How to Find a BCBA Near You in Maryland | The Learning Tree ABA
⏱ 11 min read 🎓 Understanding ABA 📍 Maryland Families ✅ Provider Evaluation Guide

This guide explains exactly what a BCBA is, what separates a BCBA from other members of the therapy team, how to verify credentials in Maryland, what questions to ask before choosing a provider, and what to expect from a BCBA who is truly invested in your child. By the end, you will have everything you need to evaluate any ABA provider confidently — including us.

Key Takeaways
  • The BCBA — not the RBT — designs your child's program, supervises all sessions, and makes every clinical decision.
  • Maryland BCBAs must hold both national BACB certification and a Maryland state behavior analyst license. Both are verifiable in under a minute — for free.
  • BCBA caseload size is one of the most important quality questions you can ask. A BCBA supervising 20+ children simultaneously cannot provide genuine oversight.
  • Research directly links BCBA supervision frequency and parent training involvement to better therapy outcomes.
  • A good BCBA will welcome every hard question in this guide. Evasiveness is a red flag.

What Is a BCBA and What Do They Do?

BCBA stands for Board Certified Behavior Analyst. It is a graduate-level professional credential issued by the Behavior Analyst Certification Board (BACB), the national organization that sets standards for the field of applied behavior analysis. Earning a BCBA is a rigorous process with four distinct requirements:

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Graduate Degree

A master's degree or higher in behavior analysis, psychology, education, or a closely related field from an accredited program.

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Supervised Fieldwork

1,500 to 2,000 hours of supervised fieldwork in applied behavior analysis, completed under direct BCBA supervision.

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National Examination

A passing score on the BACB's comprehensive national exam covering assessment, behavior intervention design, ethics, and clinical practice.

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Ongoing Continuing Education

32 CEUs every two years — including at least 4 in ethics — to maintain certification. BCBAs must recertify continuously to stay active.

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Maryland adds a second layer of protection. In addition to national BACB certification, BCBAs must hold a state-issued license through the Maryland Board of Professional Counselors and Therapists — a requirement in effect since 2015. Practicing behavior analysis in Maryland without a current state license is a regulatory violation. This two-layer system gives families clear, verifiable protections.

What a BCBA Does Day to Day

In the context of ABA therapy for a child with autism, a BCBA's responsibilities include:

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Individualized assessment before any goals are written

A thorough evaluation of your child's communication, skills, learning preferences, and behavior — conducted before therapy begins, not after.

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Designing the behavior intervention plan and all therapy goals

Every goal is based on the assessment and your family's priorities — not pulled from a generic template. The BCBA writes the clinical roadmap for your child.

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Supervising the Registered Behavior Technicians (RBTs)

RBTs implement sessions directly with your child. The BCBA designs those sessions, trains the RBTs, and is accountable for everything that happens in them.

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Providing parent training

So you understand the strategies being used and can support your child at home, in the community, and at school — not just during session hours.

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Reviewing data and adjusting the program

Every session generates data. The BCBA reviews it, identifies what is working and what needs to change, and adjusts goals and procedures as your child makes progress.

The BCBA is not the person sitting with your child for 20 hours a week — that is the RBT's role. The BCBA is the clinician who designs and oversees the program. In a well-run ABA program, the BCBA's role is not a formality. It is the foundation of everything.

BCBA vs. BCaBA vs. RBT: Understanding the Full ABA Therapy Team

One of the most common sources of confusion for families entering ABA therapy is the alphabet soup of credentials. Who is who on the therapy team? Who makes clinical decisions? Who should you be able to reach when you have a question?

