12 JANUARY 2026
Dysregulated behaviour is a phrase that many parents, educators, and professionals will recognise instantly. It’s often used to describe children who appear overwhelmed, reactive, or unable to cope with everyday expectations. In this article and video, we explore how to support your child with managing these behaviours.
Behaviour as communication, not defiance
When a child reacts strongly, disrupts a situation, or withdraws completely, it can be tempting to see the behaviour as something negative that needs to be corrected. Historically, behaviour has often been managed through reward and consequence-based systems, a model rooted in early behaviourist approaches.
While these systems are widely used at home and in schools, they don’t always work for every child. For some, they can increase pressure, anxiety, and fear. A child may spend an entire day worrying about whether they will earn a reward or avoid a consequence, rather than feeling safe enough to learn, play, and engage.
When behaviour is viewed as communication, it shifts the focus. Instead of asking, “How do we stop this behaviour?” we begin to ask, “What is this behaviour telling us?”
The hidden cost of rewards and consequences
Reward systems are often well-intentioned, designed to motivate and encourage positive behaviour. However, they can unintentionally create high levels of internalised pressure. Children may feel they must perform perfectly to gain approval, avoid disappointment, or meet expectations that feel unclear or unachievable.
For some children, this pressure can lead to heightened emotional responses, anxiety, and stress. These feelings may then emerge as shutdowns, outbursts, avoidance, or defiance. In these moments, the behaviour we see is not a choice but a stress response.
Fear of failure or loss of reward can activate fight, flight, or freeze reactions, making regulation even harder.
Looking beneath the surface
Supporting children more effectively means shifting attention away from controlling behaviour and toward understanding its root cause. Is the child overwhelmed by noise, sensory input, or social demands? Are they anxious about expectations they don’t fully understand? Are they carrying emotional stress that hasn’t yet been expressed in words?
When adults take time to explore these questions, responses become more compassionate and effective. Behaviour begins to make sense within the context of the child’s experience, rather than being seen as something to challenge or suppress.
This approach doesn’t mean removing all boundaries or structure. It means responding in a way that reduces fear and increases emotional safety.
The power of connection and collaboration
A more connected and collaborative approach encourages adults and children to work together. Instead of imposing control, adults become partners in helping children navigate difficult moments. This might involve adjusting expectations, offering reassurance, or temporarily stepping back from demands during periods of dysregulation.
Connection builds trust, and trust creates the conditions for learning and growth. When children feel understood rather than judged, their nervous systems are better able to settle. Over time, this can reduce the intensity and frequency of dysregulated behaviour.
Collaboration also helps children understand the “why” behind expectations, making goals feel shared rather than imposed.
Reducing pressure to support regulation
Periods of dysregulation are not the time to increase expectations or tighten systems. Often, the most effective response is to pull back, lower demands, and create space for regulation to return.
Whole-class reward systems, public behaviour charts, or visible consequences can unintentionally heighten pressure, particularly for children who are already struggling. Small changes in approach can significantly reduce anxiety and help children feel safer.
When pressure is reduced, children are more able to engage, reflect, and develop skills for managing future challenges.
Moving forward with compassion
Understanding behaviour as a response rather than a problem invites a powerful shift in mindset. It allows adults to respond with curiosity, empathy, and flexibility, rather than fear or frustration.
By focusing on connection, collaboration, and understanding, we create environments where children are not driven by anxiety or fear of failure. Instead, they are supported to grow, learn, and regulate alongside the adults who care for them.
Rethinking how we respond to behaviour may feel challenging at first, but it opens the door to calmer interactions, stronger relationships, and more sustainable long-term outcomes for children and families alike.