What Is Pivotal Response Training (PRT) and How It Helps Build Motivation
Some of the most meaningful gains in ABA therapy come not from correcting every behavior but from focusing on a few key learning areas — or pivots — that can unlock widespread progress across multiple skills. That’s the idea behind Pivotal Response Training (PRT), a naturalistic teaching approach rooted in the science of ABA.
Unlike highly structured strategies like Discrete Trial Training, PRT takes place in everyday environments and is designed to increase motivation, responsiveness, and generalization. It’s playful, child-led, and often looks like everyday interactions — but it’s backed by decades of research and clinical success.
What Is PRT?
PRT focuses on a small set of “pivotal areas” — skills that, when improved, cause broad improvements in other domains. These pivotal areas include:
Motivation
Responsivity to multiple cues
Self-management
Initiations of social interactions
Rather than targeting isolated skills like “say dog” or “match shapes,” PRT strengthens a child’s overall ability to learn by increasing their motivation to participate and communicate.
The Core Principles of PRT
PRT strategies include:
Child Choice
Use items and activities the child is naturally interested in (e.g., blocks, trains, iPad).Clear, Natural Cues
Use everyday language (“Do you want juice?”) rather than robotic instructions (“Say ‘juice’ now”).Interspersed and Varied Tasks
Mix easy and difficult tasks so the child stays engaged and successful.Direct Reinforcement
Reward is naturally linked to the response — if the child says “ball,” they get the ball (not just a token).Reinforce Attempts
Even approximations (“buh” for “bubbles”) get praise to build confidence.
What Does a PRT Session Look Like?
Let’s say the child loves trains. The therapist sits on the floor and offers a choice: “Do you want the red train or blue train?” The child points. The therapist says, “Say red train.” If the child tries, they immediately get to play with it. The therapist builds in new language naturally (“Let’s go fast!” “Wow, it’s crashing!”) while staying engaged in the play.
This looks like fun — and it is. But it’s also teaching key communication, turn-taking, and attention skills.
What Skills Can Be Taught With PRT?
Requesting (manding)
Making choices
Social interactions
Conversation starters
Flexible language use
Because PRT focuses on motivation and responsiveness, it’s particularly helpful for children who:
Are resistant to more structured teaching formats
Have difficulty generalizing skills to new settings
Struggle with spontaneous language
How PRT Helps Build Motivation
Many children with autism show low motivation for adult-led tasks. PRT flips this dynamic by:
Letting the child lead the activity
Embedding learning into play
Using natural rewards
Reinforcing effort and approximations
This creates more intrinsic motivation — the child learns that communication and interaction lead to enjoyable outcomes.
How Parents Can Use PRT at Home
Follow your child’s lead during play
Pause during an activity and wait for a communication attempt
Reinforce all efforts to communicate — words, gestures, signs
Use clear prompts: “Tell me what you want.”
Offer real rewards — not just tokens, but the item requested
Example: During snack time, hold up two preferred items and say, “Which one?” Prompt your child to name one and give it immediately.
Real-Life Example
Ava, age 4, had very limited spontaneous speech. Traditional DTT methods felt frustrating for her. When her therapist switched to PRT using her favorite dolls and dress-up games, Ava began initiating requests like “hat, please” and “my turn” — phrases she hadn’t used before. Her language blossomed through play.
Final Thoughts
PRT shows us that learning doesn’t have to be rigid — it can be joyful, spontaneous, and driven by your child’s natural curiosity. By focusing on pivotal skills and harnessing motivation, PRT empowers children to connect, express themselves, and enjoy the process of learning.