Credential
Education & Training
Role in Your Child's Program
Clinical Decision Authority
Board Certified Behavior Analyst
BCBA
Master's degree or higher; 1,500–2,000 supervised fieldwork hours; national exam; 32 CEUs every 2 years; Maryland state license required
Conducts assessment; writes all therapy goals and the behavior plan; supervises RBTs; provides parent training; reviews data and adjusts the program
Full clinical authority. All clinical decisions belong to the BCBA.
Board Certified Assistant Behavior Analyst
BCaBA
Bachelor's degree; supervised fieldwork hours; national BCaBA exam; continuing education required; Maryland state license required
Assists the BCBA with program implementation and supervision; may supervise RBTs under BCBA oversight; cannot practice independently
Limited, under BCBA supervision. Cannot independently design or oversee a full clinical program.
Registered Behavior Technician
RBT
High school diploma minimum; standardized 40-hour BACB training; competency assessment; must be supervised by a BCBA or BCaBA at all times
Implements the therapy program the BCBA has designed; spends the most direct time with your child; builds the therapeutic relationship session by session
No independent clinical authority. Implements only — all decisions are made by the supervising BCBA.
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What this means for your child's care: In a quality ABA program, your child will spend most session hours with an RBT. This is normal and expected — RBTs are trained to build strong, consistent therapeutic relationships. What matters is that the BCBA is genuinely present, genuinely engaged, and genuinely supervising. A BCBA whose name is on your child's case but who is rarely present is not providing adequate care — and that is a meaningful quality concern.

How to Verify a BCBA's Credentials in Maryland

Verifying a BCBA's credentials is simple, free, and something every family should do before starting therapy. There are two things to confirm: national BACB certification and Maryland state licensure.

1

Search the BACB Certificant Registry

National certification — certificant.bacb.com

The BACB maintains a public online registry of all currently certified BCBAs. Search by name to confirm certification is active and in good standing, whether it is under disciplinary review, and whether the BCBA-D (doctoral-level) designation applies.

A name search takes under a minute and gives you current status directly from the certifying body.

🔍 Search the BACB Registry →
2

Verify Maryland State Licensure

State license — Maryland Dept. of Health

BCBAs practicing in Maryland must hold a current state license issued by the Maryland Board of Professional Counselors and Therapists. Verify through the Maryland Department of Health's online license verification tool, or call the Board directly at 410-764-4732.

Both verifications together take under two minutes and are entirely free.

🔍 Verify Maryland License →
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If a credential cannot be verified: A legitimate BCBA is easy to find in both registries. If a provider is evasive about credentials, cannot provide a BACB certificate number, or redirects you away from official verification channels, treat that as a significant red flag and seek care elsewhere. At The Learning Tree ABA, all of our BCBAs hold current BACB certification and active Maryland state licensure. We are glad to share credentials with any family who asks.

Why BCBA Supervision Is Essential in ABA Therapy

An RBT is trained to implement a specific program with skill and consistency. What an RBT is not trained or credentialed to do is assess a child independently, modify a therapy plan, troubleshoot when progress stalls, or make clinical decisions about goals. Those responsibilities belong exclusively to the BCBA.

Research consistently shows that the quality of BCBA oversight is one of the strongest predictors of ABA therapy outcomes. This is why supervision ratios matter so much when evaluating any provider. A BCBA supervising 20 or 25 children simultaneously cannot realistically provide meaningful oversight for any of them.

✅ Adequate BCBA supervision looks like
  • Regular direct observation of your child's sessions
  • Consistent data review between sessions
  • Program adjustments when something isn't working
  • Scheduled parent training as a core part of the program
  • Prompt, accessible communication when you have questions
  • A manageable caseload — typically under 12 active cases
  • Clear explanation of what is being worked on and why
⚠️ Inadequate supervision looks like
  • BCBA rarely or never observed in sessions
  • Goals that haven't changed in months without explanation
  • Parent training not offered or very infrequent
  • Difficulty reaching the BCBA with questions
  • Vague answers about how often the BCBA checks in
  • Very large BCBA caseloads (20+ children)
  • Session data not reviewed or explained to the family

When evaluating any ABA provider in Maryland, asking specifically about BCBA caseload size and supervision frequency is not an invasive question. It is one of the most important questions you can ask.

Related | Supporting Your Child's Growth with ABA Therapy — What the Research Shows

Questions to Ask a BCBA Before You Start Therapy

Finding a BCBA near you is one thing. Finding the right BCBA for your child requires knowing what to ask — and knowing what good answers sound like. Use this at any consultation, with any provider. A BCBA who is confident in their approach and genuinely committed to family partnership will welcome every one of these questions. Evasiveness is a meaningful signal.

