At the end of your child's first month with us at MindWay ABA you'll sit down with a two-page report and a graph you can read in under a minute. That's the bar.
Most ABA therapy pages describe data collection as something that happens behind a clinician's door. Ours doesn't work that way. If you can't read your child's progress, you can't tell whether the hours, the drives, and the early mornings are doing anything. So this page is a walkthrough of how we measure progress, how often you'll see it, and what you'll actually be looking at when you do.
We work with families across Carmel, from West Carmel and Home Place to households closer to Midtown Plaza, plus neighbors in Westfield, Zionsville, Fishers, and Noblesville. The rhythm of Carmel Clay Schools shapes our review calendar more than people expect: kindergarten readiness windows in late spring, IEP cycles in late summer, and the six-month insurance reassessment cadence that runs underneath all of it.
2 pages
Monthly summary in plain language
< 1 min
To read the graph that matters
Every 6 mo
Formal reassessment & parent review
3 weeks
Flat data triggers a goal revisit
01 · Daily Measurement
How we measure progress, day to day
Every session your child has, an RBT is collecting data on the specific skills and behaviors in their plan. Not vague impressions. Numbers, tied to targets, that roll up into a graph your BCBA reviews before the next session even starts.
Frequency
How many times your child independently asked for water in a two-hour session.
Duration
How long they stayed in a peer game before disengaging.
Latency
"Put on your shoes" used to take 45 seconds. Now it takes 8.
Rate
Requests per hour, useful when session lengths vary.
Interval
Sampling for behaviors too frequent to count cleanly.
Not all of this happens in a session room. Some of your child's most important data gets collected on the Monon Greenway practicing greetings with strangers, or at Coxhall Gardens where we run sensory-friendly outings. A skill that only shows up in our center isn't really mastered yet. The data has to reflect that.
The formal assessments behind the daily data
Early language
VB-MAPP
Starting point for most younger learners building foundational skills.
Language & academics
ABLLS-R
More granular skill mapping across language and academics.
Independent living
AFLS
Older learners working on self-care and community skills.
Verbal behavior
PEAK
Deeper look at language and cognition.
02 · The Reports You'll See
What your progress reports actually look like
You get two documents, not one. The clinical version for your chart and your payer. And the one written for you: a plain-language monthly summary, usually two pages, that says what your child worked on, what moved, what didn't, and what we're trying next.
Monthly Summary — Sample
Independent manding · last 12 sessions
The x-axis is almost always time, usually sessions or dates. A rising trend line means the skill is gaining ground. A flat one means it's stalled. A vertical phase-change line marks the day we changed something on purpose, so you can see whether the change helped.
A plateau isn't automatically bad. Three weeks of flat data is our trigger to revisit.
We time quarterly reviews around the Carmel Clay Schools calendar when it matters. Late spring before kindergarten transitions. Late summer ahead of IEP meetings in 46032 and 46033 households where school coordination is part of the plan.
03 · Cadence
When you'll hear from us
-
Weekly
Brief check-in From your BCBA or lead RBT — text, call, or note at pickup.
-
Monthly
Plain-language summary Two pages. What moved, what didn't, what we're trying next.
-
Quarterly
Deep review meeting Timed around the Carmel Clay Schools calendar when it matters.
-
Every 6 months
Formal reassessment Re-score VB-MAPP, ABLLS-R, AFLS, or PEAK. Drives insurance authorization.
04 · Goals
How goals get set, reviewed, and adjusted
A goal starts with three inputs, not one. Your BCBA reviews the functional behavior assessment, the relevant skills assessment results, and the priorities you bring to the table. If getting through a haircut without a meltdown is what's actually wrecking your week, that goes on the list ahead of a stacking-blocks target. Your priorities aren't a wishlist. They're an input with weight.
80%
Independent responses across 3 sessions, with at least 2 different staff members.
DTT
Short, structured repetitions at a table.
NET
Same skill, folded into play, snack, or community outings.
BST
How we teach parent-facing goals: explain, model, you try, feedback.
