Whose Antecedent Is It?
Whose Consequence Is It?
Whose Operational Definition Is It?
Fun & Silly ABA
100

Demand Fading

  • Spend the first 15 minutes of session building rapport, placing 1-2 demands every 5 minutes for the first 10 minutes of session. 
  • Contingent on low behaviors (complying to demands), increase to 5 demands for the next 10 minutes, then increase to current trial goal (about 1 trial every minute) for the remainder of session. 
  • If behaviors occur, spend 5 minutes building rapport (no demands) and begin this procedure again.

FR

100

Differential Reinforcement of Compliance.

  • Each time _____ completes a request, give immediate access to a break from work and/or a positive reinforcer.
  • The duration of breaks from work will be 2 minutes.
  • The positive reinforcers that will be delivered will be highly preferred activities.

DN

100

Operational Definition: A tantrum is defined as _____ engaging in one or more of the following behaviors: crying (with or without tears), whining, falling to the floor, kicking while on the floor, vocal protesting, and/or pulling at people or their clothing.

Onset Criteria: The behavior is considered to have started when the above-described actions persist for at least 5 consecutive seconds. Offset Criteria: The behavior is considered to have ended after 10 consecutive seconds during which ______ either ceases all identified behaviors or successfully responds to redirection. 


Observable precursor behaviors that may indicate an impending tantrum include:

Yelling or vocalizing at a high pitch, Facial scrunching, Brow furrowing or frowning

These behaviors often occur shortly before the onset of a tantrum and may serve as early warning signs of emotional escalation.

A child gets a break every 3 minutes of work time. What kind of strategy is this?

MS

100

If you were a reinforcer, what kind would you be: edible, tangible, activity, social, or sensory?

Open discussion.

200
  • Maximize opportunities for ____ to make choices during instructional sessions and daily routines, especially when demands are presented.

  • Offer choices related to:

    • Order of tasks (e.g., “Do this task first or second?”)

    • Manner of task completion (e.g., “Would you like to use crayons or markers?”)

    • Any other relevant aspect of the activity or environment, provided that the core task objective is preserved.

  • Encourage _____ to exercise control over his environment to the greatest extent possible while still maintaining instructional integrity and learning goals.

  • Reinforce choice-making behaviors to promote independence and self-determination.

NA
200

Tangible extinction.

  • Prevent _____ from gaining access to preferred items / activities in any way when he engages in the target behavior.
  • Do not negotiate or decrease the delay to a preferred item / activity or increase the amount of preferred item / activity _____ is already getting as a reaction to the target behavior.
  • If possible, act as though the behavior did not occur.
  • If some reaction is absolutely necessary, avoid eye contact and give the minimum reaction necessary to keep people and property safe.

JD

200

Aggression is exhibited as ______ engaging in or attempting to engage in one or more of the following: Headbutting others (to include throwing his head backward at others), hitting with an open or closed fist, kicking, biting others, hitting others with objects, pulling/grabbing someone else's hair, scratching others, or throwing things in the direction of others.


Examples: BT presents a demands, _____ hits the BT with a closed fist. ______ walks up to a peer and attempts to hit peer but BT blocks with blocking pad.


Nonexamples: BT presents demand, _____ slams his hand on the table. 


Known Antecedents: Circle time, redirection from highly preferred activity, at pickup.

CB

200

What’s your MO for coffee on a Monday morning?

Sleep deprivation = establishing operation (EO) for caffeine!

300

SD Modification – Attention

Current Problem Signal:
______ has learned that screaming at others is an effective way to gain attention. This behavior may be inadvertently reinforced by others responding to his screaming (even if just to tell him to stop).

Modification Goal:
Change the environmental cues that signal "attention is unavailable unless you scream" by teaching and reinforcing appropriate attention-seeking behaviors and ensuring that screaming no longer results in attention.

Replacement Behaviors to Teach:

  • “Excuse me.”

  • “May I have your attention?”

  • “Can we do ___?”

JD

300

Escape Intervention (Differential Reinforcement of Alternative Behavior):

Ensure that _____ receives significantly more verbal attention and reinforcement for engaging in appropriate, alternative behaviors than he does for engaging in the target escape-maintained behavior.

  • Provide frequent verbal engagement (e.g., asking questions during play, narrating actions, or reading aloud) to keep _____ on task and promote appropriate participation.

  • Reinforce alternative behaviors such as appropriate conversational skills by granting brief breaks from task demands.

