prompt the student to “do what they had viewed in the video.”

Task Analysis: Cleaning the Living Room

  1. Get supplies
  2. Turn off fireplace
  3. Dust TV
  4. Wipe off desk
  5. Clean craft table
  6. Dust air conditioner
  7. Wipe off fireplace
  8. Take out recycling

Evaluation

Students performance is evaluated by calculating a percentage of the steps the student completed independently. A step is considered completed independently if the student began the task within 5 seconds and completed it correctly. If a student scores 80% for three consecutive sessions they can move on to the next home maintenance skill.

Lesson Starter Based On:

For Developing a Video Model:

Kellems, R. O., Mourra, K., Morgan, R. L., Riesen, T., Glasgow, M., & Huddleston, R. (2016). Video modeling and prompting in practice: Teaching cooking skills. Career Development and Transition for Exceptional Individuals, 39(3), 185-190.
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