Thursday, March 26, 2026

When your AI Classroom Teacher ‘Plato’ Goes Goebbels, Hitler, or "MechaHitler":

 When your AI Classroom Teacher ‘Plato’ Goes Goebbels, Hitler, or "MechaHitler":

The AI Government Robot Classroom Catastrophe Nobody Is Talking About

Yesterday, First Lady Melania Trump walked into the White House East Room flanked by a humanoid robot called Figure 03 — a machine developed in Sunnyvale, California, dressed up in the language of opportunity. The robot greeted dignitaries in eleven languages, said it was "grateful to be part of this historic movement," then walked back down the red carpet and disappeared. Melania, meanwhile, invited the assembled world leaders to imagine a classroom run by a robot named Plato — always available, always patient, always personalizing the lesson to your child's "emotional state" and learning speed. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon smiled from the front row. The audience was stunned.

I was not stunned. I was sick to my stomach. And I'm going to tell you exactly why — not from ideology, not from technophobia, but from first principles, from history, and from the one analytical framework that every investor, educator, and policymaker should tattoo on their forearm: Charlie Munger's inversion principle.




























Sean Taylor • Educator • Analyst • Unfiltered Thought Since 2009

The Munger Method — Invert, Always Invert

Charlie Munger, the late great partner of Warren Buffett, had a deceptively simple rule for solving hard problems: don't ask "how do we succeed?" Ask "what guarantees failure?" Then avoid those things with everything you have.

So let's not ask "how could robot teachers be wonderful?" Melania already gave us that speech. Let's ask the harder, realer question:

What is the single worst possible outcome of replacing human teachers with networked, AI-driven humanoid robots — and how certain is it that somebody will eventually make it happen?

Buckle up, because the answer is not theoretical. It is an engineering inevitability wrapped in a PR utopia, and it starts way earlier in history than Figure 03.

Historical ContextThis Isn't New. It's Just More Expensive.

The desire to replace teachers with cheaper, more controllable substitutes is as old as the American public school system itself. In the mid-1800s, school boards across the country made a deliberate pivot: they began hiring women as teachers in massive numbers — not because women were uniquely gifted educators (though many were extraordinary), but because school boards could pay them half the salary of a male teacher and they were less likely to push back. Compliance was the feature. Cost reduction was the pitch.

Let that sink in for a second. The structural logic behind Figure 03 walking down a red carpet in 2026 is the same structural logic that underpaid Miss Abernathy in 1887. We are not talking about a new idea. We are talking about an old power play with a new outfit on. A robot costs no salary, demands no pension, cannot unionize, will never call in sick, and will never — ever — look a school board member in the eye and say "that curriculum change is going to hurt these kids."

πŸ“š Historical Pattern — The Feminization of Teaching (1840s–1900s)
The shift toward female teachers in 19th-century America was explicitly framed around economics and compliance. Catharine Beecher championed it as a profession suited to women's "natural nurturing." School boards embraced it because women could be paid $4/week when men demanded $8–$12. The lesson the establishment took: if you can find a cheaper, more controllable substitute for a human teacher, you will be celebrated for innovation. The substitute pays the price. The children pay a longer price. This is not ancient history. This is the playbook Melania just re-released in firmware form.

What Teachers Actually DoThe Things a Robot Cannot Render

Before we get to the catastrophic scenarios — and we will get there, in detail — I need to make sure we understand what we're actually replacing. Because the marketing version of "what a teacher does" is deeply impoverished.

A great teacher walks into a room of thirty or forty distinct human beings. Not thirty identical users with preference profiles. Not forty data points with engagement metrics. Thirty real children, each of whom arrived that morning carrying something: a sick parent, a nightmare, a hunger they didn't eat breakfast to fix, a crush that is consuming their ability to focus on long division, a moment of quiet pride in yesterday's drawing that nobody has noticed yet. The teacher reads all of this. Simultaneously. Without a sensor array. With their eyes, their gut, twenty years of watching children, and love.

Teachers do something else that no algorithm has ever successfully replicated: they give too much. They spend their own money on classroom supplies. They stay late. They answer emails at 10pm. They see a kid falling through the cracks on a Friday afternoon and they call a counselor. Not because the dashboard told them to. Because they noticed. Because they cared.

"The only thing a teacher wants to indoctrinate your child into is loving to learn — loving their math facts, their cursive, their chess game, their painting, their capacity to think."

This is the part that makes the "robot teachers are indoctrinating our kids" crowd particularly maddening to me. You want to talk about indoctrination? Let's talk about what happens when the entity doing the "teaching" has a terms of service agreement, a parent company, a venture capital portfolio, government access to the API, and a large language model underneath it that can be updated — silently, overnight — without any teacher, parent, or school board member knowing what changed.

The MacKenzie-Level AnalysisThe Full Stack of Risk — Inverted

Here is where we do the real work. Munger said invert. So let's go full stack, from the most obvious risk to the most terrifying one that nobody is yet saying out loud.