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Consultation Checklist — Ask Every Provider These Questions

Note what good answers look like versus answers that should give you pause

Question to AskWhat a Good Answer Sounds Like
How many children does each BCBA currently supervise?
A specific number — ideally under 12 active cases. Confidence in the answer signals transparency.
How often will the BCBA directly observe my child's sessions?
At least 10–20% of total therapy hours, with regular scheduled observations — not just "as needed."
How will my child's therapy goals be developed?
Through a formal individualized assessment first. Goals should reflect your child specifically — not a standardized template.
Is parent training included in the program?
Yes — as a core, structured component of the care plan, not an occasional add-on.
How will I know if my child is making progress?
Regular data reviews with the BCBA, explained in plain language. You should always understand what the data shows and what it means.
What happens if progress stalls or a goal isn't working?
A clear process: the BCBA reviews data, identifies the problem, and adjusts the program. You are notified and involved in the conversation.
What approach do you take to goals around autism — do you use neurodiversity-affirming practices?
Goals focused on communication, independence, safety, and quality of life — not on making a child appear neurotypical. Your child's identity is respected.
Can I verify your BACB certification and Maryland state license?
An immediate yes, with a BACB certificate number provided willingly. No legitimate BCBA will hesitate at this question.

What the Research Says About BCBA-Supervised ABA

The evidence base for BCBA-supervised ABA therapy is extensive. Decades of peer-reviewed research — including studies published in the Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis and the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders — consistently demonstrate that children who receive adequately supervised, individualized ABA therapy make significant gains in communication, adaptive behavior, social skills, and daily living skills.

What the Evidence Shows

Research on supervision quality shows that the frequency and quality of BCBA oversight is directly associated with better outcomes for children in ABA therapy. Studies examining caseload size, supervision hours, and parent training involvement consistently find that more engaged BCBAs produce better results — not just in raw skill acquisition, but in how well those skills generalize to home, school, and community settings.

A 2024 review published in Behavior Analysis in Practice examined factors associated with treatment quality across ABA programs. Among the strongest predictors of positive outcomes were BCBA supervision frequency, the presence of formal parent training within the program, and the degree to which therapy goals were individualized to the child's specific needs and family priorities — rather than pulled from a generic template.

Sources: Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis; Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders; Behavior Analysis in Practice (2024 review)

This is why the questions in the section above matter. You are not asking about administrative details. You are asking about the factors that research identifies as most predictive of your child's progress.

The BCBA-Led Team at The Learning Tree ABA

At The Learning Tree ABA, the BCBA is not a name on a case file. Every child in our care is assigned a dedicated BCBA who is genuinely present, genuinely supervising, and genuinely invested in that child's progress. We hold ourselves to every standard described in this guide.

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Individualized assessment before any goals are set

Before your child's first therapy session, their assigned BCBA conducts a thorough assessment to understand your child's current skills, communication style, learning preferences, and your family's priorities. No goals are written from a template. Every goal reflects your child specifically.

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Active, ongoing supervision — not checkbox supervision

Our BCBAs observe sessions directly, review data, and adjust programs based on what is actually happening in your child's sessions. This is real clinical involvement, not a name on a case file.

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Parent training built into every program

Parent training is a core component of every care plan — not an optional add-on. Your BCBA will work with you directly to build the skills and confidence to support your child at home, in the community, and at school.

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Communication that is clear and consistent

You will know what is being worked on, why, and how it is going — in plain language, not just data graphs. Your BCBA is accessible to answer questions and address concerns promptly.

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Neurodiversity-affirming goals

Our BCBAs set goals that are meaningful for your child and your family — focused on communication, safety, independence, and quality of life. We do not set goals designed to make your child appear neurotypical. Your child's identity is respected in every session.

All of our BCBAs are currently certified with the BACB and hold active Maryland state behavior analyst licenses. We will provide credential verification to any family who requests it — no hesitation. Ask us for credentials the same way you would ask any provider. We welcome it.

We serve families across Maryland — Baltimore County, Montgomery County, Howard County, Anne Arundel County, Harford County, Carroll County, and surrounding areas — through in-home services and our Hunt Valley center.

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Ready to connect with our BCBA team?

Reaching out is a no-pressure, no-commitment conversation. We will help you understand the intake process, verify your insurance or Medicaid coverage, and answer any question in this guide.

