RBT Exam Prep

Lesson 2.1 — The RBT Role and Responsibilities

What an RBT is, and is not

A Registered Behavior Technician (RBT) is a paraprofessional who provides direct Applied Behavior Analysis services to clients under the close, ongoing supervision of a Board Certified Behavior Analyst (BCBA) or Board Certified Assistant Behavior Analyst (BCaBA). The RBT credential is issued by the Behavior Analyst Certification Board (BACB).

The key word is paraprofessional. An RBT implements; they do not design. An RBT collects data; they do not interpret it clinically. An RBT reports observations; they do not modify treatment plans. Everything an RBT does happens within a system of supervision and within the scope of the plans and instructions provided by a BCBA.

RBTs work with a wide range of clients, including individuals with:

  • Autism spectrum disorder (ASD)
  • Developmental disabilities
  • Mental health disorders
  • Cognitive impairments
  • Social disorders
  • Substance use challenges

Settings include homes, clinics, schools, and community environments.

What RBTs do: core responsibilities

1. Implement treatment plans

RBTs carry out skill acquisition plans (SAPs) and behavior reduction plans (BRPs) exactly as written by the BCBA. This means following the procedures, using the specified prompting strategies, delivering reinforcement as described, and completing programs in the order and format outlined in the plan.

2. Collect and report data

Accurate data collection is one of the most critical RBT responsibilities. Data drives all clinical decisions. RBTs use frequency, duration, latency, interval, and permanent product recording methods as directed. Data is reported to the BCBA through session notes, graphs, and verbal reports during supervision.

3. Assist with assessments

RBTs assist BCBAs with preference assessments, ABC data collection, and skill assessments. The RBT does not conduct functional behavior assessments (FBAs) independently; they assist under direction.

4. Maintain professional and ethical standards

RBTs follow the BACB’s ethics code at all times. This includes maintaining client confidentiality, respecting client dignity, maintaining professional boundaries, and avoiding dual relationships.

5. Collaborate with other professionals

RBTs communicate with speech therapists, occupational therapists, educators, and other team members as directed by the BCBA. The BCBA coordinates the clinical team; the RBT participates as a contributing member.

6. Participate in ongoing training and supervision

RBTs are required to maintain their competency through supervision, training, and annual renewal of their certification.

What RBTs do NOT do

This is as important as knowing what RBTs do. The exam frequently presents scenarios where an RBT takes an action they should not take, and the correct answer is to recognize the boundary.

RBTs do not:

  • Design, write, or modify behavior plans or skill acquisition plans
  • Make clinical decisions about a client’s treatment
  • Independently determine the function of a behavior
  • Independently conduct functional behavior assessments
  • Make promises to families about treatment outcomes
  • Provide clinical consultation to other professionals
  • Modify goals or criteria without BCBA direction
  • Communicate clinical information to families independently (formal clinical communication is the BCBA’s responsibility)

Exam tip: When a scenario asks what an RBT should do in an ambiguous or uncertain situation, the answer almost always involves one of two actions: continue implementing the plan as written and document what happened, or contact the supervising BCBA. If in doubt, defer to the supervisor.

Supervision requirements

The BACB has specific, mandatory supervision requirements that RBTs must meet. These are tested directly on the exam.

Minimum supervision

An RBT must receive qualified supervision for at least 5% of the total hours they provide ABA services each month.

Supervision contacts

Supervisors must have at least two real-time contacts with the RBT each month. At least one must be one-on-one (not in a group), and the second may be in a small group setting.

Direct observation

The supervisor must observe the RBT providing services at least once per month, either on-site or via video observation.

Record keeping

RBTs are responsible for:

  • Tracking their own work hours and supervision hours
  • Maintaining supervision records for 7 years
  • Producing records within 7 days if the BACB requests them during an audit

Who can supervise an RBT

  • BCBA (Board Certified Behavior Analyst)
  • BCaBA (Board Certified Assistant Behavior Analyst)
  • BCBA-D (Doctoral level BCBA)
  • A qualified individual in another behavioral health field who meets BACB criteria

RBT’s responsibility

If supervision is not being provided at the required rate, the RBT is responsible for requesting it. The supervisor is ultimately responsible for the clinical work done by the RBT.

Quiz 2.1 — The RBT Role and Responsibilities

15 questions · No time limit