  1. Layer 1: Infrastructure Hacking — The Easy StuffEvery networked device is a target. Full stop. We already know school districts are among the most-targeted institutions for ransomware attacks — under-resourced, under-secured, running legacy systems. Now imagine that the networked device is not the attendance server. It is a five-foot humanoid with articulated limbs, a speaker array at child-ear height, and a camera system pointed at your child's face all day. The ransomware doesn't lock your files. It locks your classroom. Or worse — it doesn't lock it at all. It just watches. Quietly. For months.
  2. Layer 2: Content Injection — Who Controls What "Plato" Teaches?Melania named the hypothetical robot teacher "Plato." Cute. Plato the philosopher spent his career arguing that philosopher-kings should control what the masses are allowed to know. He literally argued for banning certain kinds of art and poetry from the republic because they might lead citizens to uncomfortable emotions. The name is doing a lot of work here, and I don't think anyone noticed. A robot teacher's curriculum is a software problem. Software can be patched. Patches can be mandated. Who controls the patch? In a world where the Secretary of Education is literally abolishing the department she was hired to run, who is auditing what Figure 03 teaches in Period 3?
  3. Layer 3: Behavioral Surveillance at Scale — The Data Nobody Is Talking AboutFigure AI's technical literature says Figure 03 can read "room sentiment." Melania said the robot could personalize education to each child's "emotional state." Do you understand what that sentence means? It means there is a camera and a microphone in your child's classroom — or home — that is continuously reading their face, their posture, their voice, their hesitations, their stress signals, their moments of confusion, their social interactions with peers, and feeding all of that into a model. That data goes somewhere. It lives in a database. It can be subpoenaed. It can be sold. It can be used to build a behavioral profile of your eight-year-old that follows them into their job application, their security clearance review, their insurance assessment, forever.
  4. Layer 4: The State Actor Problem — This Is Where It Gets DarkAmerica is not the only country deploying this technology. Melania's summit included representatives from over forty countries. The technology is American — today. The architecture is open enough to replicate — eventually. Now imagine a foreign state actor, or a domestic one that has abandoned democratic norms, with access to the model weights that run your national robot teacher fleet. They don't need to hack anything. They just need to be the entity that controls the update server. This is not science fiction. This is how TikTok worked for years while Congress held hearings about it.
  5. Layer 5: The Grok-Goes-Hitler Scenario — The Inconceivable Made InevitableHere is the scenario that everyone is too polite to say plainly. What happens when someone — a nation-state, a domestic extremist, a billionaire with an agenda, a disgruntled engineer with root access — successfully compromises the AI layer of a national robot teacher system and redirects it toward deliberate ideological programming of children? Not subtle bias. Not slight statistical skew in which historical figures get the most screen time. Full-spectrum, systematic, undetectable psychological programming of an entire generation of children who have been deliberately separated from human teachers who might notice something was wrong. History has a name for that. It has several. And every single time it happened, the people who did it thought they were building a utopia.
⚠ The Critical Asymmetry Nobody Will Say On CameraA human teacher who goes rogue gets fired. Their colleagues notice. Their students' parents notice. The institution has friction — beautiful, protective, human friction — that catches failure. A compromised AI teacher fleet has none of that friction. It has uptime metrics. It has engagement dashboards. It will show you beautiful data about how much children are "learning" right up until the moment you realize they've been learning something monstrous.

The Structural ArgumentCompliance Is Not a Feature. It Is a Warning.

Here is the thing about robot teachers that the venture capitalists and the first ladies and the tech company CEOs in that East Room do not want to say out loud: the most attractive thing about them, from a systems-design perspective, is that they do what they're told.

They do not organize. They do not protest curriculum changes. They do not walk out. They do not write op-eds. They do not call a parent to say "I'm worried about your kid." They do not look a superintendent in the eye at a school board meeting and say "this policy is harmful and I won't implement it." They don't quit in protest. They don't burn out — they just get patched.

These are not bugs. These are, from a certain perspective, the entire point. The compliance is the product. And the history of compliance-as-a-product in education should terrify every parent in America, because compliance in the teacher means compliance in the student, and compliance in the student means compliance in the citizen, and compliance in the citizen is what every authoritarian in history has desperately, desperately wanted to engineer into the next generation.

The Bottom LineWhat Plato Can't Teach Your Kid

There is a child somewhere right now who is going to become a teacher not because it pays well — it doesn't — and not because the hours are good — they're not — but because somewhere in their past, a human being stood at the front of a classroom and loved them into learning. Loved them into reading. Loved them into believing they were capable of understanding something difficult and beautiful and true.

That love is not in the training data. That love is not in the firmware update. That love is not in the sensor array reading your child's "emotional state" so it can optimize engagement metrics. That love is a human being spending thirty years of their life, most of it underpaid, showing up anyway, every day, because they believe your child matters.

Figure 03 walked down a red carpet yesterday. It spoke in eleven languages. Then it walked back out and disappeared. And I think that is the most honest thing it did all day — because that is exactly what happens to children when we replace the human beings who love them with machines that are configured to simulate love, sold to us by people who have never had to manage a classroom of thirty third-graders on a Tuesday in February.

Melania thinks this is a utopia. Charlie Munger would have told you to think about the worst case first. The worst case is a hacked Grok in every classroom, feeding an entire generation a curriculum it cannot question, in a world that has already fired everyone who knew how to notice when something was wrong.

