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VB-MAPP Alternatives: 6 ABA Assessments Compared (and How to Choose)

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The VB-MAPP is one of the most widely used assessments in ABA, but it isn’t the only option — and it isn’t the right fit for every learner. If a child has aged past its roughly 48-month developmental ceiling, needs a functional-living focus, or your funder wants a different kind of data, you’ll want an alternative.

Here are six of the most common alternatives to the VB-MAPP, what each does best, who it’s for, and how to choose.

Quick Comparison

Tool Best for Type Typical age range
ABLLS-R Broad language + learning + academic skills Criterion-referenced skills inventory ~2–12
AFLS Functional, independent-living skills Criterion-referenced skills inventory Childhood–adult (often 16+)
PEAK Advanced/derived language, relational skills Assessment + curriculum Early learners–adolescents
Essential for Living (EFL) Moderate-to-severe disabilities, functional communication Assessment + curriculum Children–adults
Vineland-3 Adaptive behavior, norm-referenced outcomes Norm-referenced (caregiver report) Birth–90+
EarliPoint Objective developmental measurement FDA-cleared eye-tracking biomarker 16–95 months

 

1. ABLLS-R — the Closest Skills-Based Cousin

The Assessment of Basic Language and Learning Skills, Revised (ABLLS-R), developed by Dr. James Partington, is the alternative most often compared to the VB-MAPP. Like the VB-MAPP, it’s rooted in Skinner’s verbal behavior framework, but it casts a wider net: it contains 25 skill areas across language, social, self-help, academic, and motor categories.

Choose it when: you need a more comprehensive skills inventory across a broader age range (commonly up to around age 12), or your funder prefers it. The ABLLS-R goes deeper on academic and functional skills than the VB-MAPP, while the VB-MAPP is more tightly structured around early developmental milestones.

2. AFLS — for Real-World Independence

The Assessment of Functional Living Skills (AFLS), from Partington and Dr. Michael Mueller, focuses on what a learner can do independently in real-world settings. It spans six modules: Basic Living Skills, Home Skills, Community Participation, School Skills, Vocational Skills, and Independent Living Skills.

Choose it when: the clinical questions center on functional independence rather than developmental milestones — often for older children, adolescents, and adults (it’s frequently used from age 16 and up). The AFLS covers self-management, vocational, and community domains that the VB-MAPP and ABLLS-R don’t comprehensively address.

3. PEAK — for Advanced and Derived Language

The PEAK Relational Training System (Promoting the Emergence of Advanced Knowledge), developed by Dr. Mark Dixon, is both an assessment and a curriculum. It targets derived relational responding — the ability to make flexible connections between concepts without directly teaching every one — through four modules: Direct Training, Generalization, Equivalence, and Transformation.

Choose it when: a learner has solid foundational skills and needs to move toward more advanced, flexible language and cognition that milestone-based tools don’t fully capture. PEAK is grounded in Relational Frame Theory and written to be usable by clinicians, teachers, and caregivers alike.

4. Essential for Living (EFL) — for Moderate-to-Severe Needs

The Essential for Living (EFL), developed by Dr. Pat McGreevy, is a communication, behavior, and functional-skills assessment, curriculum, and skill-tracking instrument designed specifically for children and adults with moderate-to-severe disabilities. Like the VB-MAPP, it’s based on ABA and Skinner’s analysis of verbal behavior.

Choose it when: you’re serving learners with more significant support needs, where the priority is essential functional communication and life skills rather than tracking developmental milestones.

5. Vineland-3 — for Adaptive Behavior and Standardized Outcomes

The Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales, Third Edition measures adaptive behavior — everyday functional skills — and, unlike the VB-MAPP, it’s norm-referenced, producing standard scores from birth through 90+.

Choose it when: you need a standardized, norm-referenced outcome measure for funders, schools, or eligibility — something the criterion-referenced VB-MAPP doesn’t provide. Many practices use both: the VB-MAPP to guide curriculum and the Vineland for standardized progress reporting.

6. EarliPoint — the Objective Complement

The tools above are all skills- or report-based assessments scored through clinician observation or caregiver interview. The EarliPoint System is different in kind: it’s an FDA-cleared device that uses eye-tracking to objectively measure a child’s social visual engagement, producing quantitative developmental indices.

