June 5, 2026

My Child Doesn’t Play “Typically”, How Naturalistic Play-Based ABA Approach Helps

In-Home Play-Based ABA Therapy for Young Children with Autism in Lehi, Alpine, and Highland, Utah

Many parents share the same quiet concern: “My child doesn’t play like other children.”

They may line up toys, focus on parts of objects, avoid pretend play, or prefer playing alone. For families of young children with autism—especially between 18 months and 6 years old—this is often one of the earliest signs that support may be needed.

The good news? Play can be taught, supported, and expanded, without forcing children to play in a way that doesn’t feel natural.

That’s where play-based ABA therapy makes a meaningful difference.

Why Play Looks Different for Some Children with Autism

Play is a developmental skill. For some children with autism, challenges with:

  • Joint attention
  • Engagement with others
  • Symbolic or pretend play
  • Flexibility and regulation

can affect how play develops.

This doesn’t mean a child can’t learn to play, it means they need intentional, respectful support that meets them where they are.

Why Traditional Approaches Often Miss the Mark

Some therapy models focus on:

  • Structured drills
  • Compliance-based tasks
  • Repetition without connection

For young children, these approaches may:

  • Reduce motivation
  • Increase frustration
  • Limit creativity and engagement
  • Fail to generalize skills to real life

Play-based ABA takes a different path, one grounded in connection, engagement, and developmental readiness.

How Play-Based ABA Supports Play Development

At Playability Behavior & Learning, play is not a break from learning—it is the learning.

Using evidence-based models such as:

  • Early Start Denver Model (ESDM)
  • JASPER (Joint Attention, Symbolic Play, Engagement, and Regulation)

we support children by:

  • Following their interests
  • Building joint attention and shared enjoyment
  • Expanding functional and symbolic play
  • Supporting emotional regulation during play
  • Encouraging communication through natural moments

This approach helps children learn how to:

  • Engage with others
  • Use toys flexibly
  • Participate in routines and pretend play
  • Communicate needs, ideas, and emotions

All within activities that feel safe and motivating.

Why In-Home Play-Based ABA Matters

Young children learn best in familiar environments.

In-home ABA therapy allows us to:

  • Work within daily routines
  • Use the child’s own toys and interests
  • Coach parents in real time
  • Support skills that generalize naturally

This leads to progress that shows up outside of therapy, not just during sessions.

What Progress Really Looks Like

Progress in play-based ABA may look like:

  • Increased eye contact and shared attention
  • Longer engagement during play
  • New ways of using toys
  • Emerging pretend play
  • More communication, verbal or nonverbal
  • Fewer frustrations during play

These changes form the foundation for later learning, social skills, and independence.

Why Families Choose Playability Behavior & Learning

Families in Lehi, Alpine, and Highland choose us because we offer:

  • BCBA-led, in-home ABA therapy
  • A play-based, neuroaffirming approach
  • Specialization in ages 18 months–6 years
  • High-quality, individualized care
  • Bilingual services in English and Spanish

We work with families who value thoughtful, relationship-based early intervention and want therapy that respects their child’s unique development.

Serving Families in Lehi, Alpine, and Highland, Utah

If you’re wondering:

  • “Is my child’s play development on track?”
  • “How can therapy help without forcing my child?”
  • “What does high-quality ABA really look like?”

We invite you to schedule a consultation to learn how play-based ABA can support your child’s growth.

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