Pearson Vue RBT Practice Exam Questions – 2025 Edition

Take Pearson Vue RBT Practice Exam, our realistic mock test designed to mirror the official format and experience of the Pearson Vue exam. This full-length practice test includes multiple-choice questions.

Out of these, 75 questions are scored, while 10 are unscored trial questions randomly placed throughout the test.

By taking this Pearson RBT Practice Exam, you’ll get a feel for the pacing, question types, and structure used on test day. Once you complete the exam, your score will be available instantly, helping you pinpoint areas that need improvement.

Key Features:

  • 85 total questions (75 scored, 10 unscored)
  • Same format and layout as the official RBT exam by Pearson Vue
  • Timed environment to simulate real testing conditions
  • Instant scoring with detailed feedback
  • 100% free and accessible online

Pearson RBT Practice Exam

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Question 1
During a skill acquisition program, the supervisor instructs you to use errorless learning to teach sight words. You accidentally allow the client to make several errors before prompting. What is the biggest risk of this mistake?
A
The client won’t generalize the word reading
B
Errors may become part of the learning history
C
Reinforcement won’t be effective
D
The client will stop responding
Question 1 Explanation: 
Errors may become part of the learning history – In errorless learning, the goal is to minimize mistakes to prevent the client from practicing incorrect responses. By letting the client make repeated errors, those mistakes can get reinforced (even unintentionally) and become part of their response pattern. Over time, this creates confusion and slows acquisition because the client has to “unlearn” the wrong behavior before mastering the correct one. Errorless teaching only works when prompts are immediate and systematically faded.
Question 2

You’re teaching a child to wash dishes using a forward chaining procedure. After completing the first three steps independently, the child refuses to continue. What’s the BEST immediate response as an RBT?

A
Record the refusal and end the session immediately
B
Provide reinforcement for the three completed steps and re-present the task next session
C
Physically prompt the remaining steps without reinforcement
D
Switch to backward chaining immediately
Question 2 Explanation: 
Provide reinforcement for the three completed steps and re-present the task next session – As an RBT, you must reinforce what the client did correctly, even if the entire chain wasn’t completed. Ending the task without reinforcement could punish the correct steps. Forcing completion with physical prompts could create avoidance or escape-maintained behaviors. Switching chains requires a supervisor’s approval. Reinforcing partial success helps maintain motivation and ensures the client is still moving forward in learning.
Question 3
A client frequently engages in screaming when denied access to a preferred toy. The BCBA implements differential reinforcement of alternative behavior (DRA) with functional communication training. As the RBT, what is your role during this intervention?
A
Allow screaming sometimes to reduce extinction bursts
B
Ignore the alternative communication if screaming occurs
C
Prompt and reinforce the communication response every time while withholding reinforcement for screaming
D
Switch between ignoring and reinforcing screaming to reduce attention
Question 3 Explanation: 
Prompt and reinforce the communication response every time while withholding reinforcement for screaming – In DRA combined with FCT, the key is teaching the client a more appropriate way to access reinforcement (like saying “toy” or using a picture card). The RBT must consistently reinforce the alternative response to strengthen it while ensuring that screaming is never reinforced. This consistency prevents the problem behavior from being maintained and increases the likelihood of long-term replacement.
Question 4
During discrete trial training, a client consistently answers correctly only after the RBT repeats the instruction. What is the MOST likely issue?
A
Prompt dependency on repetition
B
Stimulus fading error
C
Reinforcer not motivating enough
D
Generalization deficit
Question 4 Explanation: 
Prompt dependency on repetition – If a client only responds after the instruction is repeated, the repetition itself has become a prompt. This creates prompt dependency, meaning the client is waiting for the extra cue rather than responding to the initial discriminative stimulus. To fix this, the RBT should avoid unnecessary repetition and instead use prompt fading strategies, like time delay, so the client learns to respond to the first presentation.
Question 5

While teaching a client to request using a PECS card, the RBT notices the client throws the card when reinforcement is delayed. What does this behavior suggest?

A
The client is engaging in extinction burst behavior
B
The program should be terminated
C
The card is an aversive stimulus
D
The RBT should stop using PECS and switch to verbal mands
Question 5 Explanation: 
The client is engaging in extinction burst behavior – When a behavior that previously got reinforcement no longer works (like handing over a card and not immediately receiving the item), the client may temporarily escalate with more intense or inappropriate behaviors (like throwing the card). This is an extinction burst, not a reason to stop the program. The RBT must continue reinforcing correct card exchanges and avoid reinforcing the disruptive behavior. With consistency, the inappropriate behavior will decrease.
Question 6
You’re teaching a client to differentiate between “big” and “small” objects. The client always chooses the last option presented, regardless of size. What is this behavior called?
A
Response generalization
B
Stimulus overselectivity
C
Position bias
D
Faulty stimulus control
Question 6 Explanation: 
Position bias – The client is responding based on the placement of the item instead of the actual characteristic (size). This is common in discrimination training. The RBT should randomize item placement, ensure reinforcement only follows correct responses, and possibly introduce error correction procedures to reduce this bias.
Question 7

A client is taught to ask for help by saying “help.” However, in natural settings, the client screams instead of requesting assistance. What is the BEST interpretation of this problem?

A
The skill was not maintained
B
The reinforcer was too weak
C
The chaining procedure was flawed
D
The behavior did not generalize
Question 7 Explanation: 
The behavior did not generalize – The client learned to use the mand “help” in a controlled teaching environment but did not carry over the skill into real-life situations. This is a generalization failure. To address it, the RBT should practice the skill in multiple settings, with multiple people, and across different situations so the client learns to use the behavior naturally.
Question 8

You’re conducting a preference assessment using multiple-stimulus-without-replacement (MSWO). After the client selects an item, what should you do next?

A
Replace the chosen item and continue
B
Remove the chosen item and present the rest
C
End the assessment after the first choice
D
Rotate the items randomly after every choice
Question 8 Explanation: 
Remove the chosen item and present the rest – In MSWO, once an item is selected, it’s taken out of the array so the client can choose among the remaining items. This provides a ranked order of preferences. Replacing items or stopping too soon would invalidate the hierarchy, while rotation should occur at the start of each trial, not after each selection.
Question 9
A supervisor instructs you to probe a new skill without using reinforcement. What is the purpose of this?
A
To evaluate generalization
B
To assess baseline responding
C
To strengthen the behavior
D
To test preference stability
Question 9 Explanation: 
To assess baseline responding – A probe without reinforcement allows the RBT to see whether the client can already perform a skill without teaching or prompting. This is a baseline check to determine the starting point of instruction. Reinforcement is withheld during probes to prevent teaching during what should be an assessment-only period.
Question 10

You’re implementing a token economy. A client consistently saves tokens but refuses to exchange them for back-up reinforcers. What is the MOST likely explanation?

A
The backup reinforcer is not motivating
B
The token delivery schedule is too thin
C
The client is engaging in hoarding behavior
D
The client doesn’t understand the exchange process
Question 10 Explanation: 
The client doesn’t understand the exchange process – If tokens are accumulated but never exchanged, it usually means the client hasn’t learned the connection between tokens and backup reinforcers. This is not “hoarding” but a skill deficit. The RBT should provide modeling, physical prompts, and immediate opportunities to exchange tokens so the client learns the link between tokens and reinforcement. Later, the schedule can be thinned once the exchange behavior is strong.
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