What We Do

Collaboration with
Caregivers and Service Providers

We understand the impact this diagnosis can have on those most directly affected by the learner’s disabilities: those who live with them at home. We appreciate that parents know their child best and value their feedback at every step in the therapy process. Through weekly consultation, parents guide the goals targeted in therapy. The BCBA and therapist collaborate with family members to address any questions or concerns they have regarding treatment and to offer training and support. Working together as a team ensures treatment integrity, and promotes generalization and maintenance of the learner’s progress. Our objective is to empower family members with scientifically proven strategies that will reform everyday encounters, facilitate more positive interactions, and foster more meaningful relationships. We collaborate with schools, speech therapists, physical therapists, and any other providers willing to be our partner in supporting your child’s progress. We have attended IEP meetings at the request of parents.
Applied
Make a difference of social importance for the family.
Behavioral
Focus on observable and measurable behavior.
Analytic
Prove relationships between behavior and the environment.
Technological
Procedures are clear and replicable.
Conceptually Systematic
Relate procedures to behavioral principles.
Effective
Behavioral techniques result in socially significant change.
Generality
Results are durable and long lasting.

Skills we target in therapy include but are not limited to:

Daily living skills such as: using the toilet, brushing teeth, transitioning from a preferred activity to a non-preferred activity, working the best way, cleaning up, completing age-appropriate activities, getting dressed and undressed, putting clothes in the hamper, tying shoes, following a schedule, sitting at the table while eating, eating new foods, wiping, using a tissue, cleaning hands using soap and water, wiping hands and face when done eating, counting objects, listening to a story, and completing a puzzle.

Communication skills such as: labeling and identifying environmental objects, labeling and identifying family members, requesting basic needs and wants, using functional phrases in the appropriate context, responding to WH questions, asking WH questions, responding to social questions, following instructions, verbal imitation, labeling and identifying nouns and verbs, placing objects according to prepositions, expressive and receptive sequencing, singing age-appropriate songs, and responding to yes/no.
Motor skills such as: buttoning buttons, zipping zippers, coloring, drawing, writing, cutting, fine motor coordination, fine motor imitation, gross motor imitation, gross motor coordination, throwing a ball, jumping, running, performing the motions to age-appropriate songs, climbing stairs, jumping rope, and manipulating small objects to build a model.

Social skills such as: making eye contact in response to name, looking in the direction of a point, initiating a conversation, reciprocating a conversation, responding to social greetings, showing an object to others, playing age-appropriate games, taking turns, waiting, sharing, accepting “no”, interrupting appropriately, imitative play, pretend play, sharing experiences, listening to others, and sharing stories.

At PRISM, we focus on socially significant behaviors that “typical” children don’t need to be taught and that aren’t taught in “typical” classrooms. We teach our learners to demonstrate culturally acceptable behaviors, become “a good friend”, identify emotions, and develop an awareness of others. The more socially adaptive skills our learners develop over time, the more we expand their opportunities to be included among peers and participate in a purposeful lifestyle.
Contacts
217 Brook Avenue, Suite 201,
Passaic NJ 07055