Javascript is currently not supported, or is disabled by this browser. Please enable Javascript for full functionality.

Skip to Main Content
    The Chicago School of Professional Psychology
   
 
  Nov 22, 2024
 
2013-2014 Academic Catalog and Student Handbook with Addendum 
    
Catalog Navigation
2013-2014 Academic Catalog and Student Handbook with Addendum [Archived Catalog]

Ph.D. Applied Behavior Analysis


Return to Programs of Study Return to: Programs of Study


CHICAGO • LOS ANGELES

Doctor of Philosophy, Applied Behavior Analysis

Program Overview

Applied Behavior Analysis is the ethical design, implementation, and evaluation of environmental changes to produce socially significant improvements in behavior. At the M.S. level, the Applied Behavior Analysis program incorporates the content areas and practicum requirements to make graduates eligible for national board certification by the Behavior Analyst Certification Board® in addition to providing a solid foundation in the philosophy, science, and application of behavior analysis. The aim is to prepare students for a rewarding career in the rapidly growing field of Applied Behavior Analysis. M.S. graduates work in residential, school, and community-based settings with a wide variety of clients including children, adults, and seniors. Clients may have no diagnoses (e.g., school children in a regular education class or teachers seeking to be more effective) or may have diagnoses such as autism, behavioral difficulties, developmental disabilities, mental illness, and a variety of geriatric conditions. Doctoral graduates are lead practitioners and researchers in educational, clinical, and business settings who can successfully respond to the diverse needs of consumers of behavioral interventions and therapies, and who can teach and mentor students of behavior analysis in university settings. 

The Chicago School offers the prospective student three ABA Departments, two of which offer the PhD degree: one in Chicago, one in Los Angeles, and one in Washington, DC. The following information is intended to help the student to make an informed choice. First and most important, the core curriculum, policies, and procedures of these three Departments are identical. Core Courses have the same goals and competencies, required courses are the same, and the elective offerings are quite similar and in some cases identical. Both offer course sequences approved by the Behavior Analyst Certification Board® and both seek to develop highly competent behavioral scientist-practitioners who will be agents of change in our communities and contributors to the scientific literature.   The differences between Departments reflect the diversity in faculty interests and of applications of behavior analysis, the ABA opportunities in the Departments’ respective communities, and the delivery mode and scheduling of classes. We advise prospective students to carefully consider these factors, interview the faculty, review their publications and presentations, and make a very strong commitment to ABA at the Chicago School campus of their choice.

The TCS Los Angeles ABA Department delivery model has been created to serve full-time working people. The program operates on a Fall, Spring, and Summer semester schedule (with standard school breaks). The ABA classes are held on campus on Saturdays and Sundays on alternating weekends of each semester. During the Fall and Spring semesters which are comprised of 14 weeks, ABA students attend classes on 7 weekends; during Summer, which is 8 weeks, they attend classes on 4 weekends. Additionally, the TCS LA ABA Department follows a blended-course model for some 2- and all 3-credit courses.  Blended courses combine on-ground classroom instruction with additional on-line content.  The purpose of the on-line content is to support material covered during the on-ground classes, and to assist students in incorporating that material in more complex domains such as issues relevant to applied practice, theoretical and philosophical considerations, and scientist-practitioner related research activities.

In Los Angeles, students are provided with opportunities to pursue  full- or part-time employment throughout the Southern California region. Current TCS LA ABA students work in a range of settings with various populations covering more than 60 different organizations and agencies. In addition, the TCS LA ABA T.E.A.C.H. (Training + Education = Achievement) center is located on the Los Angeles campus. The mission of T.E.A.C.H. is to provide training and support to individuals and organizations seeking to improve evidenced-based practices. LA ABA students have the opportunity to support T.E.A.C.H. activities across several domains including direct service provision, research associate positions, and the development of novel approaches to training and the dissemination of behavior analysis, to name a few. In addition to providing mentorship and supervision for T.E.A.C.H. related activities, several LA ABA faculty support student involvement in their own community-based behavior-analytic clinical and research services. These services are diverse and multi-faceted, and opportunities for student involvement range from direct service support (e.g., assessment, training, client service provision) to systems design and development (e.g., organizational behavior management).

