Learning How to Share with Peers Through ABA

Whether it is giving up a favorite toy during recess, splitting a snack or passing the crayons during an art project, sharing is a cornerstone of early childhood development.

It is the building block upon which children form meaningful friendships, collaborate in preschool classrooms and integrate smoothly into community environments. However, sharing requires a sophisticated blend of empathy, communication and emotional self-regulation.

For neurotypical children, learning to share is a years-long process filled with normal toddler tantrums and protective ownership. For children on the autism spectrum, this social expectation can be significantly more overwhelming.

Because autism spectrum disorder (ASD) inherently influences how a child processes social expectations and communicates their needs, sharing can feel like an illogical and stressful disruption to their environment. Fortunately, with the right behavioral support, children can learn to navigate these peer interactions confidently.

In this article, we will explore the underlying reasons why sharing is challenging for children with autism and how applied behavior analysis (ABA therapy) introduces structured, compassionate interventions to teach peer sharing.

Key Takeaways
  • Sharing is a developmental skill. It requires children to combine empathy, communication, flexibility, and emotional regulation, making it a gradual learning process.
  • Children with autism face unique sharing challenges. Difficulties interpreting social cues, adapting to changes in routine, and understanding temporary loss can make sharing feel stressful.
  • ABA therapy teaches sharing systematically. Therapists break sharing into manageable steps, using individualized treatment plans that gradually build confidence and social success.
  • Evidence-based strategies promote lasting progress. Visual schedules, Functional Communication Training (FCT), positive reinforcement, and gradual peer exposure help children develop sharing skills that transfer to everyday life.

Why is Sharing Extra Challenging for Children with Autism?

Sharing is a complex sequence of hidden social rules.

First, sharing requires a child to accurately interpret peer behavior. A child with autism may struggle to notice when a classmate is reaching out for an item or indicating a desire to play together.

Without clear communication, a peer’s approach can feel sudden or invasive.

Second, sharing involves rigid thinking versus flexibility. Many autistic children find comfort in predictability and routine.

If a child has a highly specific plan for how they want to build a block tower, an unexpected request to share those blocks disrupts that mental script, causing intense distress or frustration.

Finally, there is the challenge of emotional regulation and understanding temporary loss. When a child with ASD is asked to hand over a high-preference toy, they may not immediately internalize that the item will eventually return to them.

To them, giving the toy to a peer feels final, triggering a natural protective instinct to preserve their preferred routine.

Sharing Challenge How ABA Therapy Helps
Difficulty recognizing when a peer wants to play or share. Therapists teach children to recognize social cues and practice responding appropriately through structured activities.
Strong preference for routines and predictable play. Gradual exposure to sharing activities helps children build flexibility without becoming overwhelmed.
Anxiety about temporarily giving up a favorite toy. Visual schedules and turn-taking boards show that sharing is temporary and the item will be returned.
Difficulty expressing needs or requesting another turn. Functional Communication Training (FCT) teaches children to request turns, ask for more time, or communicate boundaries appropriately.
Emotional frustration during peer interactions. Positive reinforcement and individualized skill-building encourage calm, successful sharing experiences.

How Does ABA Therapy Approach Sharing with Peers?

ABA therapy addresses sharing by removing the guesswork. Rather than expecting a child to understand a vague command such as “be nice and share,” a Board Certified Behavior Analyst (BCBA) and Registered Behavior Technicians (RBTs) break sharing down into objective, actionable and measurable skill components.

Every ABA treatment plan begins with an individual assessment of the child’s current baseline. A child who exhibits physical aggression or elopement when a toy is touched requires a completely different starting point than a child who simply ignores peers.

By looking at data collected across sessions, the clinical team tailors the program to build tolerance progressively.

Initially, a therapist might teach a child to share with a trusted adult in a highly controlled, low-stress environment. Once the child learns that sharing results in predictable outcomes and positive interactions, the therapist systematically introduces peers into the environment.

This phased approach prevents the child from feeling overwhelmed so that every step forward is built on a solid foundation of emotional regulation and trust.

Why Sharing Can Be Challenging Explanation
Understanding Social Cues Children with autism may have difficulty recognizing when peers want to join an activity or borrow a toy.
Need for Predictability Unexpected interruptions to a preferred activity or routine can cause stress and resistance.
Emotional Regulation Giving up a favorite item may feel permanent, making sharing emotionally overwhelming.
Communication Difficulties Limited communication skills can make it difficult to request turns, explain preferences, or negotiate with peers.

Key Strategies for Mastering Peer Sharing

Helping a child master sharing involves pairing empathy with evidence-based behavioral strategies. ABA therapists utilize several evidence-based tools to help children transition from protective ownership to cooperative play.

Visual Schedules

Abstract time blocks can provoke anxiety. Therapists frequently use visual boards that cleanly lay out expectations, such as a “First [Peer’s Name], Then [Child’s Name]” placard.

Seeing a physical, visual representation of the sharing cycle helps the child realize that their access to the toy hasn’t vanished forever, but has simply paused.

Functional Communication Training (FCT)

Sometimes, behavior outbursts occur during sharing because a child lacks the words to advocate for themselves. FCT teaches children to use verbal phrases, picture exchange systems (PECS) or AAC communication devices to say “Can I have a turn?” or “Two more minutes, please.”

Empowering a child to voice their boundaries reduces the need for problem behaviors.

Non-Contingent Reinforcement & Pairing

To make peer interactions pleasant, therapists make sure that the presence of a peer signals good things. When a child shares, they immediately gain high-quality positive reinforcement, such as enthusiastic verbal praise, a fun token or brief access to an even more exciting bonus activity.

Supporting Your Child’s Social Journey with Blue Gems ABA

Learning to share with peers is a major developmental milestone that directly influences a child’s ability to navigate classrooms, playdates and everyday social settings. Because every child on the autism spectrum interacts with the world differently, there is no one-size-fits-all approach to social skill development.

At Blue Gems ABA, our compassionate clinical teams specialize in creating individualized, data-driven treatment programs that honor your child’s unique personality while guiding them toward greater independence.

We continuously evaluate progress and work hand-in-hand with families so skills generalize from our therapy centers straight into real-world peer interactions.

To discover how we can help your child build meaningful connections and master essential social milestones, please contact us today.

Frequently Asked Questions
Why is sharing difficult for children with autism?

Children with autism may have difficulty interpreting social cues, adapting to unexpected changes, and understanding that sharing is temporary, making peer interactions more challenging.

How does ABA therapy teach children to share?

ABA therapy breaks sharing into small, teachable steps, using modeling, structured practice, positive reinforcement, and gradual peer interactions.

What is Functional Communication Training (FCT)?

FCT helps children communicate their needs appropriately by teaching phrases, picture systems, or AAC devices to request turns or ask for more time.

Can parents practice sharing skills at home?

Yes. Parents can encourage turn-taking during games, use visual supports, praise successful sharing, and maintain predictable routines for practice.

How long does it take for a child to learn sharing skills?

Every child progresses at their own pace. Consistent practice, individualized ABA therapy, and family involvement help children steadily build confidence and social independence.