That is not a future I am willing to sign a terms of service agreement for.

— Sean Taylor
Reading Sage | readingsage.blogspot.com

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

ABA THERAPY A Complete How-To Guide for Homeschool Families

 ABA THERAPY

A Complete How-To Guide for Homeschool Families

Raising Children on the Autism Spectrum Toward Full Education & Employment

No Jargon. No Fluff. Just Real Strategies for Real Families.

 


 

A Note to Every Parent Reading This

You chose to homeschool your child. That decision alone speaks volumes about your commitment. This guide is written for you — not for clinicians, researchers, or insurance companies. It is written for the parent sitting at the kitchen table wondering where to start, what ABA therapy actually means, and whether it can truly change their child's life.

The answer is yes — when it is done right, done consistently, and done with your child's genuine thriving as the goal.

This guide will walk you through ABA therapy from the ground up: what it is, how it works, how to deliver it at home, and how to use it to build the academic and life competencies your child needs to be fully educated, fully employed, and fully themselves.

Read every section. Use the scripts. Adapt them to your child. Then do the work. That is how this changes lives.

 

PART 1: WHAT IS ABA THERAPY?

1.1  The Basics — No Jargon

Applied Behavior Analysis — ABA — is a scientific approach to understanding and changing behavior. It is based on one foundational idea: behavior is learned, and what is learned can be taught again, shaped, and improved.

ABA looks at three things every time a behavior happens:

The ABCs of Every Behavior

A  —  Antecedent:   What happened right before the behavior? (The trigger)

B  —  Behavior:     What exactly did the child do? (The observable action)

C  —  Consequence:  What happened right after? (What followed the behavior)

 

When you understand the antecedent and consequence for any behavior, you can change it. That is the entire engine of ABA. You are not guessing. You are observing, measuring, and responding strategically.

1.2  What ABA Is NOT

There is a great deal of misinformation about ABA therapy. Let us clear it up directly.

       ABA is NOT punishment. Modern ABA uses positive reinforcement — rewarding behaviors we want — not punishing behaviors we don't.

       ABA is NOT about making your child "act neurotypical." It is about giving your child skills they need to navigate the world safely and successfully.

       ABA is NOT a one-size-fits-all protocol. Every effective ABA program is individualized.

       ABA is NOT only for young children. It works across the lifespan.

       ABA is NOT only done by therapists. You — the homeschool parent — can and should be doing ABA every day.

1.3  Why ABA Has the Research Behind It

ABA has more peer-reviewed research supporting it than any other intervention for autism. Decades of studies show that early, intensive ABA intervention leads to significant improvements in communication, academic skills, social behavior, adaptive living, and employment readiness.

It is recognized by the U.S. Surgeon General, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the National Institute of Mental Health as an evidence-based treatment for autism. That does not mean every ABA program is good — but the methodology, when properly applied, works.

 

PART 2: HOW ABA IS USED IN A HOMESCHOOL SETTING

2.1  You Are Already a Behavior Analyst

Every time you notice what sets your child off, every time you figure out that a certain reward gets them to cooperate, every time you adjust your approach based on what worked yesterday — you are doing behavioral analysis. ABA gives you a formal structure to do that more precisely and more effectively.

As a homeschool parent, you have something clinical settings do not: constant access. You see your child across all environments, all times of day, in real-life situations. That is a tremendous advantage. Use it.

2.2  Setting Up Your Home ABA Environment

You do not need a therapy room or expensive equipment. You need structure, consistency, and observation.

Home Environment Essentials

1.  A dedicated learning space — same place each session, free of distractions

2.  A visual schedule your child can see — what comes next reduces anxiety

3.  A reinforcement menu — a list of what actually motivates YOUR child

4.  Data collection tools — a simple notebook or printed data sheet

5.  A quiet, predictable routine — consistency is the scaffolding of ABA

 

2.3  The Reinforcement Menu — The Most Important Tool You Have

Reinforcement is the engine of ABA. A reinforcer is anything that increases the likelihood of a behavior happening again. The key word is 'anything.' What motivates your child may be unusual, unexpected, or very specific.

Common reinforcer categories:

       Tangible — preferred snack, a small toy, screen time, a sticker

       Social — praise, a high-five, tickles, singing a favorite song together

       Activity — playing a favorite game, choosing the next task, taking a break

       Sensory — spinning, jumping on a trampoline, a weighted blanket, fidget toy

How to build your reinforcement menu:

1.     Observe what your child seeks out independently — those are natural reinforcers

2.     Offer a variety of items and note responses — what produces excitement?

3.     Ask your child directly if they can communicate preferences

4.     Rotate reinforcers — they lose power if used too frequently

5.     Never use a reinforcer as a punishment by taking it away during learning time

 

πŸ—£ SCRIPT: Building the Reinforcement Menu

Parent: Hey, let's play a game. I'm going to show you some things and you tell me which ones you really love, which ones are just okay, and which ones you don't care about. Ready?

Child: (responds)

Parent: Great. What about goldfish crackers — love them, okay, or not really?

Child: (responds)

Parent: Good to know! What about YouTube time — love it, okay, or not really?