The TCS Chicago ABA Department is oriented toward the full-time day student, although there are many part-time students in Chicago as well. Many students work (some full-time) but we always advise students to consider carefully the balance between school, family, and work and make reasoned choices about time and resource allocation. Because of the ABA field placement requirements, students are generally on campus two to three days a week and at practicum or working on other days. The Chicago Campus also offers the ABA student other opportunities to expand and apply their skills. At this time one opportunity is with the application of ABA technologies to public schools, and the second is with clinical and counseling skills and licensure, and other opportunities are under development.

One opportunity is a function of the Chicago ABA Department’s close relationship with some public schools in the area, and significant work with the schools both in Special Education and in Regular Education. Chicago ABA graduates and students consult and work with local public schools, including a wide range of Special Education diagnoses and school configurations. Some of these sites (serving the range of ABA clients from people with autism and other disabilities to neuro-typical populations) also use Precision Teaching and provide opportunities for advanced research in instructional design as well as other applied experimental analyses.  

A second opportunity arises from the relationship between the ABA Department in Chicago and the Counseling Department.   The ABA student in Chicago may apply for the additional courses and supervised practice leading to a State license: the LPC (Licensed Professional Counselor) credential (see below for more details about the requirements for the LPC). The intent is to give these students a very strong foundation of theory and practice in radical behaviorism (and the BCBA credential), while giving them the knowledge, skills, and license of the professional counselor. It should be noted that the courses in this joint sequence are taught by the faculties of the respective Departments and are not “watered down” in any way, so students pursuing this path may form a uniquely valuable synthesis and enrich both fields.

Admission Requirements

Application to The Chicago School’s Doctor of Philosophy in Applied Behavior Analysis programs is open to any person who has earned a bachelors degree from a regionally accredited institution and who meets other entrance requirements. Applicants will be judged on their overall ability to do graduate work. Factors that are considered in admission are: GPA from undergraduate and any graduate schools, successful work history after completion of the baccalaureate degree, the admission essay, and letters of recommendation from academic professors or professional or volunteer experience supervisors. Generally, an undergraduate GPA of a 3.0 or higher on a 4.0 scale is required for admission. Students must submit official transcripts from all schools where a degree was earned. It is recommended that transcripts are submitted from all schools where credit was received to enhance their applications

There are two entry points into the Ph.D. Applied Behavior Analysis Program: 1) post-baccalaureate 112 credit, and 2) post-Masters with BCBA 58 credit*; NOTE that only* applicants with a Masters degree and the required BCBA coursework will be considered for post-Masters entry.  Additional coursework may be required for Post-Masters entry students with a non TCSPP Applied Behavior Analysis Masters degree and when appropriate, the standard TCSPP course transfer and waiver guidelines apply (information available on the TCSPP website).

Standardized Testing

The Graduate Record Examination (GRE) is required for ABA doctoral work but not for MS applicants. Scores should be sent directly to the school (GRE School Code: 1119) for consideration. Please see the application for detailed instructions and information regarding application requirements, application deadlines, and letters of recommendation
 

Application Fees

Degree applications must be submitted with a $50.00(USD) application fee to be considered.

TOEFL or IELTS, International Credentials, and International Students

TOEFL or IELTS: If English is not your primary language, you must submit official TOEFL or IELTS scores with your application (TOEFL School Code: 7161). International students who received a bachelor’s degree from an accredited United States institution are exempt from this requirement. The minimum scores are: TOEFL - 550 paper based, 213 computer based, 79 internet based; IELTS - 6.5.

ELS Educational Services, Inc.: The Chicago School is a cooperative member of ELS Educational Services, Inc. which provides intensive English language programs. Students who have successfully completed ELS course 112 may be considered for admission in lieu of the TOEFL or IELTS.

