Services

Applied Behavioral Analysis

What is ABA (Applied Behavioral Analysis)? 

  • gold-standard treatment for children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) or other developmental conditions. 

  • type of therapy that improves social, communication, and learning skills through reinforcement strategies. 

How does it work? 

ABA involves several phases, allowing for an approach that’s tailored to your child’s specific needs 

  1. Consultation and assessment 

First, you’ll want to consult with a therapist trained in ABA. The therapist will ask about your child’s strengths and abilities as well as things that challenge them. 

Also they’ll spend time interacting with your child to make observations about their behavior, communication level, and skills by using specific assessment called VB MAPP. It is a criterion-referenced assessment curriculum guide and skills tracking system designed specifically for children with autism and other individuals who demonstrate language delays. 

  1. Developing a plan 

Your child’s therapist will use their observations from the initial consultation and assessment to create a formal plan for therapy. This plan should align with your child’s unique needs and include concrete treatment goals. 

These goals generally relate to reducing problematic or harmful behaviors, such as tantrums or self-injury, and increasing or improving communication and other skills. 

The plan will also include specific strategies caregivers, teachers, and the therapist can use to achieve treatment goals. This helps to keep everyone who works with your child on the same page. 

  1. Caregiver training 

ABA also relies on parents and caregivers to help reinforce desired behaviors outside of therapy. 

Your child’s therapist will teach you and your child’s teachers about strategies that will help to reinforce the work they do in therapy. 

  1. Frequent evaluation 

ABA therapists try to uncover causes of certain behaviors to help your child change or improve them. Over the course of therapy, your child’s therapist may adapt their approach based on how your child responds to certain interventions. 

As long as your child continues treatment, their therapist will continue to monitor their progress and analyze which strategies are working and where your child may benefit from different treatment tactics. 

What’s the end goal? 

The goal of treatment depends largely on your child’s individual needs. 

However, ABA often results in children: 

  • showing more interest in people around them 

  • communicating with other people more effectively 

  • learning to ask for things they want (a certain toy or food, for example), clearly and specifically 

  • having more focus at school 

  • reducing or stopping self-harming behaviors 

  • having fewer tantrums or other outbursts 

What is ABA (Applied Behavioral Analysis)?

    gold-standard treatment for children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) or other developmental conditions.

    type of therapy that improves social, communication, and learning skills through reinforcement strategies.

How does it work?

ABA involves several phases, allowing for an approach that’s tailored to your child’s specific needs

    Consultation and assessment

First, you’ll want to consult with a therapist trained in ABA. The therapist will ask about your child’s strengths and abilities as well as things that challenge them.

Also they’ll spend time interacting with your child to make observations about their behavior, communication level, and skills by using specific assessment called VB MAPP. It is a criterion-referenced assessment curriculum guide and skills tracking system designed specifically for children with autism and other individuals who demonstrate language delays.

    Developing a plan

Your child’s therapist will use their observations from the initial consultation and assessment to create a formal plan for therapy. This plan should align with your child’s unique needs and include concrete treatment goals.

These goals generally relate to reducing problematic or harmful behaviors, such as tantrums or self-injury, and increasing or improving communication and other skills.

The plan will also include specific strategies caregivers, teachers, and the therapist can use to achieve treatment goals. This helps to keep everyone who works with your child on the same page.

    Caregiver training

ABA also relies on parents and caregivers to help reinforce desired behaviors outside of therapy.

Your child’s therapist will teach you and your child’s teachers about strategies that will help to reinforce the work they do in therapy.

    Frequent evaluation

ABA therapists try to uncover causes of certain behaviors to help your child change or improve them. Over the course of therapy, your child’s therapist may adapt their approach based on how your child responds to certain interventions.

As long as your child continues treatment, their therapist will continue to monitor their progress and analyze which strategies are working and where your child may benefit from different treatment tactics.

What’s the end goal?

The goal of treatment depends largely on your child’s individual needs.

However, ABA often results in children:

    showing more interest in people around them

    communicating with other people more effectively

    learning to ask for things they want (a certain toy or food, for example), clearly and specifically

    having more focus at school

    reducing or stopping self-harming behaviors

    having fewer tantrums or other outbursts

 

About ABA therapy — OCASG

What is ABA therapy