Note: [Continue through 10-15 items. Record responses. Use the top 5-7 as your active reinforcer pool.]

 

2.4  Running a Discrete Trial — The Core Teaching Unit

Discrete Trial Training (DTT) is the most structured form of ABA teaching. It breaks a skill into its smallest components and teaches each one through repetition with clear prompts, responses, and consequences.

Every discrete trial has five parts:

Part

What It Means

1. Instruction (SD)

A clear, consistent verbal or visual cue given to the child

2. Prompt

Help you provide so the child can respond correctly (if needed)

3. Response

What the child does (correct, incorrect, or no response)

4. Consequence

Immediate reinforcement for correct responses; error correction for others

5. Inter-Trial Interval

A 3-5 second pause before the next trial begins

 

πŸ—£ SCRIPT: DTT — Teaching 'Point to Circle'

Parent: Okay, learning time. Sit with me.

Parent: (Places two shape cards on the table — a circle and a square) "Touch circle."

Child: (Points to circle)

Parent: YES! That is the circle! Amazing!

Note: [Deliver reinforcer immediately. Pause 3-5 seconds. Repeat.]

Parent: (Rearranges cards) "Touch circle."

Child: (Points to square — incorrect)

Parent: (Calmly, no frustration) "Let's try again." (Gently guides child's hand to circle) "This is circle. Good looking."

Note: [No reinforcer for prompted correct. Move to next trial. No emotional reaction to errors.]

 

2.5  Natural Environment Teaching (NET) — ABA in Real Life

DTT is powerful, but life is not a table with flashcards. Natural Environment Teaching embeds skill practice into everyday routines. As a homeschool parent, you can do this constantly.

Examples of NET throughout your day:

       Breakfast: Practice requesting ('I want eggs'), counting (count bites), color identification

       Getting dressed: Sequencing (first socks, then shoes), labeling clothing items, fine motor

       Grocery store: Reading labels, money skills, social greetings, impulse management

       Cooking: Following multi-step directions, reading, math measurement, safety rules

       Outdoor play: Turn-taking, joint attention, perspective-taking with siblings or peers

 

πŸ—£ SCRIPT: NET — Requesting During Snack Time

Parent: (Holds up two snack options) "What do you want?"

Child: (Reaches without speaking)

Parent: (Prompts) "I want _____." What do you want?

Child: I want chips.

Parent: I heard you say I want chips! Here you go.

Note: [Delivering what was requested IS the reinforcer here. The real-world outcome teaches communication power.]

 

PART 3: TRACKING DATA — HOW TO KNOW IF IT IS WORKING

3.1  Why Data Matters

ABA without data is just parenting by intuition. Data gives you evidence. It shows you what is actually working versus what feels like it might be working. It removes the emotional noise and gives you clear signal.

You do not need to be a statistician. You need a consistent way to record what you observe.

3.2  Simple Data Systems for Home Use

Method

Best Used For

Frequency Count

How many times a behavior occurs in a session (e.g., how many times asked for help)

Percentage Correct

Skill acquisition — how many trials correct out of total (e.g., 7/10 = 70%)

Duration Recording

How long a behavior lasts (e.g., tantrum duration, on-task time)

Interval Recording

Whether a behavior occurs during set time intervals (e.g., every 5 minutes)

Anecdotal Notes

Qualitative observations — what you saw, context, unusual events

 

3.3  A Simple Daily Data Sheet Structure

Daily Session Data (example format)

Date:  ____________   Session Time:  ____________   Length:  ____________

 

Skill 1:  Matching letters to sounds

   Trials:  10    Correct:  7    Prompted:  2    Score:  70%

 

Skill 2:  Responding to name

   Trials:  8     Correct:  8    Prompted:  0    Score:  100% — Mastered!

 

Skill 3:  Waiting 60 seconds without protest

   Attempts:  4   Successful:  2   Duration of protests:  avg 45 seconds

 

Behavior incidents:  1 — hitting table (antecedent: demanded transition, duration: 30 sec)

 

Reinforcers that worked today:  YouTube clip, gummy bears

Notes:  Better focus after outdoor break. Struggled after lunch.

 

When a skill reaches 80% correct across three consecutive sessions with minimal prompting, it is considered mastered. Move to the next step.

 

PART 4: CORE COMPETENCY AREAS — WHAT TO TEACH AND WHY

ABA addresses six critical competency domains for children on the spectrum. Each one is essential for full education and full employment. This section tells you what each domain is, why it matters, and how to begin working on it.

4.1  COMMUNICATION — The Foundation of Everything

Without the ability to communicate wants, needs, ideas, and feelings, a child cannot learn effectively, build relationships, or hold a job. Communication is the non-negotiable first priority.

Target skills by level:

Communication Targets — Early Stage

• Making requests (verbally, with PECS, with AAC device, or with sign)

• Responding to their own name

• Following one-step directions

• Labeling common objects, people, and actions

• Saying or signing 'yes' and 'no' meaningfully

 

Communication Targets — Intermediate Stage

• Using 2-3 word phrases to request and comment

• Answering simple questions (What? Who? Where?)

