
"If the application of behavioral techniques does not produce large enough effects for practical value, then the application has failed. Practical value is whatever you define as meaningful for your child's life."
"The program should be changing behavior in the situations your child actually lives in, not just performing well under controlled conditions."
"Quality ABA requires data from home, from school, from the community. Data collected only at the clinic is insufficient."
Applied behavior analysis (ABA) is defined as an outcome-based intervention that should produce meaningful changes in a child's life. The standard for success is practical value, which refers to significant behavioral changes outside of clinical settings. Parents should expect ABA to make a real difference and should engage with their child's BCBA to review outcome data. Effective ABA requires data collection from various environments, including home, school, and community, to ensure that the program is impactful in real-world situations.
Read at Psychology Today
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