Question

Difficulty: hard. Skill: analyze. Type: ethics professional judgment.

During a community outing, care team asks the BCBA to act quickly even though the requirement related to personal biases and professional interference is directly relevant. What is the most appropriate response? The case file includes 6 recent sessions, 5 implementers, and 1 setting.

A
Collaborate with cultural humility and adapt services without relying on stereotypes or abandoning data in relation to adolescent's grabbing preferred items

Correct answer

B
Continue unchanged and ignore the new contextual information
C
Add a punishment procedure before clarifying function, risk, or feasibility
D
Use the descriptive label as the explanation and treatment target

Explanation

Answer A

The clue is the combination of ABC data from three outings, grabbing preferred items, and the required task: Personal biases and professional interference. The case file includes 6 recent sessions, 5 implementers, and 1 setting. Collaborate with cultural humility and adapt services without relying on stereotypes or abandoning data in relation to adolescent's grabbing preferred items is best because it answers that clue through cultural humility and responsive practice instead of treating the scenario as a generic behavior problem. On exam items like this, name the decision point first, then eliminate options that rely on one report, a label, a familiar protocol, or an action that skips the relevant data check.

Why this question is hard

Clue
Key scenario clue

The clue is the combination of ABC data from three outings, grabbing preferred items, and the required task: Personal biases and professional interference. The case file includes 6 recent sessions, 5 implementers, and 1 setting.

Trap
Common trap

Ignoring relevant data or context prevents a defensible behavior-analytic decision.

Next
If you missed it, review Cultural humility and responsive practice

Then answer a few related scenarios before moving back to broad practice.

Why the other choices are weaker

B
Choice B

Ignoring relevant data or context prevents a defensible behavior-analytic decision.

C
Choice C

A punishment-first response is weaker when less intrusive, function-based, or assessment steps have not been addressed.

D
Choice D

A label is not enough; the decision should be based on observable behavior and relevant variables.

Study tags

Cultural humility and responsive practicePersonal biases and professional interferencecultural humilityculturally responsive

Turn this into a study plan

If this question felt difficult, practice a short drill from Ethical and Professional Issues and use the review page to turn missed items into a weak-area plan.

Related study guides

Try 5 similar questions

Question FAQ

What BCBA domain does this question cover?

This practice question is tagged to Ethical and Professional Issues. It also includes study tags for Cultural humility and responsive practice, Personal biases and professional interference, cultural humility, culturally responsive.

How should I review this practice question?

Answer the scenario before reading the explanation, compare your reasoning with the correct answer, then review why the distractors are weaker.

Is this an official BACB exam question?

No. This is an original study question for BCBA Scenario Tutor and is not an official BACB exam item.

Practice interactively

Try more BCBA scenario questions in the interactive practice mode, then use review tools to track missed domains and flagged items.