In two 2023 studies published in JAMA and JAMA Network Open, the EarliPoint Severity Indices predicted 74.1% of the variance in social disability, 88.8% of verbal ability, and 77.9% of nonverbal cognitive ability against gold-standard measures.

Choose it when: you want an objective, observer-independent developmental measure — not as a replacement for the VB-MAPP, but as a complementary data stream. It’s most useful alongside a skills assessment, where it answers a question the others can’t: how is a child’s underlying development changing, measured objectively?

How to Choose a VB-MAPP Alternative

A simple decision framework:

  • Need broader skills coverage for an older or higher-skilled learner? → ABLLS-R
  • Focused on functional, independent-living skills? → AFLS
  • Ready for advanced, flexible language? → PEAK
  • Serving moderate-to-severe support needs? → Essential for Living
  • Need a norm-referenced standard score for funders or schools? → Vineland-3
  • Want objective, observer-independent developmental data? → EarliPoint (alongside your skills tool)

In most practices the question isn’t “which one instead of the VB-MAPP” — it’s “which combination.” A skills assessment for curriculum, a norm-referenced measure for outcomes, and increasingly an objective measure for an independent developmental signal.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best alternative to the VB-MAPP?

There’s no single best — it depends on the learner and the goal. The ABLLS-R is the closest skills-based alternative; the AFLS is best for functional living skills; the Vineland-3 is best when you need a norm-referenced standard score. For objective developmental data, EarliPoint complements any of them.

Is the ABLLS-R better than the VB-MAPP?

Neither is universally “better.” The VB-MAPP is more tightly structured around early developmental milestones; the ABLLS-R is broader across language, academic, and functional skills and spans a wider age range. The right choice depends on the learner’s age and needs.

What assessment replaces the VB-MAPP for older children?

For learners beyond the VB-MAPP’s ~48-month developmental range, clinicians often turn to the ABLLS-R (up to ~age 12) or the AFLS (functional skills, often 16+). The Vineland-3 works across the lifespan for adaptive behavior.

Can you use more than one ABA assessment together?

Yes — and many practices do. A common combination is a skills-based tool (VB-MAPP or ABLLS-R) for curriculum, a norm-referenced measure (Vineland-3) for standardized outcomes, and an objective measure (EarliPoint) for an independent developmental data stream.

Angela Pagliaro, LBA, BCBA

Solutions Consultant

Angela is a Solutions Consultant at Earlipoint Health with expertise in applied behavior analysis and healthcare operations.

Angela Pagliaro, LBA, BCBA

Solutions Consultant

Angela is a Solutions Consultant at Earlipoint Health with expertise in applied behavior analysis and healthcare operations.

See how EarliPoint fits seamlessly into your clinical workflow.

Jamie Pagliaro brings over two decades of leadership in autism and behavioral health to his role as President and CEO of EarliPoint. Most recently, he served as Chief Operating Officer at Rethink, a leading SaaS provider supporting individuals with autism and developmental disabilities. Under his leadership, Rethink’s behavioral health division became the company’s largest business unit, serving thousands of clinicians and driving scalable, tech-enabled care delivery.

Earlier in his career, Jamie was Executive Director of the New York Center for Autism Charter School, the first public charter school in New York State dedicated to children with autism. At EarliPoint, he leads the company’s mission to bring breakthrough science to the front lines of care—empowering providers, families, and health systems with earlier answers and better outcomes.

Jamie Pagliaro

President & Chief Executive Officer

Dr. Ami Klin is a globally recognized leader in autism research and early detection. As Director of the Marcus Autism Center and Division Chief of Autism and Developmental Disabilities at Emory University School of Medicine, he has dedicated his career to understanding how young children engage with the social world—and how subtle disruptions in attention can signal developmental differences. His pioneering work in eye-tracking science led to the development of EarliPoint™ Evaluation, the first FDA-authorized tool to objectively assess autism in children as young as 16 months.
At EarliPoint, Dr. Klin drives clinical strategy and innovation, ensuring that families and clinicians worldwide have access to timely, science-based insights that enable earlier, more personalized intervention. His career reflects a deep commitment to transforming how society supports children with autism—starting with the earliest signs.

Ami Klin, PhD

Chief Clinical Officer & Co‑Founder