You’re not alone in this struggle, and more importantly, your child isn’t destined to be the classroom troublemaker forever. What looks like defiance or deliberate misbehavior is almost always your child’s way of communicating an unmet need or underlying struggle that they don’t have the words or skills to express appropriately.

Understanding What’s Really Behind the Behavior

The most important thing to remember is that behavior is always communication. When we can truly hear what this behavior is trying to tell us, we can understand the need that our child is trying to get met by this behavior. Once we hear it, we can heal it.

Your child isn’t waking up each morning plotting to cause chaos in their classroom. The disruptive behavior is typically triggered by fear – fear of not being good enough, of being rejected, of facing something that feels overwhelming or threatening to them. These fears might seem irrational to adults, but they’re completely real to your child’s developing brain.