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Montrose Wolf

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Nationality
  
American


Name
  
Montrose Wolf

Montrose Wolf httpsbehavioranalysishistorypbworkscomf1422

Born
  
29 May 1935Houston, Texas (
1935-05-29
)

Institutions
  
University of WashingtonArizona State UniversityKansas University

Known for
  
Teaching Family ModelJournal of Applied Behavior Analysis

Influences
  
B.F. SkinnerJack Michael

Died
  
March 19, 2004, Lawrence, Kansas, United States

Fields
  
Psychology, Linguistics, Applied behavior analysis

Influenced by
  
B. F. Skinner, Jack Michael

Montrose Madison Wolf (May 29, 1935 – March 19, 2004) was an American psychologist. He developed the technique of "time-out" as a learning tool to shape behavior in children in the 1960s. He was a leader in creating the discipline of problem-solving, real-world psychological research known as applied behavior analysis. He created the Teaching Family Model as an intervention program for dealing with juvenile delinquents. He helped replicate this model almost 800 times. In the field of applied behavior analysis he introduced and named the concept of social validity.

Donald Baer, Sidney W. Bijou, Todd Risley, James Sherman, and Wolf established the Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, in 1968 as a peer-reviewed journal publishing research about experimental analysis of behavior and its practical applications.

References

Montrose Wolf Wikipedia