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In this episode of Acorns to Oaks, Kristine and Sarah discuss five of the most controversial topics in applied behavior analysis.
They explore whether teaching social skills can become masking, why treatment goals should be tied to the individual’s autonomy, and how ethical care should never be about changing who someone is. They also talk about extinction, forced feeding, planned ignoring, distress, financial incentives, insurance pressures, and what trauma-informed ABA should look like in real life.
This conversation is thoughtful, direct, and rooted in respect for the people and families receiving care. Rather than avoiding the hard questions, Kristine and Sarah talk through them with honesty, clinical experience, and a commitment to doing no harm.
ABA is often discussed in polarized terms. For some families, it has provided support, communication, safety, and meaningful progress. For others, the history and practice of ABA raise serious concerns about compliance, masking, distress, and whether autistic traits are being treated as problems.
This episode does not dismiss those concerns. Instead, Kristine and Sarah talk through them directly. They discuss where criticism has validity, especially around forced compliance, food, distress, and treatment that ignores the individual. They also explain how ethical ABA should be different: centered on autonomy, safety, functional skills, social validity, family support, and the goals of the person receiving care.
The larger question is not simply whether ABA is good or bad. The better question is: what does ethical care actually look like, and how do we make sure the individual is respected at every step?
Acorns to Oaks is presented by Nurture & Nature ABA, providing compassionate ABA therapy and parent support in Valley Village and the San Fernando Valley.
Learn more or schedule a consultation: nurtureandnatureaba.com
Follow Nurture & Nature on Instagram, YouTube, Facebook, and LinkedIn.
This podcast is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for individualized clinical care.
By Make BeliefIn this episode of Acorns to Oaks, Kristine and Sarah discuss five of the most controversial topics in applied behavior analysis.
They explore whether teaching social skills can become masking, why treatment goals should be tied to the individual’s autonomy, and how ethical care should never be about changing who someone is. They also talk about extinction, forced feeding, planned ignoring, distress, financial incentives, insurance pressures, and what trauma-informed ABA should look like in real life.
This conversation is thoughtful, direct, and rooted in respect for the people and families receiving care. Rather than avoiding the hard questions, Kristine and Sarah talk through them with honesty, clinical experience, and a commitment to doing no harm.
ABA is often discussed in polarized terms. For some families, it has provided support, communication, safety, and meaningful progress. For others, the history and practice of ABA raise serious concerns about compliance, masking, distress, and whether autistic traits are being treated as problems.
This episode does not dismiss those concerns. Instead, Kristine and Sarah talk through them directly. They discuss where criticism has validity, especially around forced compliance, food, distress, and treatment that ignores the individual. They also explain how ethical ABA should be different: centered on autonomy, safety, functional skills, social validity, family support, and the goals of the person receiving care.
The larger question is not simply whether ABA is good or bad. The better question is: what does ethical care actually look like, and how do we make sure the individual is respected at every step?
Acorns to Oaks is presented by Nurture & Nature ABA, providing compassionate ABA therapy and parent support in Valley Village and the San Fernando Valley.
Learn more or schedule a consultation: nurtureandnatureaba.com
Follow Nurture & Nature on Instagram, YouTube, Facebook, and LinkedIn.
This podcast is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for individualized clinical care.