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Supporting High-Needs Learners in Group Settings

Supporting High-Needs Learners in Group Settings

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Supporting high-needs learners in group settings starts with how we design the environment, not how we manage behavior. We reflect on how unclear expectations, limited movement, and unpredictable routines can impact anyone, then connect that experience to what our learners face every day. By redefining “high needs,” we focus on learners who require more support with regulation, skill acquisition, and participation, without lowering expectations for their success.

We explore the often unspoken skills required in group settings, like waiting, turn-taking, imitation, and tolerating mistakes, and why these must be explicitly taught. We also share proactive strategies like structuring predictable routines, using visuals, and separating group skill instruction from academic content.

Finally, we discuss common pitfalls such as over-prompting, reinforcing escape, and staff burnout, and how thoughtful planning, intentional teaching, and clear team communication can create more inclusive and sustainable group experiences.

What’s Inside:

  • Why environment design matters more than behavior control
  • Key group skills that must be explicitly taught
  • Common mistakes and how to prevent staff burnout

Mentioned in This Episode:
How To ABA Blog
Episode 172: How to Teach Executive Functioning Skills
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