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ABA Therapy vs Speech Therapy: Understanding the Differences

Compare ABA therapy and speech therapy for autism. Learn how these therapies differ, overlap, and can work together for your child's benefit.

Published December 28, 2024

Shamay Selim, M.Ed., BCBA

Clinical Director at Foundations Autism

Reviewed December 28, 2024

ABA Therapy vs Speech Therapy: A Comprehensive Comparison

Parents of children with autism often wonder about the differences between ABA therapy and speech therapy. Both can help with communication, but they take different approaches and address different aspects of your child's development. Understanding these differences helps you make informed decisions about your child's care.

Quick Comparison

Aspect ABA Therapy Speech Therapy
Provider BCBA (Board Certified Behavior Analyst) and RBT (Registered Behavior Technician) SLP (Speech-Language Pathologist)
Focus Behavior and learning across all domains; communication is one component Speech, language, communication disorders, and oral motor skills
Hours Typically 10-40 hours/week Typically 1-3 hours/week
Setting Home, center, school, community Clinic, school, occasionally home
Approach Behavioral principles, data-driven, functional communication Language science, developmental models, speech mechanics

What ABA Therapy Addresses

ABA therapy takes a comprehensive approach to development:

Communication in ABA

  • Functional communication (requesting, rejecting, commenting)
  • Manding (making requests)
  • Tacting (labeling things in the environment)
  • Intraverbals (conversational responses)
  • Communication across different settings and people
  • Alternative communication systems (PECS, AAC devices)

Other ABA Areas

  • Social skills and play
  • Daily living skills (self-care, safety)
  • Behavior management
  • Academic readiness
  • Motor imitation
  • Attending skills

What Speech Therapy Addresses

Speech therapy focuses specifically on communication disorders:

Core Speech Therapy Areas

  • Articulation: Producing speech sounds correctly
  • Phonology: Sound patterns in language
  • Expressive language: Using words, sentences, grammar
  • Receptive language: Understanding language
  • Pragmatics: Social use of language
  • Fluency: Speech flow (stuttering)
  • Voice: Pitch, volume, quality
  • Oral motor: Mouth muscle coordination for speech
  • Feeding/swallowing: If SLP has this specialty

How They Complement Each Other

ABA and speech therapy can work together effectively:

ABA Strengths

  • More intensive hours for practice
  • Teaches communication in natural contexts
  • Addresses motivation for communication
  • Generalizes skills across settings
  • Targets behaviors that interfere with communication
  • Coordinates with parents for home practice

Speech Therapy Strengths

  • Expertise in speech sound production
  • Knowledge of typical language development
  • Assessment of language disorders
  • Oral motor evaluation and treatment
  • AAC device evaluation and programming
  • Treatment of specific speech disorders

Collaboration Goals

  • SLP assesses and identifies speech/language needs
  • ABA team practices communication throughout the day
  • Both teams coordinate on communication goals
  • SLP provides consultation to ABA team on specific issues
  • ABA addresses behaviors that interfere with speech therapy
  • Both share strategies with parents

When You Need Both

Consider both ABA and speech therapy when your child has:

  • Autism diagnosis with communication delays
  • Articulation problems (hard to understand)
  • Need for intensive communication practice
  • Behavioral barriers to communication
  • Need for AAC device support
  • Complex language disorders

When ABA Alone May Be Sufficient

  • Communication delays are primarily motivation/behavioral
  • Speech sounds are age-appropriate
  • Language structure is developing well
  • No specific speech disorder present
  • Insurance or access limits other services

When Speech Therapy Alone May Be Sufficient

  • No autism diagnosis or behavioral needs
  • Specific speech sound disorder only
  • Language disorder without autism features
  • Stuttering or voice disorder
  • Oral motor or feeding concerns

Questions to Consider

  • What are your child's specific communication challenges?
  • Is your child's speech difficult to understand?
  • Does your child need intensive practice opportunities?
  • Are there behavioral factors affecting communication?
  • What does your insurance cover?
  • What providers are available in your area?

Coordinating Care

If your child receives both therapies:

  • Request providers communicate regularly
  • Share goals between teams
  • Ask about coordinated treatment planning
  • Avoid conflicting approaches or vocabulary
  • Ensure parents receive consistent guidance
  • Consider scheduling around each other for child's energy

Making the Decision

To determine the right combination for your child:

  1. Get comprehensive evaluations from both disciplines
  2. Discuss recommendations with each provider
  3. Consider your child's overall needs
  4. Check insurance coverage for both
  5. Assess scheduling and family capacity
  6. Start with what's most needed and add services as appropriate

Got questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about this topic.

Should my child do ABA therapy or speech therapy?

Many children with autism benefit from both ABA and speech therapy. ABA addresses overall communication in the context of behavior and learning, while speech therapy focuses specifically on speech and language disorders. They complement each other well, and your child's team can coordinate goals.

What's the main difference between ABA and speech therapy?

ABA therapy uses behavior science to teach a wide range of skills including communication, while speech therapy specifically addresses speech, language, and oral motor skills. ABA focuses on functional communication in real-world contexts, while speech therapy may address articulation, phonology, and language structure.

Can ABA therapists work on speech goals?

Yes, ABA therapy often includes communication goals using approaches like Verbal Behavior (VB). However, ABA therapists aren't speech-language pathologists and can't address all speech issues. They focus on functional communication rather than speech mechanics like articulation.

Does insurance cover both ABA and speech therapy?

Yes, most insurance plans cover both therapies as they address different clinical needs. ABA is typically covered under autism/behavioral health benefits, while speech therapy is covered under medical or rehabilitation benefits. Both may require prior authorization.

Have more questions?Visit our FAQ·ABA Glossary

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