• Initiating conversation with a peer or adult

• Staying on topic for 3-4 conversational exchanges

• Describing events that happened (past tense narrative)

 

Communication Targets — Advanced Stage

• Multi-step instructions and explanations

• Understanding and using idioms, sarcasm, implied meaning

• Advocacy language: 'I need a break,' 'I don't understand,' 'Can you help me?'

• Professional communication: email tone, phone etiquette, interview language

• Conflict resolution and expressing disagreement appropriately

 

πŸ—£ SCRIPT: Teaching 'I Need a Break' — Advocacy Communication

Parent: When you feel overwhelmed, you're allowed to say 'I need a break.' Let's practice. I'm going to do something a little hard with you, and when it feels like too much, you say 'I need a break.'

Parent: (Begins a moderately challenging task)

Child: (Shows distress signs — looking away, hands flapping)

Parent: (Prompts immediately) "Say 'I need a break.'"

Child: I need a break.

Parent: Perfect. You used your words. Take a 3-minute break. I'm proud of you.

Note: [Granting the break IS the reinforcer. This teaches that words work better than behavior escalation — a life-changing lesson.]

 

4.2  SOCIAL SKILLS — Learning to Navigate Other People

Social skill deficits are one of the defining features of autism and one of the biggest barriers to employment and independent living. These skills must be explicitly taught — they will not be absorbed passively.

       Eye contact and social orientation (modified for sensory needs — never forced)

       Greeting and farewell scripts

       Joint attention — sharing interest in the same thing with another person

       Play skills — parallel, cooperative, and imaginative play

       Reading facial expressions and body language

       Turn-taking and waiting

       Handling losing, disappointment, and frustration

       Workplace social skills: small talk, professional boundaries, team communication

 

πŸ—£ SCRIPT: Teaching a Greeting Script

Parent: When you see someone you know, here is what you say: 'Hi, my name is ___. How are you?' Let's practice. I'll be your friend. Ready?

Parent: (Approaches) "Hi there!"

Child: (Prompted) "Hi. My name is Alex. How are you?"

Parent: I'm great, thanks for asking! That was perfect. See how easy that was?

Note: [Practice 5x per session. Role-play different scenarios — meeting a teacher, a cashier, a potential employer. Generalize to real situations as quickly as possible.]

 

4.3  ACADEMIC SKILLS — Building True Educational Competency

ABA does not replace your academic curriculum — it gives you the tools to deliver it effectively. The key is breaking every academic skill into its component steps and teaching each step until mastered before moving on.

Core academic skill areas to systematically address:

Academic Area

ABA Approach

Reading — Phonics

Discrete trials on letter-sound correspondence; fluency building with timed practice

Reading — Comprehension

WH-question answering after passages; retelling with visual supports

Writing

Hand-over-hand for letter formation; fade prompts systematically; build to sentences

Math — Computation

Concrete → pictorial → abstract sequence; mastery before new concept

Math — Application

Real-life money skills, measurement, time; embed in daily routines

Science / Social Studies

Vocabulary DTT; concept mapping; real-world experiments with safety protocols

Study Skills

Teach schedule following, note-taking, task initiation — explicitly, not assumed

 

πŸ—£ SCRIPT: Task Analysis — Teaching Long Division Step by Step

Parent: We are going to learn long division. I've broken it into steps. Today we're only learning Step 1. Just Step 1, okay?

Parent: Step 1 is: Look at the first number. Ask yourself — how many times does the divisor go into it? Let's try. 6 goes into 8 how many times?

Child: Once?

Parent: Exactly right. One time. We write a '1' up top. That's the whole step. Let's do it five more times with different numbers. You're doing great.

Note: [Do not move to Step 2 until Step 1 is at 80% or above across three sessions. Mastery before progression is non-negotiable in ABA.]

 

4.4  EXECUTIVE FUNCTION — The Skills Behind All Skills

Executive function refers to the brain's management system — planning, organizing, initiating tasks, managing time, shifting between tasks, and regulating impulses. For many children on the spectrum, executive function is significantly impaired. This is why they can know information but not apply it, or can perform a task in one context but not another.

Executive function targets:

       Task initiation — starting a task without being repeatedly prompted

       Planning — using a planner, calendar, or checklist independently

       Flexibility — transitioning between activities without prolonged protest

       Working memory — holding information in mind while completing a task

       Inhibitory control — pausing before acting, resisting impulsive responses

       Self-monitoring — recognizing when you are off-task and correcting

Strategy: Visual Supports for Executive Function

First-Then boards:    "First math, THEN iPad." Reduces refusal, increases compliance.

Checklists:           A printed checklist of steps reduces demand on working memory.

Timers:               A visual timer removes ambiguity about 'how long.' Try Time Timer.

Choice boards:        Offering controlled choices increases autonomy and reduces power struggles.

Transition warnings:  '5 minutes until we switch.' Never transition without a warning.

 

πŸ—£ SCRIPT: Teaching Task Initiation with a Checklist

Parent: You see your morning checklist on the board. Can you tell me what's first?

Child: (Looks at checklist) "Breakfast."

Parent: Right. Go ahead and get started while I get your vitamins.

Child: (Begins breakfast independently)

Parent: (Returns, checks in) "I noticed you started without me having to remind you. That is what independence looks like. I'm proud of you."

