Your Child Isn’t Lazy at School. They Don’t Feel Safe Enough to Be Wrong.
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You have watched your child come alive for one teacher and go quiet for the next. Same kid, same subject, and somehow one room gets eye contact and raised hands while the other gets a shrug and a half-finished worksheet. You have probably been told they need to focus more, try harder, apply themselves. Here is what nobody says out loud: a child does not switch off because they stopped being capable. They switch off when a room stops feeling safe enough to be wrong in. Your child is not broken, and neither is your parenting.
TL;DR
A child who goes quiet or stops trying is usually responding to feeling unsafe to be wrong, not to a lack of ability.
The warmth of the teacher-student relationship has a medium-to-large link with engagement across 99 studies and more than 88,000 students (Roorda et al., 2011), and matters more as children get older.
Matching lessons to a child's “learning style” was disproven in 2008 and reconfirmed in 2024, yet nearly nine in ten educators across 18 countries still believe it.
What works is not a style label but knowing the child: their interests, culture, and what makes them feel seen.
Parents rebuild safety at home with a short daily check-in, real choice in how work gets done, a brief reflection, and tying lessons to the child's real life.
FROM THE VIDEO
Key moments from Building Relationships with instructional coach Cassandra Williams:
Connection takes no budget and no new tech, only intentional attention, and a two to three minute check-in shifts the whole relationship. Watch at 00:43
Start by learning a child’s interests, culture, and background, then build the lessons around what you find. Watch at 01:07
Notice who pulls back and who avoids group work, because withdrawal is information about how a child feels in the room. Watch at 03:02
Common questions from parents
Why does my child do well for one teacher and shut down for another?
Engagement tracks the relationship more than the subject. When a child feels known and safe with a teacher, they take more academic risks and participate more, and the research shows that link is medium-to-large and grows stronger in the higher grades. A room that feels unsafe to be wrong in produces the shrug you see, even when the child is fully capable.
Should I ask the school to teach to my child’s learning style?
The learning-styles theory was tested in 2008 and reconfirmed as ineffective in 2024, so matching lessons to a style will not move the needle. A better request is that the teacher get to know your child: their interests, their strengths, and what helps them feel comfortable enough to participate. That is the part with evidence behind it.
Is my child’s withdrawal a sign of a learning difference?
Sometimes a child pulls back because a skill underneath is stalling, and the disengagement is protective. A screener is a helpful starting point to see where a child is, but it is not a diagnosis. If your child might need formal accommodations such as an IEP or 504 plan, or you suspect a vision, hearing, or medical cause, pursue a professional evaluation too, since that is the only route to those supports.
What is one thing I could do at home tonight?
Have a two to three minute conversation with your child that has nothing to do with grades or homework. Ask an open question, listen, and write down one detail to follow up on tomorrow. Small, consistent attention rebuilds the safety that makes a child willing to try again.
Being Known Is Not a Soft Extra. It Is the Foundation.
Cassandra Williams, the instructional coach in the video, opens with a line that sounds like a poster and turns out to be measurable: the most powerful tool a teacher holds is the relationship. The research backs her. A meta-analysis of 99 studies covering more than 88,000 students (Roorda, Koomen, Spilt and Oort, 2011, in the Review of Educational Research) found that the warmth of the teacher-student relationship has a medium-to-large link with how engaged a child is, and the effect grows stronger, not weaker, as children move into the higher grades. Researchers who study motivation describe the same thing from the inside: children carry a built-in need to feel connected, and when that need is met they grow far more willing to take on hard work for its own sake. For a child who has been struggling, that willingness is the whole game. A reader who avoids the page does not need a louder phonics drill first. They need a reason to believe the next attempt is worth the risk, and that reason almost always begins with a person who already knows them. None of this needs a budget or a new app. It needs an adult who knows the child.
Author Quote"
A child does not switch off because they stopped being capable. They switch off when a room stops feeling safe enough to be wrong in.
"
Laura LurnsLearning Success Expert
“The warmth of the teacher-student relationship shows a medium-to-large association with student engagement, and the effect grows stronger as children move into the higher grades.” - Roorda, Koomen, Spilt & Oort, meta-analysis of 99 studies and 88,417 students, Review of Educational Research, 2011
What Schools Call a Learning Style Is Usually a Child Who Feels Seen
Listen closely to the video and you will hear a phrase repeated that deserves a gentle correction: tailor your teaching to each student’s learning style. The intention is lovely. The science is not on its side. Researchers tested the idea that matching lessons to a child’s supposed learning style back in 2008, and a fresh review reached the same verdict in 2024. A study of educators across 18 countries found nearly nine in ten still believe it. That gap is not a science problem. It is a systems problem, and it has been running for almost two decades. Here is the part worth rescuing: when Williams talks about surveys, interests, culture, and one-on-one conversations, she is not sorting children into visual or auditory boxes. She is getting to know them. Knowing a child means noticing that one student lights up over animals and another over basketball numbers, then handing the same fraction problem to each of them inside the thing they already love. That is not a teaching style. It is attention, and attention is something you hold more of at home than any classroom of thirty ever will. Knowing a child is the thing that works. The label wrapped around it was never the point.
Key Takeaways:
1
Safety comes before skill: A child has to feel safe to be wrong before they will risk learning.
2
Relationships are measurable: Warm teacher bonds link to engagement across 99 studies and 88,000 students.
3
Learning styles is the wrong label: Disproven in 2008, yet nine in ten educators still teach to it.
The Child Who Withdraws Is Telling You Something
Williams describes playing detective: noticing who participates, who pulls back, who avoids group work. At home you see the same signals at the kitchen table, and they are easy to read as defiance or laziness. They are almost always something else. A child who stops trying has usually decided, somewhere quiet, that trying and failing in front of people costs more than not trying at all. “I am bad at this” is not a description of where your child sits today. It is a prediction they are making about where they are headed, and they will act on it until something rewrites it. The rewrite does not need a specialist. It needs the small, repeatable moves the video keeps circling back to:
A two to three minute check-in that has nothing to do with performance. Ask about the tournament, the friend drama, the thing they built, then write one detail down and follow up tomorrow.
Real choice in how a task gets done. Let your child pick whether to explain an idea out loud, draw it, or build it before they write it.
A short daily reflection: what went well, what felt hard, what they want to try differently next time. Ownership grows where reflection lives, and so does a growth mindset.
A bridge from the work to their actual life. One teacher tied a math lesson to the interest rates her students’ families were facing. Tie fractions to a recipe or a budget your child already cares about.
None of these are programs. They are the ordinary acts of a parent who has decided their child is worth knowing, repeated until the child believes it too.
Author Quote"
Knowing a child is the thing that works. The learning-style label wrapped around it was never the point.
"
You want your child to walk into a classroom and believe the room is for them. You want them to raise a hand, get something wrong, and try again without the whole thing turning into a verdict on who they are. What stands in the way is rarely your child and rarely you. It is a system quicker to label a quiet child than to ask why the room stopped feeling safe. Nobody will ever advocate for your child the way you do, and that is not a flaw in the schools. It is true of every system everywhere, which is exactly why your seat at the table is not optional.
Learning Success built All Access for exactly this: a place where the relationship you already have with your child becomes the most effective teaching tool in your home, with the science-based tools to back it up.
And connection rarely travels alone. A child who has gone quiet at school is often carrying something underneath it: a reading skill that stalled, a focus that wanders, a working memory that drops the third instruction before they reach it. All Access helps you find the actual gap and close it, so the confidence you are rebuilding has solid ground to stand on.
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