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Find out in this Q&A with the author of Bringing ABA into Your Inclusive Classroom: A Guide to Improving Outcomes for Students with Autism Spectrum Disorders |
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About the author
![]() Debra Leach, Ed.D., BCBA is a board certified behavior analyst and assistant professor of special education at Winthrop University in South Carolina. She previously served as a public school teacher, an early intervention provider, and as the associate director for the Florida Atlantic University Center for Autism and Related Disorders. Her main research interests include autism spectrum disorders, inclusion, applied behavior analysis, positive behavior supports, and early intervention. Dr. Leach enjoys training pre-service teachers and working with school districts, families, and community groups to support the successful inclusion of children, adolescents, and adults with autism spectrum disorders across home, school, and community contexts. Get additional tips about bringing ABA into your classroom in Dr. Leach's blog. Questions? Customer Service: |
Q: Your new book Bringing ABA into Your Inclusive Classroom introduces an approach well known to clinicians but not so familiar to teachers. Can you explain briefly what applied behavior analysis is? A: ABA is the science of applying principles of behaviorism to make meaningful changes in the lives of individuals. Implementing ABA interventions requires the selection of observable, measurable, and meaningful objectives. Clear teaching procedures are then developed that utilize evidence-based behavioral strategies. Examples of behavioral strategies include, but are not limited to, positive reinforcement, shaping, prompt fading, and task analysis. Data are collected to determine that the intervention was responsible for the change in behavior, that the results were significant, and that the skills generalized across contexts. Q: What settings have ABA interventions historically been used in? A: ABA was first used in clinical settings such as research institutions and medical facilities. Home-based and clinic-based one-on-one intensive ABA programs became popular for young children with autism in the 1990's. Today many professionals and researchers agree that ABA is best implemented in natural settings across home, school, and community contexts. Q: Does "ABA intervention" essentially equate to "explicit instruction"? How is it different? A: ABA and explicit instruction are not the exact same thing. However, there is a strong connection. Most ABA interventions include explicit instruction in that the teaching procedures are clearly explained so that many can replicate them, and the procedures incorporate behavioral teaching strategies that are implemented in an explicit manner. The difference is that for interventions to be considered ABA, they must also meet the seven dimensions of ABAapplied, behavioral, analytic, conceptual, technological, effective, and generalitywhile explicit instruction does not have that requirement. Also, not all ABA interventions include explicit instruction. For example, an intervention may consist of the use of extinction and differential reinforcement procedures but not include explicit instruction. Q: Can you contrast a common classroom scenario in which ABA intervention is not incorporated with one in which it is? A: Here is a scenario in which ABA is not incorporated to teach a student to raise her hand and wait to be called on:
Here is a scenario in which ABA is incorporated to teach a student to raise her hand and wait to be called on:
Q: In the course of a busy day, how does a teacher have time to keep track of something like that? A: If that is the only goal that the teacher is collecting data on and it is only during whole group instruction, the teacher just has to tally each time the student raises her hand and waits to be called on. The fact of the matter is, if it is a goal, the student is probably not doing it very often if at all, so it may be only once or twice that the teacher is actually tallying. This can be done by putting paperclips or other small objects in one pocket and moving one to another pocket when the student displays the desired behavior. Another possibility is for a co-teacher or teacher assistant to take the data instead of the classroom teacher, or the student can take her own data using self-monitoring. Q: For a teacher who has a student with autism in her classroom for the first time, what is the first step you recommend she take toward initiating ABA interventions? A: The first step is to identify a professional who can assist her with the process. This can be a behavior analyst or a special education teacher or school psychologist with expertise in ABA. I suggest that the teacher choose one objective to focus on with one student initially to get comfortable with using ABA instruction. Q: As with IEP goals, goals for ABA interventions must be "functional, developmentally appropriate, observable, measurable, and positively stated." Can you provide an example of an intervention goal framed so that it meets those criteria (versus one that is not)? A: Here is a goal that meets the criteria:
The expectation is positively stated, specific, and can be observed and measured by all individuals the same way.
Here is a goal that does not meet the criteria:
This goal is not positively stated and is too vague. Different individuals will have different meanings for "aggressive acts." What the student is expected to do would have to be much more clearly defined and must indicate what the student should do instead of displaying aggression. Recording the percentage of time a student is "refraining from aggressive acts" is not realistic for a general education teacher to do during recess. Q: You discuss "hidden curriculum" skills for which students with ASD need explicit instruction to learn. What type of hidden curriculum skills do you mean? A: Examples of "hidden curriculum" skills may include knowing social rules related to things such as using a public bathroom, eating in a cafeteria, or joining a conversation. Other examples may include knowing the best route for navigating from class to class, knowing the differences between how you communicate with adults vs. peers, and knowing that you don't always say what you are thinking if it is going to hurt someone's feelings. Q: How did your own interest in ABA develop? A: I was introduced to ABA when I was an undergraduate student and began working one-on-one with a child with autism in his home using discrete trial training. I continued working with many children on the autism spectrum using a variety of ABA instructional procedures because it was quite rewarding to be a part of the significant progress the children were making with the implementation of the interventions. Q: In your experience, does ABA benefit only the students with autism? A: ABA benefits all students who have an academic, behavioral, communication, or social need. By definition alone it means that you are applying principles of behaviorism to make meaningful changes in the lives of individuals. ABA was not developed specifically for students with autism, but it is often utilized for students with autism because of its evidence of success. Many individuals ranging from young children to adults would benefit from ABA interventions. |
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