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Degrees of specificity in task analysis.

K Crist, R T Walls, P A Haught

    American Journal of Mental Deficiency
    |July 1, 1984
    PubMed
    Summary
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    Shorter task analysis in vocational rehabilitation led to more errors for individuals with intellectual disabilities, especially those with severe intellectual disability. Training time remained consistent across all task specificity levels.

    Area of Science:

    • Vocational Rehabilitation
    • Intellectual Disability Research
    • Task Analysis Efficacy

    Background:

    • Task analysis is a critical component of vocational rehabilitation for individuals with intellectual disabilities.
    • The optimal level of specificity in task analysis for this population remains an area for investigation.
    • Understanding how different task analysis granularities impact learning and error rates is crucial for effective training.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To investigate the impact of varying task-analysis specificity (long, medium, short) on training outcomes for individuals with intellectual disabilities.
    • To determine if the degree of intellectual disability (mild, moderate, severe) influences the effectiveness of different task-analysis levels.
    • To assess the relationship between task-analysis specificity, training errors, and training time.

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    Main Methods:

    • Employed a counterbalanced design to teach three distinct assembly tasks (lawn mower engine, electric drill, carburetor).
    • Utilized three levels of task-analysis specificity: long (28 steps), medium (14 steps), and short (7 steps).
    • Recruited participants with mild, moderate, and severe intellectual disabilities for vocational rehabilitation training.

    Main Results:

    • The short task analysis condition resulted in a higher number of errors during training across all participants.
    • No significant differences in training time were observed between the different task-analysis specificity levels.
    • A significant interaction effect was found between the level of intellectual disability and the treatment condition, with severely intellectually disabled individuals committing the most errors under the short task-analysis condition.

    Conclusions:

    • While shorter task analyses may increase errors, they do not necessarily prolong training duration for individuals with intellectual disabilities.
    • Severely intellectually disabled individuals appear particularly susceptible to increased errors when task analyses are less specific.
    • Tailoring task-analysis specificity to the individual's cognitive level is recommended for optimizing vocational rehabilitation outcomes.