ABA Principles: Mastering Challenging Behaviors
What is Applied Behavior Analysis?
ABA is a scientific approach to understanding and modifying behavior. It is a widely recognized and evidence-based practice that has been proven effective in addressing challenging behaviors and promoting positive behavior change in individuals, particularly those on the autism spectrum disorders.
In simple terms, ABA focuses on the relationship between behavior and the environment. It seeks to identify the factors that influence behavior and uses this knowledge to develop strategies for behavior modification. ABA principles are based on the understanding that behavior is learned and can be shaped through systematic interventions.
Struggling with Challenging behaviors
- Physically challenging behaviors: Such as hitting, biting, spitting, or pulling hair.
- Emotionally challenging behaviors: Aggressive shouting or using derogatory language.
- Self-injurious behavior: Behaviors that harm the individual, like pinching, hair pulling, head-banging, or biting hands or arms.
- Pica: Eating things other than food, which can become self-injurious when an autistic person eats potentially toxic or sharp objects.
Children with Sensory Processing Disorder may respond to over-stimulation or under-stimulation in their environment with challenging behaviors.
- Over-responsiveness to sensory input: Leading to distractibility, avoidance behaviors, or seeming to be in their “own world.”
- Under-responsiveness to sensory input: Seeking high levels of sensory input, which may be displayed as crashing into walls or banging toys.
- Difficulty with sensory integration: Resulting in behaviors such as difficulty navigating around obstacles or appearing clumsy.
- Sensory-seeking behaviors: Such as seeking constant and intense sensory input such as non-stop spinning or swinging.
Prioritizing Your Child’s Well-being: Addressing Physical Factors
- Gather Information: Collect data on the behavior through various means, including interviews with family members and friends. Use appendix A to collect data. It will help you define the behavior and develop and educated guess as to why your child in engaging in the behavior.
- Analyze Data: Review the data collected over the past five to ten days to identify patterns and possible triggers for the behavior. This includes analyzing antecedents, behaviors, and consequences to understand the context in which the behavior occurs.
- Develop and educated guess about the function of the behavior based on the data analysis. Remember, the function of a behavior is simply “the why” the child is exhibiting the behavior in question. Common functions of behavior include obtaining attention, escaping, or avoiding a situation, gaining access to tangibles, or sensory stimulation.
Developing an Intervention Plan
I have attached a list of evidence-based strategies that you can easily implemented at home:
- Emphasize Positive Reinforcement: Focus on rewarding desired behaviors to increase the likelihood of their recurrence. Find meaningful rewards that motivate your child and provide them immediately after the desired behavior is exhibited.
- Utilize Negative Reinforcement: Use the technique of removing aversive stimuli following a desired behavior, which can increase the likelihood of that behavior being repeated.
- Use Prompting and Fading: Provide prompts or cues to encourage the correct response, gradually reducing the level of prompting as your child becomes more independent. This approach builds their confidence and skills.
- Promote Generalization: Teach skills in a way that allows your child to apply them in different settings and situations. This helps them transfer their learned behaviors to various contexts.
- Establish Behavioral Contracts: Create agreements between you and your child, outlining specific expectations and consequences. This helps provide structure and clarity.
- Consider Extinction: Withhold reinforcement for previously reinforced behaviors to reduce their occurrence. This approach encourages your child to seek alternative, more appropriate behaviors.
- Implement Differential Reinforcement: Reinforce desired behaviors while withholding reinforcement for undesired ones. This helps shape and strengthen positive behaviors.
- Utilize Antecedent-Based Interventions (ABI): Modify the environment to prevent behaviors from occurring before they happen by removing triggers or providing alternative options.
- Incorporate Visual Supports: Use visual aids such as charts and schedules to help your child understand expectations and routines. Visual support can enhance their understanding and compliance.
Tailoring Interventions for Your Child’s Success
Author Bio
Hey there! I’m Eddie Corletto, the passionate mind behind kidscalma.com. A proud father of an autistic teenager. A special education teacher with over ten years of experience in the classroom. I hold a master’s degree specializing in Autism and Sensory Processing Disorders. I am deeply committed to supporting autistic children and their families. Kidscalma is my platform to share both my professional and personal experiences. I specialize in creating helpful resources for parents and educators supporting children on the Autism spectrum, Sensory Processing Disorder, and other learning disabilities. When I’m not in my classroom or writing, you might catch me hiking with my family or cycling around the scenic roads of California’s Central Coast. I believe our children can achieve amazing things every day. Connect with me on Facebook or subscribe to my blog for more insights and resources!
ABA Principles: Mastering Challenging Behaviors
Eddie Corletto, M.Ed. Special Education
Published March 22, 2024
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