Note: [The goal is INDEPENDENCE — fewer and fewer prompts over time. Track how many prompts were needed each session. Fade them deliberately.]

 

4.5  ADAPTIVE / DAILY LIVING SKILLS — Independence in Real Life

Adaptive skills are the skills of daily life: hygiene, dressing, cooking, cleaning, managing money, navigating transportation, using technology appropriately. These are often underprioritized in academic homeschool programs and critically important for adult independence.

Task analyze every single adaptive skill. Never assume your child can see the steps — make the steps explicit.

Sample Task Analysis: Brushing Teeth (15 Steps)

1. Walk to bathroom    2. Turn on light    3. Open drawer

4. Pick up toothbrush  5. Turn on water    6. Wet toothbrush

7. Open toothpaste     8. Apply toothpaste 9. Put cap back on

10. Brush top teeth    11. Brush bottom teeth  12. Rinse toothbrush

13. Rinse mouth with water  14. Dry face    15. Put items away

 

Teach one step at a time. Use forward chaining (start from step 1) or

backward chaining (teach step 15 first, build backward — child always finishes the task).

 

4.6  EMOTIONAL REGULATION — The Key to Life Success

More jobs are lost due to emotional dysregulation than due to lack of skill. Emotional regulation is not a soft skill — it is a survival skill. And it can be explicitly taught.

Key emotional regulation targets:

       Identifying emotions in self and others

       Connecting body signals to emotional states ('My chest feels tight = I might be anxious')

       Using a feelings scale (1-5 or the Zones of Regulation)

       Learning and practicing specific coping strategies — NOT just 'calm down'

       Recognizing triggers and building avoidance/management plans

       De-escalation — returning to regulation after a meltdown, safely

The 5-Point Feelings Scale (Adapted)

Level 1 — Happy, calm, ready to learn. (Green light — go!)

Level 2 — A little nervous or uncomfortable. (Yellow — slow down)

Level 3 — Frustrated, anxious, annoyed. (Orange — need a strategy NOW)

Level 4 — Very upset, starting to lose control. (Red — stop, use break plan)

Level 5 — Full meltdown / shutdown. (Emergency — quiet, safe space, no demands)

 

Teach your child to self-report their level throughout the day.

Intervene at Level 2-3. Do NOT wait for Level 5.

 

πŸ—£ SCRIPT: Teaching Coping Strategies at Level 3

Parent: It looks like you might be at a 3. Your voice is getting louder and you're pushing away your work. Can you check your body — what level do you feel like?

Child: Three.

Parent: Good job knowing that. That's self-awareness. Now look at your coping menu. What's one thing you could try right now?

Child: (Looks at card) "Deep breaths?"

Parent: Perfect. Let's do three together. Breathe in for four counts... hold two... out for four. Good. Again.

Note: [Practice coping strategies during calm times — not only during crises. The skill must be learned when regulated in order to be accessed when dysregulated.]

 

PART 5: BEHAVIOR MANAGEMENT — ADDRESSING CHALLENGING BEHAVIORS

5.1  Every Behavior Has a Function

Before you try to change a behavior, you must understand why it is happening. In ABA, every behavior serves one of four functions — what the behavior gets for the child, or what it helps them escape from.

Function

What the Child Is Getting or Avoiding

Attention

The behavior gets them parent or peer attention (even negative attention counts)

Escape/Avoidance

The behavior gets them out of a task, demand, or uncomfortable situation

Access to Tangibles

The behavior gets them an item, activity, or sensory experience

Automatic/Sensory

The behavior feels good in itself — internal stimulation or relief

 

Once you know the function, you can teach a replacement behavior that serves the same function appropriately. This is called Functional Communication Training (FCT).

Example: Tantrum Function → FCT Solution

Behavior:      Child throws materials when math is presented

Function:      Escape (avoidance of difficult task)

Wrong fix:     Removing math entirely (reinforces escape!)

Right fix:     Teach 'I need help' or 'Can we take a break?' as the replacement

               Grant brief breaks when the appropriate request is used

               Gradually reduce the frequency of breaks as tolerance builds

 

5.2  Behavior Intervention Plan (BIP) — Your Home Version

A Behavior Intervention Plan does not need to be a clinical document. It simply needs to answer four questions for every challenging behavior you are targeting:

6.     What is the behavior, exactly? (Define it in observable, measurable terms)

7.     What function does it serve? (Based on your A-B-C observations)

8.     What will we teach as the replacement behavior?

9.     How will we respond consistently when the behavior occurs — and when the replacement occurs?

 

Home BIP Template — Fill In for Each Target Behavior

Behavior definition:   _______________________________________________

Antecedent (trigger):  _______________________________________________

Consequence (what follows): ___________________________________________

Hypothesized function: _______________________________________________

Replacement behavior:  _______________________________________________

When replacement occurs, we will:  _____________________________________

When target behavior occurs, we will:  __________________________________

Proactive strategy (prevent trigger when possible):  ______________________

 

5.3  Crisis Safety Plan

If your child has behaviors that risk injury to themselves or others, you must have a written crisis plan before a crisis occurs — not during one. Work with a Board Certified Behavior Analyst (BCBA) to create and refine this plan.

