This paper aims to explore how reflective practice, a deliberate process of examining professional actions, decisions and assumptions, can enhance clinical effectiveness in applied behaviour analysis. Despite being well-established in related disciplines, reflective practice has received limited systematic attention in behaviour analytic literature, representing a gap in progressive practice development.
This conceptual paper synthesises reflective practice literature from education, health care and social work with behaviour analytic principles. It translates traditional reflective models into behavioural terms and proposes implementation strategies including structured journaling, peer consultation and graduated skill development within Applied Behaviour Analysis (ABA) supervision frameworks.
Reflective practice offers systematic examination of how personal histories, contextual factors and implicit biases influence clinical decisions. Key benefits include improved alignment with ABA principles, enhanced ethical reasoning, increased cultural responsiveness and burnout prevention. Barriers include time constraints and limited training.
As a conceptual paper, empirical validation within ABA is needed. Future research should operationalise reflective practice using behaviour analytic methodology, develop valid measurement tools and examine impact on practitioner behaviour, client outcomes and ethical decision-making.
This study provides practitioners with strategies for incorporating structured reflection through self-monitoring systems, peer consultation and supervision protocols. This study offers organisations guidance on creating reflective cultures while maintaining fidelity to behavioural principles and evidence-based practice standards.
To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this study represents one of the first comprehensive explorations of reflective practice in ABA. This study bridges progressive practice movements with empirical foundations, contributing to discussions about reframing behaviour analysis towards contextually sensitive, ethically grounded practice.
