Blogs

How ABA Therapy Changes as Children Mature

One of the best parts about applied behavior analysis (ABA therapy) is that it’s a highly personalized treatment plan. It is catered to each specific patient’s unique strength, challenges, preferences and needs so therapists can help target the most appropriate skills and behaviors for each child with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) they serve. As children […]

What to Do When Progress Stalls in ABA Therapy

Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) can make great strides with applied behavior analysis (ABA therapy). Over time and with targeted interventions that are personalized to them, children can improve their social and communication skills, learn daily life skills, modify behaviors and manage emotions as they seek to gain as much independence as possible. How […]

How ABA Therapists Decide Which Behaviors Not to Target

Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) may exhibit behaviors that their neurotypical peers do not. These can range from self-stimulatory such as excessive tapping of their feet, to repetitive behaviors such as rocking back and forth, to even self-harming behaviors such as banging their head. There are many possible underlying causes for these behaviors, including […]

Why ‘Busy Sessions’ Don’t Always Mean Effective ABA

As a parent of a child with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), you may be thrilled if you observe your child active and engaged in their applied behavior analysis (ABA therapy) sessions. From the outside looking in, constant activity, long hours and a lot of drills may seem like they are contributing to your child building […]

What Parents Misunderstand Most About ABA Data Graphs

Data is the foundation of applied behavior analysis (ABA therapy). As a science-based approach to learning and behavior, ABA therapy relies heavily on the collection and analysis of data so informed decisions can be made based on fact rather than conjecture. This approach to treatment helps effectuate positive outcomes for children with autism spectrum disorder […]

How Early Motor Delays Relate to Later Autism Diagnosis

Struggles with communication and social interactions are two of the most well-known symptoms of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Yet, these signs often don’t present themselves in children until they are out of the infant stage and would start to interact and communicate with others. Because of this, many children aren’t diagnosed with autism until they […]

Supporting School Fire Drills with ABA Strategies

Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) face many challenges in school environments that their neurotypical peers may not. In addition to social and communication deficits, they may also struggle with repetitive behaviors, restrictive interests and sensory sensitivities. With well-thought-out plans and approaches, inclusive classroom environments can be created to better support children on the autism […]

Why Some Autistic Toddlers Prefer Adults Over Children

Children spend the early parts of their life surrounded by adults. Even if they have other siblings in the house, adults are the ones they have meaningful interactions with every day — for feeding, changing, comforting and playing. At some point as the child gets older and begins to become more aware of their surroundings, […]

The Difference Between Speech Delay, Language Delay and Autism

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder that children are born with and that affects them for their entire lives. One of the hallmark symptoms of autism is a deficit in communication. Yet, autism is not the same thing as a child experiencing a delay in speech or language. In fact, speech delay, language […]

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