International credentials: Applicants with international credentials must obtain and submit an official “course-by-course” evaluation through an evaluation agency such as World Education Services (www.wes.org) or Educational Credential Evaluators Inc (www.ece.org). In addition to the agency evaluation, all official graduate and undergraduate transcripts must be submitted.

International students: International students must submit a completed application by the general consideration deadline. This will allow sufficient time to obtain the additional documentation required to study in the United States. In addition, once accepted, international students must submit the International Student Information form, a copy of their passport, and financial documentation showing sufficient funding for at least one year of study and all living expenses. This documentation must be submitted at least two months prior to the start of the semester in order to allow sufficient time for the school to issue an I-20 for the student to obtain an F-1 visa, if needed.. An I-20 visa will not be issued without this documentation.

Applicant Notification

The Chicago School reviews applications on a rolling basis. Once review begins, complete applications will be considered by the Admission Committee and applicants will be notified regarding the admission decision. The Chicago School does not share information or provide any feedback regarding admission decisions.

If a student is offered admission, in order to secure a place in the incoming class, a non-refundable tuition deposit of $500 will be required by the deposit deadline indicated in the offer of admission. The non-refundable deposit will be applied in full toward the student’s tuition upon enrollment.

Policies

The following policies are located under Academic Policies and Procedures : Transfer of Credit, Waiver of Courses, Satisfactory Academic Progress, Grading Scale, Grade Change Requests, Degree Completion, Degree Conferral, Minimum and Maximum Timeframe requirements, and Credit Hours per semester for Financial Aid.  Information on the Academic Success Program is located under Student Life .

Earning a Master of Science in Applied Behavior Analysis as Part of the PhD

An M.S. in Applied Behavior Analysis is awarded following the successful completion of the program requirements. At the beginning of the semester in which a student expects to be eligible for the master’s degree, he or she is required to submit online a Petition for Program Completion to the Office of Academic Records. The petition is a request to conduct an audit to determine eligibility for the degree. Students who meet the requirements are eligible to participate in the next scheduled commencement. All students who file a Petition for Program Completion will be charged a fee.

Click here to view the M.S. Applied Behavior Analysis catalog page. 

Academic Development Plans

An Academic Development Plan (ADP) is initiated and created by the Department in which the student is enrolled when a student demonstrates deficiencies in competencies that interfere with academic performance, training competence, and/or professional behavior. Academic Development Plans (ADPs) do not constitute disciplinary action, but failure to complete the plan may lead to disciplinary action.

Student Learning Assessment

The Chicago School of Professional Psychology (TSCPP) is committed to offering the highest quality graduate and undergraduate completion programs in applied professional disciplines. In order to meet the TCSPP standard for academic quality, all programs will develop overall program competencies, learning objectives, assessment instruments, course descriptions, and course learning objectives. Each of these curriculum components must align in order for students to understand how their program will prepare them for the profession and how they will learn what TCSPP intends. 

All academic programs at TCSPP are required to develop, conduct, and report annual assessments of student learning and program effectiveness in compliance with the processes and procedures established by TCSPP.  These assessments provide reliable and valid information to monitor, maintain, and advance the quality of academic programs.

The Program

The Ph.D. in Applied Behavior Analysis program will develop and graduate professionals who can help people and organizations select, implement, and manage effective systems to improve outcomes across a variety of settings. The programs provide students with a solid understanding of the Theory and Philosophy of Behavior Analysis as the foundation that informs the Applied Behavior Analysis, Experimental Analysis of Behavior, and Service Delivery domains to produce graduates who rely on the science of behavior to contribute to the betterment of society.

