BCBA Mock Exam 2 — 185 Real Exam Questions to Crush the Test (No Signup)

by

in

Getting ready for your BCBA exam? You’re in the right place.

I created RBTExamPrep.com to give you the most realistic BCBA mock exam experience possible 185 questions designed to feel just like the real thing.

My goal isn’t just to help you pass, but to help you understand every concept deeply.
Whether you get a question right or wrong, you’ll see detailed feedback explaining why, so you’ll be ready for that type next time. I want you to walk into test day feeling confident, calm, and prepared.

Many students have shared that these questions felt almost identical to the real exam and that’s exactly what I was aiming for. I’d love to hear how you did please share your score in the comments below! It really helps encourage others who are preparing for the exam. 🙂

I built this site to keep high-quality BCBA prep resources free and accessible for everyone, which is why it’s supported by ads. If it helped you, it’d mean a lot if you shared it with your peers.

If you want to keep practicing, check out the BCBA section for more tests and study materials!

💡 Tip: Like this site?
Bookmark this site using Ctrl + D or tap ‘Add to Favorites’ on your mobile browser.
 

Results

#1. Brock consistently discards his sandwich wrapper after finishing his meal. Sometimes he carefully places it in the trash can, other times he tosses it in, and occasionally he shoots it like a basketball into the receptacle. Despite these variations in movement, the ultimate outcome is the wrapper being in the trash. This collection of topographically different behaviors that all achieve the same environmental outcome is best described as a

A response class is a group of responses that may differ in topography how they look but have the same function that is they produce the same effect on the environment In Brocks scenario placing tossing or shooting the wrapper into the trash are all topographically distinct behaviors yet they all serve the identical function of discarding the wrapper into the designated receptacle A response is a single instance of behavior A stimulus class refers to a group of stimuli that share common physical features or evoke the same response Stimulus generalization occurs when a response that has been reinforced in the presence of one stimulus occurs in the presence of other similar stimuli meaning the same response occurs across varying stimuli not varying responses for the same outcome

💡 Tip: Like this site?
Bookmark this site using Ctrl + D or tap ‘Add to Favorites’ on your mobile browser.

Popular Categories



Search the website