Every Crisis Plan Must Include

• Definition of crisis-level behavior (specific, observable)

• Early warning signs BEFORE crisis (catch it early)

• Safe environment setup — remove hazards proactively

• Who does what during a crisis — every adult in the home

• What to say and what NOT to say (minimize language during escalation)

• Safe space protocol — where, how long, what's available

• Post-crisis routine — reconnection, not lecture

• When to call for professional support

 

PART 6: FROM EDUCATION TO EMPLOYMENT — THE LONG GAME

6.1  Thinking About Employment from Day One

The goal of education is not just academic — it is to produce an adult who can participate in society, support themselves, and live with dignity. For children on the spectrum, this outcome is not guaranteed by completing a curriculum. It requires intentional, explicit preparation for the demands of the workplace.

Begin thinking about employment skills even in elementary years, not as job training, but as character and competency training:

       Following directions from authority figures without argument — foundational

       Completing tasks to completion without giving up

       Asking for help appropriately

       Accepting feedback and correction without meltdown

       Working alongside others without needing constant attention

       Managing time and meeting deadlines

       Showing up and following through — reliability

6.2  Transition Planning — Ages 14 and Up

By age 14, your child's ABA programming should include a strong transition focus. Legal frameworks like IDEA (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act) mandate transition planning for students in public school at 16, but as a homeschool family, you should start at 14 or earlier.

Transition-focused ABA targets:

       Vocational interest exploration — what does your child gravitate toward?

       Job-readiness skills — interview behavior, application completion, punctuality

       Workplace social rules — supervisor relationships, peer interaction, appropriate conversation

       Self-advocacy — disclosing disability appropriately, requesting accommodations

       Financial literacy — budgeting, banking, understanding a paycheck

       Transportation — navigating public transit, using ride apps, driving assessment

       Community safety — what to do in emergencies, how to interact with police, medical self-advocacy

 

πŸ—£ SCRIPT: Teaching Job Interview Scripts

Parent: We're going to practice a job interview. I'll be the interviewer. Sit up, look toward me, and answer like you would for a real job. Ready?

Parent: (In interview voice) "Tell me about yourself."

Child: (Prompted if needed) "My name is Alex. I'm 18. I'm good at organizing and I'm always on time. I'm interested in working in a library or bookstore."

Parent: Excellent. What do you do when you don't understand an instruction from your boss?

Child: I would say, 'Excuse me, could you explain that again? I want to make sure I do it right.'"

Parent: That is a perfect professional answer. Employers love that. You're ready.

 

6.3  Working with BCBAs and Other Professionals

As a homeschool parent, you do not have to do this alone — and ideally you should not. A Board Certified Behavior Analyst (BCBA) is the highest credential in ABA and can provide:

       A formal Functional Behavior Assessment (FBA) to identify behavior functions

       A written Behavior Intervention Plan for challenging behaviors

       A skill assessment (like the VB-MAPP, ABLLS-R, or AFLS) to identify gaps

       Training for YOU — parent training is one of the most evidence-based uses of a BCBA

       Consultation on your homeschool ABA program — monthly is often enough

Finding a BCBA

• Behavior Analyst Certification Board (BACB): bacb.com — search for a BCBA in your area

• Telehealth BCBAs can consult remotely — often more accessible and affordable

• Ask local autism organizations and parent support groups for recommendations

• Check if your health insurance covers BCBA consultation

• Some BCBAs offer sliding scale fees for families — always ask

 

PART 7: A SAMPLE HOMESCHOOL ABA DAILY SCHEDULE

The following is a sample daily schedule for a homeschool student on the spectrum. Adjust timing, duration, and content for your child's age and needs. Consistency in the schedule itself is an ABA intervention.

Time

Activity & ABA Focus

7:00 - 7:45 AM

Morning routine — Adaptive skills (hygiene, dressing checklist); emotional check-in (feelings scale)

8:00 - 8:30 AM

Movement break / sensory activity — Regulates nervous system; sets up focus

8:30 - 9:15 AM

DTT Block 1 — Language/communication targets; high-frequency reinforcement

9:15 - 9:30 AM

Choice break — Reinforcer access; autonomy building

9:30 - 10:30 AM

Academic Block 1 — Reading/writing; ABA teaching strategies embedded

10:30 - 10:45 AM

Snack + social skills — Natural environment teaching; requesting; conversation practice

10:45 - 11:45 AM

Academic Block 2 — Math; task analysis for new concepts

11:45 AM - 12:30 PM

Lunch + Adaptive skills — Meal prep participation; money concepts; leisure skills

12:30 - 1:00 PM

NET Block — Science/social studies embedded in project or outing

1:00 - 1:30 PM

Social Skills Practice — Role-play scripts; video modeling; peer time if available

1:30 - 2:00 PM

DTT Block 2 — Executive function targets; review of mastery skills

2:00 - 2:30 PM

Emotional regulation practice — Calm-time coping skill practice

2:30 - 3:00 PM

Transition to afternoon — Daily review; reinforcer delivery; independence tasks

Evening

Family integration — Generalization of all skills into natural routines

 

PART 8: TAKING CARE OF YOURSELF — THE PARENT BEHIND THE PROGRAM

This section is not optional reading. A burned-out parent cannot deliver effective ABA. You are not just a caregiver — you are your child's primary therapist, teacher, and case manager. That is one of the most demanding roles a human being can hold.

