Definition
Discrete Trial Training (DTT) breaks a skill into small repeatable trials. Each trial has four parts: the discriminative stimulus (the instruction), the prompt (if needed), the client's response, and the consequence (reinforcement or correction).
DTT is highly effective for early language and skill acquisition, especially when paired with errorless teaching and systematic prompt fading. It is typically delivered at a table for short bursts and rotated with naturalistic teaching.

