
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The field of ABA is constantly growing and evolving. After being in the field for several years, we wanted to share our perspectives on what has changed and what still needs to change. Our field is making great strides in moving from the perception that ABA “fixes” kids to honoring who they are as people. Shayna has been in the field since 1997 and shares what it was like when she was first starting out. Nobody really knew what autism really was, let alone ABA. Supervision looked a lot different, and treatment was focused heavily on language and making kids “seem normal”.
Referring to ABA as therapy and treatment makes it seem like our main goal is still to fix people. Moving towards having it be known as education or skill acquisition could help us frame the field in a more positive way. Even those who work in the field might still think about it as a rigid system. ABA is much more compassionate than it used to be and much more focused on positive reinforcement. Cultural competence and a client-centric approach is coming more to the forefront, as well as being more oriented towards client goals. The perception starts with us as practitioners.
What’s Inside:
Mentioned In This Episode:
HowToABA.com
How to ABA on YouTube
Find us on Facebook
Follow us on Instagram
By Shira Karpel & Shayna Gaunt4.7
5757 ratings
The field of ABA is constantly growing and evolving. After being in the field for several years, we wanted to share our perspectives on what has changed and what still needs to change. Our field is making great strides in moving from the perception that ABA “fixes” kids to honoring who they are as people. Shayna has been in the field since 1997 and shares what it was like when she was first starting out. Nobody really knew what autism really was, let alone ABA. Supervision looked a lot different, and treatment was focused heavily on language and making kids “seem normal”.
Referring to ABA as therapy and treatment makes it seem like our main goal is still to fix people. Moving towards having it be known as education or skill acquisition could help us frame the field in a more positive way. Even those who work in the field might still think about it as a rigid system. ABA is much more compassionate than it used to be and much more focused on positive reinforcement. Cultural competence and a client-centric approach is coming more to the forefront, as well as being more oriented towards client goals. The perception starts with us as practitioners.
What’s Inside:
Mentioned In This Episode:
HowToABA.com
How to ABA on YouTube
Find us on Facebook
Follow us on Instagram

1,327 Listeners

622 Listeners

8,894 Listeners

417 Listeners

5,123 Listeners

441 Listeners

165,439 Listeners

25,843 Listeners

1,328 Listeners

15 Listeners

416 Listeners

87 Listeners

19,697 Listeners

28 Listeners

17 Listeners