Classroom & IEP Support

In-School ABA Therapy in Virginia

Big Heart ABA partners with Virginia families and schools to bring ABA support into the place children spend most of their day, the classroom. Our team works hand-in-hand with teachers, counselors, and IEP teams to help students access learning, manage transitions, and build the social skills that make school a place they want to be.

Student receiving in-school ABA support 🎓 Classroom-Based
Therapist working with student at school
In-school ABA collaboration in Virginia

Collaborative. Discreet. IEP-Aligned.

Why Choose Big Heart ABA for School Support

We Work With the Teacher, Not Around Them. Our Behavior Technicians integrate quietly into the classroom routine, supporting transitions, breaks, and group work without pulling the student into a separate corner. Teachers report less disruption, not more.

IEP-Aligned Goals. Our BCBAs attend IEP meetings across Virginia and translate state service goals into ABA objectives. Parents finally get one team pulling in the same direction.

Real-Time Behavior Support, Not Crisis Calls. Most school behavior plans react after a problem occurs. Our in-classroom presence prevents escalation by reading the early signs, prompting coping strategies, and de-escalating before a meltdown interrupts the day.

Student and therapist in classroom setting
Children learning in a classroom

Better Days. Better Outcomes. Together.

Why In-School ABA Makes a Difference

School Is Where the Hard Skills Live. Sitting in a group, waiting your turn, transitioning between subjects, dealing with the cafeteria. These are skills you can't teach at home. ABA support in the classroom addresses them in the moment they actually matter.

Fewer Calls Home, Fewer Suspensions. When in-school ABA is in place, families consistently report a drop in disciplinary referrals. Children stay in their seats, in their classrooms, and in their schools.

Friendships Get a Chance to Grow. Support in the classroom isn't just academic. ABA helps with reading social cues, joining conversations, and handling the small social moments that lead to real friendships.

Talk to Our Team
FAQ's

Common Questions About In-School ABA