Stepping Stones is a nonprofit disability services organization based in Cincinnati, Ohio, dedicated to creating pathways to independence for people with disabilities. Since 1963, the organization has provided innovative, inclusive, and person-centered programs that serve approximately 1,000 children and adults annually across four locations in Greater Cincinnati: Batavia, Indian Hill, Norwood, and Western Hills. The organization offers a diverse range of programs including summer day camps for ages 5-22, summer overnight staycations for ages 16 and up, weekend youth clubs, weekend overnight respite services, and adult day services for ages 18 and older. Stepping Stones also operates Step-Up, an alternative education program specifically designed for students on the autism spectrum, providing educational and skill-building support in a specialized setting. SteppingStones employs over 90 year-round staff members and serves as a United Way partner agency in the Greater Cincinnati region. The organization is committed to empowering individuals with disabilities through community-based programming, recreational activities, and structured skill development opportunities that support independence and social inclusion.
Stepping Stones delivers individualized ABA therapy built around each child’s goals.
Programs are designed and supervised by board-certified behavior analysts (BCBAs).
Caregivers are involved throughout, with parent coaching available to support skills at home.
Programs are built and supervised by a board-certified analyst. Caregiver coaching is part of the standard plan.
Senior BCBAs hold a clinical-leadership role at every location. Each name links to a BACB credential record where one is on file.
Network status comes from the clinic and is re-attested each quarter. Verify coverage directly before scheduling intake.
No published case studies yet. Claimed clinics can publish de-identified outcomes here.
Reviewers are verified as caregivers of an active or recent client before publication. Reviews cannot be edited or removed by the clinic.
Aggregate rating and the most recent public reviews from Google Maps. These are not part of the verified caregiver review program; they have not been authenticated by Stepping Stones or this directory.
My son had an awesome experience with the Saturday club. Nestled in the beautiful preserved nature of Indian Hills having mature forests and rolling hills. Indoor activities as well. Come join the fun!
The people that run this camp have no regard for those that live near it. They constantly play loud music throughout the day and have started doing karaoke OUTSIDE over a loudspeaker. It’s completely unacceptable and they just don’t care. I wonder how the counselors would feel if I stood outside their house yelling into a microphone and banging on drums.
I volunteered her for 3 summers in high school and it changed my life for the positive, all teen should volunteer here for perspective! Now my daughter attends camp here and it’s a life saver!!
My grandson is non-verbal, so at day’s end we have no idea how it went, since there’s no feedback from counselors. I would suggest creating an app that has a point system built in. And provide feedback throughout the day. Beyond that, it really seems like an awesome camp and experience for him.
I came down to Cincinnati from Columbus to visit friends for the weekend, and was invited to volunteer at Saturday Kids Club. While I enjoyed spending time with and getting to know the kids, I feel as if the day was very unorganized, and there was only one male staff member, that I unfortunately can’t remember the name of, that was of any help to us. We were given a schedule of activities at the beginning of the day, which was then not followed. It was very difficult to explain to the children in my group why we were not doing the crafts or using the slotted “sensory time”, as these were things they seemed excited about at the beginning of the day. Instead, we spent the whole second half of the day outside on the playground. While the children were mostly enjoying their time outside, I noticed volunteers were mainly the only ones being attentive to them. The staff running the camp seemed to be sitting together at a picnic table chatting, while myself and others were trying to keep everyone under control, and staff seemed to only ever interact with a child when they were approached. Many moments occurred where I questioned why staff were allowing certain behaviors within activities, and why they seem to not want to even be working. There is no clarity or conversation beforehand between staff and volunteers as to what the expectations from volunteers are, and what they are and are not allowed to do with the children. I was not introduced to anyone nor was anyone introduced to me, which made it nearly impossible for me to figure out who was actually in charge of the event. At one point, there was 5-7 children trying to storm out the front door of the building together, and while staff watched it happen, my friend/fellow volunteer was the only person outside doing her best to corral everyone inside. A bit later, a member of our group that required extra assistance in the restroom told us that they needed to go. As it is staffs job to assist in these types of situations, we brought him to them and told them, and they just said “okay” and at least ten minutes went past before I saw anyone actually take them to the restroom. This did not seem like any kind of “camp”. It seems to be “staff” members sitting around on their cell phones, not enforcing scheduled activities, while volunteers scramble to try and entertain the kids. While I did have a good time, simply because I got to meet new people and I enjoy the company of the kids, I am worried about how the camp is ran and if anyone would have truly interacted and spent time with the children, had my friends and I not been there. I do not have children, but if I were a parent I would definitely want to know that this is what happens once I drop my kid off.
Clinic verification cross-references BACB credentials, NPI, accreditation, payer contracts, insurance, and ethics-complaint history. Every check is dated and re-runnable.
Third-party coverage of Stepping Stones, automatically discovered and filtered for relevance. We don’t edit it. Click through to read the source.
Answered from the clinic's disclosed profile data on ABA Rank. Facts update whenever the clinic edits its profile or a verified review changes the rating.
Stepping Stones provides ABA therapy for preschool (3-5), school-age (6-12), teens (13-17), and adults (18+).
Stepping Stones is headquartered in Cincinnati, OH.
Inquiries route directly to the clinic's intake team. ABA Rank does not broker introductions, take referral fees, or sell inquiry data.