ABA Therapy Techniques: Methods Explained for Parents
Learn about DTT, NET, PRT, and other ABA therapy techniques. Understand which methods therapists use and why they work.
Shamay Selim, M.Ed., BCBA
Clinical Director at Foundations Autism
Understanding ABA Therapy Techniques
ABA therapy uses a variety of evidence-based techniques to teach skills and address challenging behaviors. Understanding these methods can help you be a more informed participant in your child's therapy. This guide explains the most common ABA techniques, how they work, and when they're used.
Teaching Techniques
Discrete Trial Training (DTT)
DTT is one of the foundational ABA teaching methods:
- What it is: A structured teaching format where skills are broken into small steps and taught through repeated practice
- How it works: Each trial has a clear beginning (instruction), middle (child's response), and end (consequence/feedback)
- When it's used: Teaching new skills, building vocabulary, learning academic concepts
A DTT Trial Includes:
- Antecedent: The therapist presents an instruction or question
- Behavior: The child responds
- Consequence: The therapist provides reinforcement for correct responses or correction for errors
- Inter-trial interval: Brief pause before the next trial
Example: Teaching colors - "Touch blue" (instruction) → Child touches blue → "Great job!" + preferred item (reinforcement)
Natural Environment Training (NET)
NET teaches skills in everyday contexts:
- What it is: Teaching that occurs in natural settings using the child's motivation and interests
- How it works: Creating learning opportunities within play and daily activities
- When it's used: Promoting generalization, teaching social skills, building communication in context
Key Features:
- Child-led activities based on their interests
- Learning happens in various locations (home, playground, community)
- Skills are practiced in relevant contexts
- Natural consequences reinforce behavior
Example: During play, therapist holds a desired toy and waits for the child to request it, teaching functional communication.
Pivotal Response Treatment (PRT)
PRT targets pivotal developmental areas:
- What it is: A naturalistic approach focusing on motivation, self-initiation, responding to multiple cues, and self-management
- How it works: Using child choice and natural reinforcers to teach pivotal skills that affect many areas of development
- When it's used: Building motivation for learning, increasing social initiations, improving self-regulation
Pivotal Areas:
- Motivation to learn
- Self-initiation of communication
- Self-management skills
- Responding to multiple environmental cues
Verbal Behavior (VB)
VB focuses on the function of language:
- What it is: An approach to teaching language based on B.F. Skinner's analysis of verbal behavior
- How it works: Teaching language by function (requesting, labeling, answering, etc.) rather than just vocabulary
- When it's used: Building functional communication, teaching children to use language purposefully
Types of Verbal Operants:
- Mand: Requests ("I want cookie")
- Tact: Labels ("That's a dog")
- Echoic: Repeating what's heard
- Intraverbal: Conversational responses ("What's your name?" → "John")
Incidental Teaching
Learning through naturally occurring opportunities:
- What it is: Capitalizing on child-initiated interactions to teach language and social skills
- How it works: When a child shows interest, the therapist creates a learning opportunity
- When it's used: Increasing spontaneous communication, teaching in natural contexts
Example: Child reaches for a snack → Therapist prompts "I want crackers" → Child says it → Receives crackers
Behavior Support Techniques
Functional Behavior Assessment (FBA)
Understanding why behaviors occur:
- What it is: A systematic process to identify the purpose or function of a behavior
- How it works: Gathering information through observation, interviews, and data analysis
- When it's used: Before developing behavior intervention plans
Common Functions of Behavior:
- Attention: To get attention from others
- Escape: To avoid something unpleasant
- Access: To obtain something desired
- Sensory: For automatic reinforcement (feels good)
Antecedent Interventions
Preventing problems before they occur:
- What it is: Modifying the environment or circumstances to prevent challenging behaviors
- How it works: Changing what happens before behavior occurs
- When it's used: Proactively reducing behavior problems
Examples:
- Visual schedules to prepare for transitions
- Offering choices to increase cooperation
- Modifying task difficulty to prevent frustration
- Using first-then boards ("First work, then play")
Differential Reinforcement
Reinforcing appropriate behaviors while reducing challenging ones:
- DRA (Differential Reinforcement of Alternative Behavior): Reinforcing a specific appropriate alternative
- DRI (Differential Reinforcement of Incompatible Behavior): Reinforcing behavior that can't occur at the same time as the problem behavior
- DRO (Differential Reinforcement of Other Behavior): Reinforcing the absence of problem behavior
Example: Instead of hitting to get attention (problem), teaching the child to tap a shoulder (appropriate alternative) and reinforcing that.
