Silas wrote:
. . . but will not cover the day-to-day ABA therapy. . .
I attended two presentations on ABA at a local university. It struck me as phoney in that the instructors are energetically playing a role, and the child may pick up on this. It is clunky. Interesting and ironically, it is similar to Aspie-style communication that I often do! The instructor is so focused on "getting it right" that he or she is essentially in the mode of all sending-no receiving.
For example,
"Let's play with the truck."
"Let's pick up our toys."
"Good job!" (the instructor really acting to give this effusive praise) This may be reinforcing to some kids, not so much to others.
The attempt is to find an appealing reward and then do multiple trial of stimulus-response. But the play periods we're so short, I don't know how the child could really get into it. It seemed more like pretending activities than developing skills. Maybe. It's hard to tell.
-----------------------------
The problem is that ABA seems to be believed with a mathematical certainly as if it's a religion: 'If we reward a behavior, it will become more common. If we non-reward a behavior, it will become less common . . . ' Yes, to an extent, but a lot more is going on. We are complex human beings afterall. And even kids with autism have a way of picking up what's a real situation vs. a pretend one, even if that can't put it in words.
Anything in life, try something, get feedback, revise . . . now, the ABA people can do this but only to a very limited extent. They are likely to say that aren't being purists enough, they not trying hard enough, or they're not being supported at home, again, all like a religion.
ABA is one tool in the toolbox. Yeah, it can be valuable, but it's only one tool.
Say you'd like to observe some of the sessions. This place has one-way mirrors. Or, if an ABA trained counselor is doing a session in your home, you can be doing something in the kitchen or otherwise kind of casually monitoring what's going on.