The objective of the Ph.D. in Applied Behavior Analysis program is to train individuals to contribute to applied practice settings in addition to the behavior analytic scholarly and political communities doctoral level ABA students gain a comprehensive understanding of Theory and Philosophy, the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, Applied Behavior Analysis, and Service Delivery. Graduates are equipped with the repertoire to function as leaders in their respective positions (i.e., clinical, academic, etc.) and are prepared to address a range of issues and problems, and to design, implement, and test practical effective solutions that work in the real world. Entry to the Ph.D. in Applied Behavior Analysis program is offered to post-baccalaureate students with and without their Masters degree. The incoming profile of the student determines the semester credits, the course sequence, and the years required to complete the program.

Philosophy

The Ph.D. in Applied Behavior Analysis program is designed to prepare students in a wide variety of specialization areas within ABA. Although it is common for lay people to assume that ABA is relevant only to people with autism or other developmental disabilities, behavior analysis is applied to numerous populations and problems. Thus, in the program, students can focus not only on issues related to the assessment and treatment of Autism Spectrum Disorders, but also on the assessment and treatment of severe behavior problems, instructional design, organizational behavior management, and applications with non-traditional populations such as geriatrics, people with traumatic brain injury, and regular and special education. Thus, while ABA techniques apply to people with disabilities, they are just as useful to people in the general population.

The Ph.D. in Applied Behavior Analysis program provides training to students related to all four domains of Behavior Analysis (i.e., Theory & Philosophy, Experimental Analysis of Behavior, Applied Behavior Analysis, and Service Delivery). Further, the programs and curricula are designed to infuse the scientist-practitioner model across these domains and teach students to be consumers of new research findings, evaluators of their own interventions and programs using empirical methods, and researchers, producing new data from their own settings and reporting these data to the applied and scientific community.

In summary, the Ph.D. in Applied Behavior Analysis program’s mission is to provide students with the scientific, analytical, and conceptual tools they need to provide effective, ethical, and practical behavior-analytic interventions to the diverse populations that they serve. The vision of the program is to provide the most comprehensive and effective graduate training in ABA, and to that end, the faculty provide the students with the most up-to-date information and research, and encourage critical analysis of the research with an emphasis on using it to drive practice. The ABA program emphasizes not only knowledge of the research and assessment and intervention techniques, but sound understanding of the basic concepts and principles of behavior analysis, so that students will have the conceptual and scientific underpinnings necessary to understand why interventions work, how to measure their effects, and to make appropriate program modifications when they do not. Because ABA is based on a rapidly developing and evolving behavioral technology grounded in research, the knowledge base is constantly changing. It is our Mission in the Ph.D. in Applied Behavior Analysis program at The Chicago School remain at the forefront of the development of this field.

Program Outcomes

1.     Students will explain and behave in accordance with ethical and professional standards of the field of applied behavior analysis.

2.     Students will describe and explain behavior in behavior-analytic language, using behavioral concepts and principles and in accordance with the philosophic assumptions of behavior analysis.

3.     Students will define and measure various dimensions of behavior, display and interpret behavioral data, and evaluate measurement procedures.

4.     Students will identify and use various experimental designs and evaluate research and interventions effectively and ethically. Students will assess individual behavior and recommend function-based interventions.

         Students will describe and use behavior-analytic procedures to  produce   short- and long-term benefits for clients. Students will describe and use systems of self-management, teaching, and training to produce short- and long-term benefits for clients.

         Students will identify and recommend effective interventions and state and plan for possible unwanted effects of those interventions.

5.     Students will provide for ongoing documentation, implementation, evaluation, and termination of behavioral services, including staff training and environmental support.

6.     Students will describe multicultural and diversity issues and the historical variables that contribute to them, and apply the analysis to solving individual and social problems.

7.     Students will communicate effectively in a variety of formats, for varying reasons, and with various groups of people.

BCBA Exam

The ABA program prepares and qualifies students to take the BCBA Exam. The exam results are treated as a professional qualification for individual students, as well as data about the adequacy of the program in preparing students. Students should visit (www.bacb.com) for details.

Ethics and Professional Behavior

Students are expected to learn and to follow the ethical guidelines of the American Psychological Association, the Association for Behavior Analysis: International, and the Behavior Analyst Certification Board® during and after their work at The Chicago School. A class in ethics is required, and student adherence to ethical codes is evaluated both formally and informally.

