You'll hear a lot of acronyms once therapy starts. This glossary translates the jargon into plain language so you always know what's being discussed about your child.

ABA Terms, Explained Simply

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A
ABA
Applied Behavior Analysis
Foundation
The Core Science Behind the Therapy

Applied Behavior Analysis is the scientific study of behavior and learning. It applies research-backed principles to understand why behaviors occur and how to use positive strategies to teach new skills and reduce challenges.

In Plain English

“It’s the evidence-based approach to understanding why your child does what they do — and using that understanding to help them learn and grow.”

ABC
Antecedent–Behavior–Consequence
Assessment
The Building Block of Behavior Analysis

A framework for understanding behavior: the Antecedent (what happens before), the Behavior (what your child does), and the Consequence (what happens after). BCBAs use this to identify why a behavior is occurring.

In Plain English

“Think of it as detective work: what triggered the behavior, what exactly happened, and what came after that might be keeping it going.”

ASD
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Assessment
The Formal Diagnosis

The official clinical diagnosis that qualifies a child for ABA therapy and insurance coverage. ASD is diagnosed by a licensed clinician based on developmental evaluation and observation.

In Plain English

“The formal report from your child’s psychologist or developmental pediatrician. Insurance requires this before ABA coverage begins.”

Assent
Child’s Willing Participation
Ethics
Respecting Your Child’s Voice

Modern ABA prioritizes assent — meaning your child should be a willing participant in therapy. Clinicians read cues, adjust when a child is distressed, and build therapy around activities the child enjoys.

In Plain English

“Therapy should feel good to your child. If they’re not comfortable, that’s a signal to the therapist to change something — not push through.”

B
BCBA
Board Certified Behavior Analyst
People
Your Child’s Lead Clinician

A BCBA holds a master’s or doctoral degree, completed supervised fieldwork hours, and passed a national certification exam. They assess your child, design the treatment plan, supervise RBTs, and run your weekly parent training sessions.

In Plain English

“The most qualified person on your child’s therapy team. Think of them like a doctor who specializes in learning and behavior. They call the shots on what your child works on.”

BCaBA
Board Certified Assistant Behavior Analyst
People
An Assistant Analyst

A BCaBA has a bachelor’s degree and certification but works under the supervision of a BCBA. They may assist with program implementation or data collection.

In Plain English

“Similar to a BCBA but with less advanced training — always supervised by a BCBA.”

D
DTT
Discrete Trial Training
Methods
Structured Learning in Short Repetitions

DTT breaks skills into small, clear steps and practices them in short, structured repetitions. Each trial has a clear instruction, the child’s response, and a consequence (reinforcement or correction). DTT is especially effective for teaching new skills from the ground up.

In Plain English

“Imagine flashcard practice, but for any skill — colors, words, following directions. Short bursts of focused repetition with lots of celebration when your child gets it right.”

E
Echoics
Verbal Imitation
Methods
Repeating What’s Said

A verbal operant in which a child repeats back a word or phrase that was just said to them. Building echoic ability is often an early foundation for developing expressive language.

In Plain English

“Teaching your child to repeat words they hear — a foundational step toward using language on their own.”

F
FBA
Functional Behavior Assessment
Assessment
Understanding Why a Behavior Happens

A structured process BCBAs use to determine the function (purpose) of a challenging behavior. All behavior happens for a reason — attention, escape, access to something, or sensory stimulation. The FBA identifies which one, so the team can address the root cause.

In Plain English

“Your BCBA figures out why your child is doing the challenging thing. Once you know why, you can actually fix it.”

I
IEP
Individualized Education Program
School
Your Child’s Plan at School

A legally binding document outlining the special education services, accommodations, and goals your child will receive at school. ABA therapy can support and complement IEP goals.

In Plain English

“The formal written agreement with your school district spelling out exactly what support your child will get.”

M
Mand
A Request or Demand
Methods
Teaching Your Child to Ask for Things

A mand is verbal behavior used to request something. Teaching manding is often the first priority in language programs because it gives children a functional way to get their needs met — reducing frustration and challenging behaviors.

In Plain English

“Teaching your child to ask for what they want — whether that’s saying ‘juice,’ signing ‘more,’ or using a picture card. Many problem behaviors shrink once a child can ask.”

N
NET
Natural Environment Teaching
Methods
Learning Through Real Life, Not Just Drills

NET teaches skills in the natural context where they’ll actually be used — during play, mealtimes, bath time, or a trip to the store. It’s child-led and follows the child’s interests to build motivation and generalization.

In Plain English

“Instead of flashcards at a table, your child learns to say ‘ball’ while actually playing with a ball. Skills stick better when learned in real life.”

P
Prompting
Assistance to Help a Skill Happen
Methods
The Art of Helpful Support

A prompt is any cue or assistance that helps a child complete a skill they’re learning. Prompts can be physical, verbal, gestural, or visual. The goal is always to fade prompts so the child can perform independently.

In Plain English

“Think of it like training wheels — a helpful nudge to help your child succeed, with the goal of removing that support over time as they get the hang of it.”

Prior Auth
Prior Authorization
Insurance
Insurance Approval Before Therapy Starts

Most insurance plans require prior authorization — formal approval — before ABA therapy can begin. The BCBA submits a treatment plan and the insurer reviews and approves the number of hours covered per week.

In Plain English

“Insurance paperwork that has to be approved before we can start billing. We handle this entire process — you don’t have to call your insurer yourself.”

R
Reinforcement
Rewarding Behavior to Strengthen It
Methods
The Engine of Learning in ABA

Positive reinforcement means following a desired behavior with something the child finds rewarding — making that behavior more likely to happen again. Reinforcement is individualized: what motivates one child may not motivate another.

In Plain English

“When your child does something great and gets something they love right after, they’re more likely to do it again. That’s reinforcement.”

RBT
Registered Behavior Technician
People
The Person Who Works Directly with Your Child

An RBT is a trained and certified paraprofessional who implements the ABA program designed by the BCBA. They are the person in your home most often — running sessions, collecting data, and building a relationship with your child. They work under the direct supervision of the BCBA.

In Plain English

“Your child’s day-to-day therapist. They show up, play with your child, run the therapy exercises, and keep track of how things are going — all guided by the BCBA.”

S
SIB
Self-Injurious Behavior
Behavior
Behaviors That Risk Physical Harm

SIBs include head-banging, biting, hitting, or scratching oneself. They are typically a way of communicating an unmet need. ABA addresses the underlying function while teaching safer alternatives.

In Plain English

“When a child hurts themselves, it’s usually because they’re trying to communicate something. ABA helps identify what that is and teaches a safer way to get the same need met.”

Shaping
Building Toward a Goal Step by Step
Methods
Reinforcing Progress, Not Just Perfection

Shaping reinforces successive approximations of a target behavior — rewarding small steps in the right direction, then gradually raising the bar. It’s how complex skills are built when a child can’t do the full skill yet.

In Plain English

“You celebrate and reward every small step toward the goal, not just when the full skill is perfect. Like clapping for a child’s first wobbly steps, not waiting until they can run.”

T
Treatment Plan
Your Child’s Personalized Roadmap
Goals
The Document That Guides Everything

A written plan developed by the BCBA after the initial assessment. It outlines your child’s current skill levels, target goals, the methods to be used, and how progress will be measured. It’s submitted to insurance for authorization and updated regularly.

In Plain English

“Think of it like a school curriculum customized entirely for your child — what they’ll learn, how they’ll learn it, and how you’ll all know it’s working.”

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Response time
2-4 hours (Usually sooner)
Book Consultation
Board certified
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experience
Helping families
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