What is ABA?

Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) is a science-based approach to understanding behavior and helping individuals learn meaningful skills that improve daily life. At its core, ABA is about teaching skills, supporting independence, and reducing barriers to learning—all in ways that are respectful, individualized, and rooted in compassion.

ABA is most commonly used to support autistic individuals, but its principles are effective for people of all ages and abilities. Today’s ABA focuses on helping individuals thrive in their natural environments—at home, in school, and in the community—by building skills that truly matter to them and their families.

What Does ABA Focus On?

ABA therapy supports skill development in areas such as:

  • Communication
  • Daily routines, Emotional Regulation
  • Social interaction
  • Independence.

Strategies are personalized and designed to fit naturally into everyday life.

What Does Modern ABA Look Like?

Modern ABA is collaborative, person-centered, and ethical. Therapy may be play-based when appropriate, guided by data, and continuously adjusted to ensure progress is meaningful and respectful.

Areas ABA Can Support

Today’s ABA is respectful, collaborative, and person-centered. Therapy is play-based when appropriate, guided by data, and continuously adjusted to ensure progress is meaningful and ethical.

Communication Skills

Supporting expressive and receptive communication, including spoken language, alternative communication systems, and functional communication.

Daily Living & Independence Skills

Helping individuals participate more independently in routines like dressing, hygiene, meals, transitions, and household tasks.

Learning & School Readiness

Supporting attention, following routines, task completion, and foundational learning skills needed for academic settings.

Social Interaction & Play

Building skills for social engagement, cooperative play, turn-taking, and relationship-building in ways that feel natural and comfortable.

Emotional Regulation

Building skills for social engagement, cooperative play, turn-taking, and relationship-building in ways that feel natural and comfortable.

Behavioral Support & Safety Skills

Reducing behaviors that interfere with learning or safety while teaching appropriate, functional alternatives.

Contact Us Today

Have questions about ABA or whether it may be right for your child? We’re here to help.