Certification

The Applied Behavior Analysis BCBA course sequence (seven 3-credit courses) is approved by the Behavior Analyst Certification Board® and meets the requirements necessary to take the Board Certified Behavior Analyst (BCBA) exam. ABA curricula are periodically reevaluated by the BACB to maintain approval status. 

Professional Development Group

All Doctor of Philosophy in Applied Behavior Analysis students are required to enroll in a Professional Development Group during their first semester in the program.  Students are matched with an advisor and should enroll in that faculty member’s Professional Development Group. The Professional Development Group class is graded on a pass/fail basis.

Comprehensive Examination

PhD students in ABA are required to take and pass a written comprehensive examination and an oral defense before they are allowed to propose their dissertation research to the Institutional Review Board (IRB). Four 1-credit courses prepare students to take the exam and to defend their answers. Students have two chances to pass each component (a third attempt may be allowed under extenuating circumstances). When the written and oral components of the comprehensive exam are passed, the student becomes a Doctoral Candidate and can proceed to his/her dissertation research

Dissertation

Doctoral students are also required to complete a dissertation. The dissertation must be a data-based empirical evaluation that marks an original contribution to the published literature. The PhD course sequence facilitates student completion of the dissertation with a carefully designed course sequence that has the necessary steps toward dissertation completion embedded into the required coursework. Students receive detailed information about the dissertation process and related requirements during their first year in the program.

More specific information is located in the Program Guidebook.

Full-Time vs. Part-Time Status

Since the function of the program is to increase the student’s knowledge and abilities, and these goals require intensive efforts and substantial time, the student must consider carefully the balance between school, work, family, and other responsibilities. In general, faculty members plan for students to spend three hours studying for each hour in class. Students who work full time should take a lighter load (five to nine hours per semester) in order to be able to devote to the program the energy and time that will yield the maximum benefit to them.

Class Scheduling

Some classes will be scheduled to meet in non-traditional formats to minimize travel. These will be announced well in advance so that students can make appropriate arrangements. Classes generally meet in one of three schedule patterns:

  • Once a week for one, two, or three hours
  • The distance class involves few or no face-to-face meetings, but instead extensive work via the internet or a similar distance communication system.
  • Between three and eight times a semester (for longer periods at each class meeting) when the faculty member is traveling from outside the local area

Classes are offered in a mix of day, evening, and weekend times. Note that there are some classes offered only in one time slot, such as evenings or weekends. Students are expected to have arranged other obligations in such a way as to permit attendance to classes whenever they are scheduled.


The Curriculum

The PhD in Applied Behavior Analysis is a 112-credit program which consists of 99 core credits and 13 electives. As part of the core coursework, students are required to complete comprehensive examinations (described above) in order to ensure that they are competent scientist-practitioners in Applied Behavior Analysis. The comprehensive exams assess knowledge and skills across the four domains of Behavior Analysis: Basic, Applied, Service Delivery, and Theory and Philosophy. In addition to the comprehensive exams, doctoral students are also required to complete a doctoral dissertation. The dissertation must take the form of a data-based empirical evaluation, and must mark a contribution to current peer-reviewed publications in the field. In an effort to facilitate timely graduation, relevant components of the dissertation process have been built into the doctoral student course sequence. Students are required to enroll in Proposal Development seminar and Dissertation Development courses (see Course Descriptions), during which they propose, conduct, and defend their dissertation (13 total credits). Dissertation-related activities are also infused throughout the other Core courses. Students attend the research lab of the faculty member that has been identified as their dissertation chair and research lab serves as a forum for students to both present and receive feedback throughout the dissertation process. The dissertation proposal and defense is conducted in a committee style format, and details of the process are delineated for the students at the outset of the dissertation process.

Required  Coursework:  99 Credits (includes 48 M.S. credits)

Electives: 13 Credits

Return to Programs of Study Return to: Programs of Study