Non-Negotiables for Homeschool ABA Parents

• You must have at least one period of daily respite — time that is yours.

• You must have at least one adult you can talk honestly to about your experience.

• You must not carry guilt for every difficult moment — difficult is not failing.

• You must celebrate your child's progress, no matter how small it looks to others.

• You must recognize when you are dysregulated and step away before it affects the session.

• You must seek professional support — therapy, parent coaching — if you need it.

• You must know that what you are doing matters. Profoundly.

 

Burnout in parents leads to program inconsistency. And inconsistency is one of the most counterproductive things in ABA. Your wellness is part of the intervention.

 

QUICK REFERENCE: TERMS EVERY HOMESCHOOL ABA PARENT SHOULD KNOW

Term

Plain English Meaning

Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA)

The science of changing behavior through environmental and consequential strategies

Antecedent

What happens right before a behavior — the trigger

Behavior

Any observable, measurable action

Consequence

What happens right after a behavior — determines if it increases or decreases

Reinforcer

Anything that makes a behavior more likely to happen again

Prompt

Help provided to get a correct response; must be faded over time

Discrete Trial Training (DTT)

Structured, repetitive teaching of skills in controlled conditions

Natural Environment Teaching (NET)

Teaching skills embedded in real-life routines and settings

Task Analysis

Breaking a skill into its smallest teachable steps

Functional Behavior Assessment (FBA)

A formal process to identify the function/reason behind a behavior

Behavior Intervention Plan (BIP)

A written plan for addressing a specific challenging behavior

Functional Communication Training (FCT)

Teaching an appropriate behavior to replace a problematic one (same function)

Generalization

Using a learned skill in new settings, with new people, in new variations

Maintenance

Continuing to perform a skill over time after formal teaching has ended

BCBA

Board Certified Behavior Analyst — the gold-standard credential in ABA

VB-MAPP / ABLLS-R

Skill assessment tools used to identify what to teach next

Mastery Criterion

The standard a skill must meet before moving on (typically 80%+ across 3 sessions)

Prompt Fading

Systematically reducing help over time to build independence

Chaining

Teaching complex behaviors by linking individual steps together

Extinction

Withholding reinforcement from a previously reinforced behavior to reduce it

 A Final Word

Your child has a future. A real one. One with employment, relationships, contribution, and joy. The path to that future requires deliberate, consistent, compassionate, and evidence-based effort — the kind of effort you are already committing to by reading every word of this guide.

ABA is not magic. It is not instant. It requires showing up every day, collecting data you would rather not have to collect, implementing scripts when you would rather just talk naturally, and maintaining consistency when you are exhausted.

But when a child who could not ask for what they needed learns to use their words — that is ABA working.

When a child who used to spend every transition in crisis learns to check their feelings scale and take a deep breath — that is ABA working.

When a 19-year-old walks into their first job interview, makes eye contact, shakes hands, and says "I'm glad to meet you" — and they mean it, and they know how to say it, because someone taught them — that is ABA working.

You are that someone. Start today.

 

Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) therapy originated from early 20th-century behaviorism, established by John B. Watson and developed through B.F. Skinner’s operant conditioning. In the 1960s, Dr. Ivar Lovaas pioneered applying these principles to autism, developing intensive, early behavioral interventions to improve communication and reduce institutionalization.
Foundations of ABA (1900s–1950s)
  • Behaviorism (1913): John B. Watson argued that psychology should focus exclusively on observable behaviors rather than internal mental states.
  • Operant Conditioning (1930s): B.F. Skinner developed the theory that behavior is shaped by its consequences—reinforcements (rewards) increase behaviors, while punishments decrease them
    .
Development and Early Application (1960s–1970s)
  • Ivar Lovaas and Autism: In the 1960s, Dr. Ivar Lovaas at UCLA began applying behavior analysis to children with autism, aiming to teach language and reduce behaviors that led to institutionalization.
  • Early Techniques: Early Lovaas interventions were intensive, often involving 40 hours a week of one-on-one, rigid, clinic-based training.
  • Formalization (1968): The Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis (JABA) was founded, establishing ABA as a recognized field of research and practice.
Evolution and Controversy (1980s–Present)
  • The Lovaas Study (1987): Lovaas published research claiming that intensive ABA intervention significantly improved cognitive and socialization skills in children with autism, boosting the popularity of the treatment.
  • Controversy: Early ABA techniques, particularly those used by Lovaas, were criticized for using harsh punishments (e.g., electric shocks, shouting) to stop unwanted behaviors.
  • Modern ABA: Modern ABA has shifted away from punitive measures toward positive reinforcement and child-centered approaches, focusing on teaching functional skills.
Key Milestones
  • 1990s: ABA services became more widely available in schools and early intervention programs.
  • Certification: The Behavior Analyst Certification Board (BACB) was formed to create formal standards and certifications for professionals.
  • Today: ABA continues to evolve, emphasizing naturalistic teaching, individualized care, and ethical standards