ABA Therapy Goals: Examples & How Goals Are Set
Learn how ABA therapy goals are developed and see real examples across different skill areas. Understand what makes effective goals and how progress is measured.
Shamay Selim, M.Ed., BCBA
Clinical Director at Foundations Autism
Understanding ABA Therapy Goals
ABA therapy goals are the foundation of an effective treatment program. Well-written goals are specific, measurable, and meaningful to the child's quality of life. This guide explains how goals are developed and provides examples across skill areas.
Characteristics of Good ABA Goals
Effective ABA therapy goals are:
- Specific: Clearly describes the target behavior
- Measurable: Can be counted or quantified
- Achievable: Realistic for the child's current level
- Relevant: Meaningful to the child's life
- Time-bound: Has a target timeframe for mastery
- Observable: Can be seen and documented
- Functional: Serves a practical purpose
How Goals Are Developed
Assessment Phase
- BCBA conducts comprehensive skill assessment (VB-MAPP, ABLLS-R, etc.)
- Current skills and deficits are identified
- Parent priorities and concerns are gathered
- Developmental sequence is considered
- Functional goals are prioritized
Goal Selection
- Balance across skill domains
- Build on existing strengths
- Address barriers to learning
- Consider prerequisite skills
- Align with family values and culture
Example Goals by Domain
Communication Goals
| Skill | Example Goal | Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Requesting | Child will independently request preferred items using words or PECS | 10 different items, 80% of opportunities, across 3 settings |
| Labeling | Child will label common objects when asked "What is it?" | 50 items, 90% accuracy, across 3 consecutive sessions |
| Answering questions | Child will answer "What's your name?" and "How old are you?" | 100% accuracy across 5 consecutive sessions |
| Conversation | Child will maintain a back-and-forth conversation for 3 exchanges | 5 different topics, 80% of opportunities |
Social Skills Goals
| Skill | Example Goal | Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Joint attention | Child will follow a point to look at objects | 90% accuracy across 3 consecutive sessions |
| Parallel play | Child will play alongside peers for 5 minutes | Without adult prompting, 80% of opportunities |
| Turn-taking | Child will take turns during games with a peer | 3 turn exchanges, 80% of opportunities, 5 different games |
| Greetings | Child will wave and say "hi" when greeted | Within 3 seconds, 90% of opportunities, across 3 people |
Self-Care Goals
| Skill | Example Goal | Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Toilet training | Child will independently use toilet when needed | No accidents for 2 consecutive weeks |
| Dressing | Child will put on shirt independently | Within 2 minutes, 100% of steps, 5 consecutive days |
| Handwashing | Child will complete all handwashing steps | Without prompts, 90% of opportunities |
| Eating | Child will use utensils to eat meals | 80% of bites, across 5 consecutive meals |
Behavior Goals
| Skill | Example Goal | Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Following directions | Child will follow 1-step instructions within 5 seconds | 90% accuracy, 10 different instructions |
| Waiting | Child will wait appropriately for 2 minutes | Without problem behavior, 80% of opportunities |
| Transitions | Child will transition between activities without crying | 80% of transitions across 5 consecutive days |
| Tolerance | Child will accept "no" without tantrums | 90% of occurrences across 1 week |
Academic Readiness Goals
| Skill | Example Goal | Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Matching | Child will match identical objects | 20 different pairs, 90% accuracy |
| Letters | Child will identify all uppercase letters | 26 letters, 90% accuracy, random order |
| Counting | Child will count objects 1-10 | With 1:1 correspondence, 90% accuracy |
| Sitting | Child will remain seated during table activities | For 10 minutes, 80% of intervals |
Behavior Reduction Goals
Goals targeting challenging behaviors require additional considerations:
Example: Reducing Aggression
- Baseline: Child hits others an average of 8 times per day
- Goal: Reduce hitting to an average of 1 or fewer per day
- Replacement behavior: Child will request break using words or card
- Criteria: Average of ≤1 per day for 2 consecutive weeks
Key Elements for Behavior Goals
- Always include a replacement behavior to teach
- Define behavior specifically (what counts as hitting?)
- Identify and address the function of behavior
- Set realistic reduction targets
- Focus on increasing positive behaviors
Tracking and Revising Goals
Data Collection Methods
- Frequency: Counting occurrences
- Percentage: Correct responses out of opportunities
- Duration: How long behavior lasts
- Latency: Time to respond
- Trial-by-trial: Recording each attempt
When to Revise Goals
- Goal is mastered—add new targets
- No progress after adequate time—adjust teaching strategy
- Goal proves too easy—increase difficulty
- Goal proves unrealistic—break into smaller steps
- Priorities change—revisit goal selection
Parent Involvement in Goals
Parents play a crucial role in the goal-setting process:
- Share what skills would most help your family
- Provide input on what motivates your child
- Give feedback on whether goals are realistic
- Report on generalization at home
- Practice skills between sessions
- Celebrate progress together
Got questions?
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about this topic.
Goals are developed collaboratively by the BCBA, parents, and when appropriate, the child. The BCBA conducts assessments to identify skill gaps, parents provide input on priorities and family needs, and goals are individualized for each child. Goals are reviewed and updated regularly based on progress.
A typical ABA program has 5-15 active goals at any time, though this varies by child and treatment intensity. Goals span multiple domains (communication, social skills, self-care, etc.). As goals are mastered, they move to maintenance and new goals are added.
Goals are measured through systematic data collection during sessions. Each goal has specific, measurable criteria (e.g., '80% accuracy across 3 consecutive sessions'). Data is graphed and analyzed to track progress and make treatment decisions.
When a goal is mastered, it moves to a maintenance phase where it's practiced less frequently to ensure retention. The BCBA works on generalizing the skill to new settings and situations. Then new goals are introduced to continue building skills.
Keep learning
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