    • Example: When _____ uses appropriate communication (e.g., “Can I take a break?” or stays on topic during a conversation), provide a 1-minute break as reinforcement.

  • The amount of demand reduction or break access should be contingent solely on the use of the targeted alternative behaviors—not on problem behavior.

KR

300

Instances of Aggression include _____ engaging in any of the aforementioned behaviors towards another individual (Peer/ Adult) in order to escape a task/demand,  in order to gain access to a preferred object/activity/location/person that she is trying to gain access to and/or when no demands are placed (automatic)

• Hitting individual with an open hand/ closed fist 

• Grabbing individual (i.e. grabbing their clothing/body part) 

• Pushing/shoving individual

• Pulling individual's hair 

• Scratching/ digging nails into skin

• Throwing objects at others


Precursor behaviors include:

Louder voice

wiggling of fingers

gritting of teeth

these behaviors occur before challenging behaviors.

EL

300

What would your home token economy look like? What do you “earn” stars for?

Open discussion.

400

High Probability Sequence (AKA Behavior momentum or High P-Low P)

  • Present a 2-3 of these requests before presenting a request that will likely evoke the challenging behavior (low-probability request).
  • The high-probability tasks include basic compliance (sit down, stand up, come here), basic imitation such a gross motor actions ("Do this").
  • The low-probability requests include echoics, mands using a vocal response, sharing and turn-taking

AE

400

Functional Communication:

Deliver preferred items or activities immediately upon _____ appropriate request.

  • The primary forms of requesting targeted are vocal requests; however, any appropriate form of requesting will be reinforced by prompt delivery of the preferred item or activity.

  • Access to preferred items or activities will be withheld when ______ is exhibiting non-compliant behavior, to maintain the integrity of the communication intervention.

AR

400

Crying with tears, yelling/shrieking, may or may not fall to the floor (if the demand requires distance), hitting nearby surfaces, with property destruction such as throwing objects nearby. Onset occurs after demonstrating signs of crying. Offset occurs after _____ has deescalated for 2 minutes. 

Precursors: "Nooo!" "I don't want to." "Cry, uhhh." "Scream."

SCD

400

Create a behavior intervention plan for your pet using ABA principles!

Fun team brainstorm – use reinforcement, prompting, and shaping!

500

Response Effort (Automatic, Escape, and Attention Functions):

Increase the effort required for _____ to engage in the target challenging behavior (e.g., scripting) by maintaining active engagement through structured and purposeful communication.

  • Keep _____ engaged in meaningful conversation to redirect from scripting and encourage functional language use.
    Examples include:

    • “What color is the car?”

    • “What does Peppa Pig want to do?”

    • “What do you want to make?”

    • “Tell me about the story.”

  • During book activities, have _____ read aloud to the adult to increase verbal engagement and reduce opportunities for scripting.

  • During functional pretend play, facilitate and expand on _____ play by creating dialogue related to the activity (e.g., “What is the firefighter going to do next?” or “Let’s make the animals talk to each other.”).

KR

500

Escape Functional Communication

  • When _____ independently mands for cessation by saying "all done" or "break", the mand will be reinforced on an FR1 schedule.
  • Independent mands for a "break" will be reinforced with a 2 minute- break from the task/activity. Prompted mands for a break will be reinforced with a 1-minute mand from the activity. Subsequent requests for a break will be decreased by 15 seconds each time until _____ is down to taking a 15-second break. The task/activity will be presented again after the last break using "first/then language" and the BT will modify the task by decreasing how long the activity is or making it easier for ______ to complete. 
  • Independent mands for "All done" will be reinforced with complete removal of the activity on an FR1 schedule. The task/activity will be removed for a minimum of 15 minutes. After 15 minutes, the task/activity will be presented again. Prompted mands for "all done" will be reinforced with removal of the activity/task for 10 minutes. After 10 minutes the task/activity will be presented again. BTs are to use "first/then language" and task modification to make it less likely for _____ to want to escape it. 

Mands for cessation in the presence of the behavior will not be reinforced. 

Tangible Functional Communication

  • Independent mands for objects and actions outside of the challenging behavior are to be granted on an FR1 schedule 
  • If _____ requests an object/action that is not related to the task/activity at hand, grant him access for 2 minutes and use first/then language to direct him back to the original task/activity.

FR

500

Instances are defined as ______ walking or running away from a supervised location, walking or running through a doorway without letting an adult know, or walking/running away from adult during transitions further than 3 feet.

CZ

500

Act out a behavior and let your team guess the function!

Interactive – participants act out and others guess function.