Contact The Learning Tree ABA →

Finding a BCBA near you in Maryland is a starting point. Finding the right BCBA — one who knows your child, is genuinely invested in their progress, communicates with you as a partner, and practices ethical, modern ABA — is the goal.

You now have the knowledge to evaluate any provider. You know what the credential requires, what questions to ask, how to verify that credentials are real, and what good supervision looks like versus what is inadequate. We would rather you go into this with high standards and choose us because we meet them. Ask us hard questions. We will welcome every one of them.

You Deserve a BCBA Who Is Truly Present.

Reach out to The Learning Tree ABA to connect with our BCBA team and schedule a free, no-obligation consultation.

Schedule a Free Consultation → Always a priority. Never a number. — Learn. Grow. Blossom.

Frequently Asked Questions About Finding a BCBA in Maryland

A BCBA (Board Certified Behavior Analyst) and an RBT (Registered Behavior Technician) have very different roles. The BCBA is the clinical expert — a master's-level professional who assesses your child, designs their individualized therapy program, supervises all sessions, provides parent training, and makes all clinical decisions. An RBT is the direct therapist who spends the most time with your child during sessions, implementing the program the BCBA has designed.

RBTs complete a standardized 40-hour BACB training and a competency assessment, and must practice under ongoing BCBA supervision at all times. They do not make independent clinical decisions about your child's program. A quality ABA program requires both roles working in close coordination: the RBT providing consistent daily therapy, and the BCBA providing regular oversight, data review, program adjustments, and family support.

The Learning Tree ABA maintains a team of licensed BCBAs who serve families across Maryland, including Baltimore County, Montgomery County, Howard County, Anne Arundel County, Harford County, and Carroll County. Every child in our program is assigned a dedicated BCBA who is responsible for their individual program.

We are happy to provide specific information about our current BCBA team during your consultation. If you would like to know more about the experience and background of the BCBAs who serve families in your area, please contact our intake team directly.

Consistency matters deeply in ABA therapy. A BCBA who knows your child — who has observed their progress over time, understands what motivates them, and has built a relationship with your family — is better positioned to make good clinical decisions than one who is new to the case.

At The Learning Tree ABA, we work hard to maintain consistency in BCBA assignment. Transitions do happen occasionally due to life circumstances, and when they do, we manage them carefully to ensure continuity of care. Your child's program documentation, goals, and data history transfer fully to any new BCBA, and there is always a structured transition period. Stability in the therapeutic relationship is something we take seriously.

BACB guidelines require BCBAs to provide regular, active supervision of the RBTs implementing their clients' programs. What "regular" means in practice depends on the child's age, the intensity of their program, and the complexity of their clinical needs. For younger children, children early in therapy, or children with more complex behavioral profiles, more frequent BCBA involvement is appropriate.

A common standard in quality ABA programs is that the BCBA directly observes and participates in at least 10 to 20 percent of a child's total therapy hours, in addition to reviewing session data, holding parent training sessions, and being accessible to the family between scheduled contacts. When you speak with any provider — including us — ask this question directly and expect a specific, transparent answer. Vague responses like "as needed" are not reassuring.

Yes — and in a quality ABA program, that access should be a built-in feature of the program, not something you have to fight for. At The Learning Tree ABA, regular parent meetings with the BCBA are part of every child's care plan. These meetings are not just administrative check-ins. They are working sessions where your BCBA explains what the data shows, discusses what is going well and what needs adjusting, answers your questions, and builds your skills through parent training.

You should always be able to contact your BCBA with time-sensitive questions between scheduled meetings. If you ever feel that you cannot reach your child's BCBA or that your questions are not being prioritized, that is worth addressing directly — and if it cannot be resolved, it may be a reason to consider a different provider. You are a partner in your child's therapy, not an observer. Your BCBA should treat you that way.

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Educational Information Only

The content on this page is intended for general informational and educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional clinical or legal advice. Credential requirements, supervision standards, and licensure rules reflect our best understanding at the time of publication and may change; always verify current requirements directly with the BACB and the Maryland Board of Professional Counselors and Therapists. Every child is unique — their needs, their progress, and the therapy approach that is right for them will differ. Reading this guide does not establish a provider-client relationship with The Learning Tree ABA. To discuss your child's specific situation, please contact our team directly.