Goals get adjusted when one of four things happens. Your child masters the target. The data goes flat for three weeks. You raise a new priority. Or a skill works inside our center but falls apart at a shop in the Carmel Arts & Design District or in a crowd at Carter Green during Christkindlmarkt season, which tells us we have a generalization gap to close before we call it done.
Want a real look before you decide?
Bring your child's last progress report — from us or another provider — and a BCBA will walk through it with you.
05 · Your Role
You're part of the measurement system
Not the audience for it. Your BCBA schedules short parent training sessions on a regular cadence, usually 30 to 45 minutes, built around the goals you care about most.
What we handle
- Clinical-grade data every session
- Skills assessments and re-scoring
- Writing the goals and the report
- Coordination with Carmel Clay Schools IEP teams
- Insurance plan and authorization paperwork
What we ask of you
- 30–45 min parent training on a regular cadence
- Simple home tally — tap or fridge sheet
- Tell us when our data doesn't match yours
- Generalization practice on the Monon, at Flowing Well, etc.
- 30 min with us before each 6-month plan goes to your payer
We're not handing you interval recording sheets at bedtime, and we're not asking you to run trials. Clinical-grade data collection is our job. Your data tells us whether the skill is generalizing to the place it actually has to work, which is your house.
06 · The Six-Month Cycle
Reassessment and insurance, explained
Reassessment is the heartbeat of long-term progress, and most clinics don't talk about it because it's tangled up with insurance. We'd rather you understand it. Indiana Medicaid and most major commercial payers operate on roughly six-month authorization cycles. We don't invent timelines around your contract. We work within whatever yours says.
Step 1
Re-score the assessment
Same tool we baselined on — VB-MAPP, ABLLS-R, AFLS, or PEAK.
Step 2
Compare to baseline
Movement at the domain level: language, social, self-care, academics.
Step 3
30-min parent review
You see the new scores and proposed goals before submission.
Step 4
Submit to payer
Updated treatment plan authorizes the next block of hours.
If something in the plan doesn't match what you're seeing at home in 46032, 46033, or 46074, we want to hear it before submission. Not after. For families across Hamilton County, your BCBA also coordinates with school teams when an IEP cycle is approaching.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
How often will I get a progress report?⌄
Four cadences run in parallel. A brief informal check-in each week from your BCBA or lead RBT, a plain-language written summary once a month, a deep-dive review meeting each quarter, and the formal six-month reassessment that goes to your payer. You don't have to wait for any of them — if you want the current graphs between scheduled touchpoints, ask.
What assessment tools do you use?⌄
Four, depending on your child. VB-MAPP for early language learners. ABLLS-R for a more granular map across language and academics. AFLS for older learners working on independent living and community skills. PEAK when verbal behavior and cognition need a deeper look. Your BCBA picks the right tool at intake and stays with it through reassessments so the comparisons mean something.
What if my child plateaus on a goal?⌄
Three weeks of flat data is our trigger to revisit. We bring it to the next clinical meeting, talk through what's likely blocking progress (prompt dependence, the wrong teaching format, a generalization gap, a goal that wasn't quite right), and propose a change. You hear about it before we implement it, not after. A plateau isn't a failure. It's information.
Do you do in-home, center-based, or school consultation?⌄
All three. Many Carmel families run a mix: center-based ABA for structured learning, in-home ABA for generalization where it actually matters, and school consultation when an IEP team needs coordination. Data follows your child across settings, so a skill measured at the center gets probed on the Monon Greenway, at Coxhall Gardens, or at a shop in the Carmel Arts & Design District before we call it mastered.
What credentials do your team members hold?⌄
Sessions are run by Registered Behavior Technicians (RBTs) under the supervision of a BCBA (Board Certified Behavior Analyst) holding an active Indiana Behavior Analyst license. Some teams include a BCaBA (Board Certified Assistant Behavior Analyst) providing additional clinical oversight. Supervision ratios meet or exceed BACB requirements, and your BCBA is the one writing your child's plan, reviewing the data, and sitting across from you at every reassessment.
With the right data in front of you, you'll never have to wonder whether ABA therapy is working.
Start with a sample report, a 20-minute consult, or insurance verification — whichever fits your week.
Or call (317) 795-0307 — we get back same-day.

