Q&A: How Fabian House Uses Play to Build Resilience — Backed by Brain Science & ABA Therapy Best Practices
Intro:
 At our recent Fabian House inservice on play-based resilience, led by Cori Fabian, our team explored how intentional, science-backed play builds the life skills children need most — adaptability, emotional regulation, and problem-solving.
Below, we answer common questions about how play, ABA therapy, and early childhood education intersect in our classrooms — with examples straight from our program and research from Dr. Daniel Amen and other leading scientists.
Q: Why does Fabian House focus so much on play?
A: Because play is how young brains are wired to learn resilience.
“Resilience is not innate — it is built through safe, supported challenge.” (00:26:43)
Research shows that through play, children practice:
 ✅ Emotional regulation
 ✅ Coping with frustration
 ✅ Creative problem-solving
 ✅ Social negotiation
 ✅ Cognitive flexibility
At Fabian House, play is at the heart of both our curriculum and our ABA-based interventions.
Q: Is there real science behind this approach?
A: Yes — plenty.
- Dr. Daniel Amen’s research on brain scans shows that a healthy brain is more resilient and adaptable. 
- The Center on the Developing Child at Harvard confirms that supportive relationships + safe challenge = optimal stress response development. 
- NDBI (Naturalistic Developmental Behavioral Interventions), a gold standard in play-based ABA, shows superior skill generalization and social outcomes (Schreibman et al., 2015). 
“Mental strength starts with a healthy brain. We must feed it right, move it, and challenge it daily.” (00:34:04)
Q: How does nature-based play fit in Early Childhood Education & ABA Therapy?
A: Nature play is one of the most powerful protective factors for the brain.
“Spending time in nature reduces stress and anxiety, improves mood and cognitive function.” (00:46:33)
Benefits include:
- Lower cortisol (stress hormone) 
- Better attention and executive functioning 
- Improved social-emotional learning 
- Increased sensory integration (critical for neurodiverse learners) 
At Fabian House:
- Children engage in daily outdoor learning: barefoot grounding (00:02:11), gardening, moving logs, climbing natural features. 
- We model risk vs. hazard language so children learn to assess their own safety while building confidence (00:05:59). 
Q: How is this different from “just playing”?
A: Fabian House uses intentional, scaffolded play aligned with ABA principles.
For example:
- In peer play sessions, we model and prompt turn-taking, joint attention, and cooperative problem-solving. 
- We use open-ended materials (sticks, fabric, loose parts) to encourage divergent thinking and adaptability. 
- We introduce planned opportunities for tolerating frustration and recovering from small failures. 
“Play is not just for children — it supports adult resilience too.” (00:52:19)
 “Unstructured play fosters cause-effect understanding, self-esteem, and discovery.” (00:12:06)
Q: How do you support brain health during play?
A: We integrate brain-healthy practices into all aspects of our day:
✅ Nutrition: Organic snacks (blueberries, healthy fats, leafy greens)
 ✅ Hydration: Unlimited water access — vital for neurotransmitter function (00:38:28)
 ✅ Movement: Outdoor active play multiple times daily
 ✅ Limited screen time: Zero in Baby House; heavily restricted in all settings (00:37:20)
“Even mild dehydration can lead to fatigue, irritability, and memory problems.” (00:38:28)
 “Excessive screen time is linked to increased anxiety, depression, and impaired emotional processing.” (00:36:14)
Q: How does a play-based approach help children with autism or other neurodiverse profiles?
A: Play-based ABA is highly effective for neurodiverse learners.
Studies show:
- Greater social reciprocity and communication gains through NDBI approaches (Schreibman et al., 2015) 
- Improved generalization of skills across settings 
- Enhanced emotional regulation when nature and sensory play are used intentionally 
At Fabian House:
- Our team embeds ABA supports into play: 
- Modeling language during peer interactions 
- Promoting joint attention during cooperative games 
- Using visual supports to scaffold play sequences 
- Adjusting sensory input via nature and water play 
Q: What’s one thing parents can do at home to support resilience?
A: Encourage unstructured, child-led play — especially outdoors.
“We are seeing a pandemic of over-scheduled and supervised children. They need free time to explore cause and effect, self-esteem, and discovery.” (00:12:06)
Ideas:
- Let children build with natural materials 
- Take daily walks in nature 
- Create screen-free windows for open-ended play 
- Allow for safe risk-taking and small mistakes 
Final Thoughts
Our inservice reinforced that play is serious brain work — essential for both learning and emotional health.
At Fabian House, we’re proud to provide a setting where:
 ✅ Play is intentional
 ✅ ABA is naturalistic
 ✅ Brain health is supported
 ✅ Nature is integrated
The result? Resilient, adaptable children with the tools they need to thrive — now and for life.