Extinction
Reducing behaviors by removing reinforcement:
- What it is: No longer providing the reinforcement that maintains a behavior
- How it works: The behavior decreases when it stops working
- Important note: Must be used carefully and ethically, often combined with teaching alternatives
Caution: Extinction can initially cause an "extinction burst" where behavior temporarily worsens before improving.
Prompting and Fading
Types of Prompts
Prompts are hints or assistance to help a child respond correctly:
- Physical prompts: Hand-over-hand assistance or gentle guidance
- Gestural prompts: Pointing or other gestures
- Verbal prompts: Telling the child what to do
- Visual prompts: Pictures, written words, or demonstrations
- Positional prompts: Placing correct items closer
Prompt Fading
Gradually reducing assistance for independence:
- Most-to-least: Start with full support, gradually reduce
- Least-to-most: Start with minimal support, add more only if needed
- Time delay: Wait before prompting to give the child a chance to respond independently
Reinforcement Strategies
Types of Reinforcement
- Primary reinforcers: Things naturally motivating (food, sensory experiences)
- Secondary reinforcers: Learned reinforcers (tokens, praise, privileges)
- Social reinforcement: Attention, praise, interaction
- Activity reinforcement: Access to preferred activities
Token Economies
Structured reinforcement systems:
- Child earns tokens for target behaviors
- Tokens are exchanged for backup reinforcers
- Teaches delayed gratification
- Can be faded over time
Data Collection and Analysis
Why Data Matters
- Tracks progress objectively
- Guides treatment decisions
- Identifies what's working
- Demonstrates outcomes
Common Data Methods
- Frequency/rate: How often behavior occurs
- Duration: How long behavior lasts
- Latency: Time between instruction and response
- Percentage correct: Accuracy of responses
- ABC data: Antecedent-Behavior-Consequence recording
Choosing the Right Techniques
A BCBA will select techniques based on:
- Your child's learning style and preferences
- The specific skills being taught
- Assessment results and baseline data
- Where skills need to be used (generalization)
- Your family's values and priorities
Modern ABA Emphasizes:
- Combining structured and naturalistic approaches
- Following the child's interests and motivation
- Teaching functional, meaningful skills
- Respecting the child's emotional wellbeing
- Involving families in the process
Understanding these techniques helps you participate more effectively in your child's therapy and ask informed questions about their treatment plan.
Got questions?
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about this topic.
Discrete Trial Training (DTT) and Natural Environment Training (NET) are the most commonly used ABA techniques. DTT uses structured, repeated trials to teach specific skills, while NET teaches skills in natural settings using the child's interests. Most modern ABA programs use a combination of both approaches.
DTT (Discrete Trial Training) is a structured technique where skills are taught through repeated trials at a table or designated area. NET (Natural Environment Training) teaches skills in everyday settings using naturally occurring opportunities and the child's motivation. DTT is more controlled and efficient for teaching new skills, while NET promotes better generalization.
ABA therapists use techniques like positive reinforcement, prompting and fading, functional behavior assessment, antecedent modifications, differential reinforcement, and teaching replacement behaviors. The specific techniques depend on the behavior being addressed and what assessment reveals about why the behavior occurs.
A Board Certified Behavior Analyst (BCBA) will assess your child and recommend appropriate techniques based on their learning style, current skills, goals, and preferences. Most children benefit from a combination of techniques. Good ABA programs individualize the approach and adjust based on how your child responds.
Keep learning
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