EARLY INTERVETION
Early Intervention ABA services are designed for infants and toddlers, typically ages birth to three, who may benefit from support in communication, social interaction, play, and foundational learning skills. Our approach focuses on teaching essential developmental skills through play-based, meaningful activities that fit naturally into your child’s daily routines.
HOME-BASED ABA SERVICES
Home-based ABA services bring individualized, evidence-based support directly into your child’s natural environment. Sessions take place in your home, where your child feels most comfortable and where daily learning opportunities naturally occur. Our team focuses on building functional communication, self-help skills, play skills, social skills, and behavior regulation through structured sessions and everyday routines. We work closely with parents and caregivers, offering hands-on coaching so strategies can be used throughout the day for long-lasting progress. Home-based ABA is flexible, personalized, and designed to support your child’s growth in the setting where they spend the most time.
SCHOOL-BASED ABA SERVICES
School-based ABA services support students in developing the skills they need to succeed in the classroom. Our team collaborates with teachers, related service providers, and school administrators to build consistent, student-centered plans that promote learning and independence. Services may include direct instruction, behavior support, skill-building, data collection, and consultation to help the school team implement effective strategies. Our goal is to help each student access their education by improving attention, communication, participation, social interactions, and overall classroom readiness—while ensuring interventions fit naturally into the school day.
PARENT TRAINING AND COUNSELING
Family training and counseling services aim to support parents and caregivers about ABA techniques and how they can be used. The counseling process begins with observing the individual and/or asking clinical questions to the family. Then, the relevant ABA strategies are presented to the family and behavior change programs are created considering the priorities of the families. Some ABA techniques to focus on are functions of behaviors, problem behaviors, social stories, use of reinforcers, token boards, prompting strategies, visual activity schedules, morning and evening routines.