Verbal Operants
Ethics
ABA Principles
Teaching Procedures
Prompting Strategies
100

This verbal operant is controlled by motivation (an MO) and gets the speaker what they want.

Mand 

100

Before beginning services, a BCBA must obtain this from caregivers.

Informed Consent 

100

Adding something that increases a behavior (like giving a high five).

Positive Reinforcement

100

A structured teaching method with quick trials and clear SDs.

DTT

100

Physically guiding the learner to complete the response.

Physical Prompt

200

Naming or labeling something you see is this verbal operant.

Tact 

200

Accepting gifts from clients violates this ethical requirement.

Maintaining professional boundaries

200

Taking something away to increase a behavior (like removing demands).

Negative Reinforcement

200

Teaching skills during everyday activities like play.

NET

200

Telling the learner part or all of what to say or do.

Verbal Prompt

300

When a learner repeats what someone else says, they are engaging in this.

Echoic

300

Therapists must keep all client names, information, and data private.

Confidentiality

300

Providing a consequence that reduces a behavior, like removing a preferred item.

Punishment 

300

Reinforcing closer and closer versions of a behavior.

Shaping

300

Starting with full assistance, then fading help.

Most-Least prompting

400

Answering questions or filling in blanks without the item present involves this verbal operant.

Intraverbal

400

If an RBT suspects that a client is being physically or emotionally harmed at home or in therapy, the RBT is legally and ethically required to do this immediately.

Report suspected abuse/neglect to supervisor or appropriate authorities

400

When reinforcement is no longer given, and a behavior stops over time.

Extinction

400

A skill broken down into small steps the learner completes in order.

Task Analysis

400

Starting with minimal help and adding more only if needed.

Least-Most Prompting

500

In this skill, the learner copies a modeled action without verbal instructions, and success depends on matching the topography of the movement—such as clapping hands or tapping the table exactly as demonstrated.

Motor Imitation 

500

Prioritize client safety, dignity, and welfare in every interaction.

Act in the best interest of the client

500

When a learned behavior happens in new places, with new people, or with new items.

Generalization

500

In this teaching method, the aba therapist prompts all steps of a task except the last one, allowing the learner to independently finish the final step before gradually taking over earlier steps.

Backwards Chaining

500

Placing the correct item closer to the learner to make it more likely they choose it is this type of prompt.

Positional Prompt