The First Days of School
Harry & Rosemary Wong
The classic guide to starting the year with clear procedures and routines — the backbone of any well-run K-3 classroom.
View on Amazon →Major behavioral incidents require different responses than minor disruptions. Learn to de-escalate in the moment and problem-solve after, preventing behavioral escalation cycles.
When a student is having a big behavioral episode—yelling, throwing things, hitting, or extreme defiance—they're experiencing an escalation cycle. Developed by George Colvin, this model shows that behavior doesn't explode overnight; it escalates through predictable stages, and at each stage, how we respond either de-escalates or escalates the behavior further.
The escalation cycle includes: anxiety or frustration (trigger phase), defensive behavior (student blames others, argues, resists), acting out (major disruption, aggression, refusal), recovery (gradual calming), and post-crisis depression (withdrawal). Understanding where a student is in the cycle helps you respond effectively.
Prevention is always better than crisis response. When you understand a student's triggers, you can prevent escalation:
1. Stay Calm — This is everything. Students escalate in response to adult escalation. If you're anxious, frustrated, or angry, you're adding fuel. Take a breath. Lower your voice. Speak slowly.
2. Remove Audience When Possible — Move the student away from peers. A public meltdown is worse than a private one. "Let's step into the hallway for a moment."
3. Reduce Demands — Don't ask them to sit, be quiet, or comply. The student is dysregulated and can't comply. Removing demands often prevents the peak of the escalation.
4. Give Space — Physically step back. Don't stand over them or use a commanding tone. A kneeling or sitting position is less threatening. Space allows them to feel less trapped.
5. Use Validation Language — Acknowledge their emotion without fixing it. "I see you're really upset right now. That's okay. You're safe." This isn't agreeing they're right—it's validating that their feeling is real.
6. Avoid "Why" Questions — "Why did you do that?" escalates. The student often doesn't know. Use "I notice" statements instead: "I notice you're upset."
7. Offer Choice When Possible — "You can take a break here or in the calm corner. You choose." This gives the student back some control.
8. Wait for Calm Before Problem-Solving — Don't expect the student to discuss what happened while escalated. Wait until they're calm (could be 30 minutes later).
A designated area where students can go to decompress: quiet corner with soft items, books, fidgets. Teach students to use it proactively before they're in crisis. "When you need a break, you can go to the calm corner."
Teach belly breathing before you need it. "When you're upset, breathe in slowly through your nose for 4 counts, hold for 4, out for 4." Practice during calm times. During crisis, remind: "Let's breathe together."
If a student is a danger to themselves, others, or destroying property, get support. Having a signal (knock, text, call) to request help prevents you from being alone in a crisis.
Many young students' big behaviors stem from trauma or stress responses. They're not being defiant—they're dysregulated. Safety, predictability, and relationship-building are crucial.
Once the student is calm (could be later that day or next day), problem-solve: "What happened? What were you feeling? What could you do differently next time?" Use collaborative problem-solving, not blame.
Keep brief notes on big behaviors: what happened before, what the student did, what helped. Patterns emerge—certain times, certain triggers—so you can prevent future incidents.
Don't raise your voice. Yelling escalates. Speak slower and quieter than usual, not louder.
Don't use threats or "if-then" language. "If you don't calm down, you'll..." may work in the moment but teaches that threats work. Once the threat is gone, the behavior returns.
Don't take the behavior personally. "How dare you speak to me that way?" escalates. Remember, this is the student's dysregulation, not a personal attack.
Don't demand apologies or compliance immediately. This extends the crisis. Let them calm first. Apologies and compliance often come naturally once regulation returns.
Don't isolate or shame. Removing a student from the class is sometimes necessary for safety, but make it a calm-down space, not punishment.
Don't skip the conversation after. Once calm, talk: "What happened? What were you feeling? What do you need next time?" This teaches and prevents recurrence.
During a behavioral crisis, a student's prefrontal cortex (the rational, problem-solving brain) is offline. They're operating from their amygdala (the survival/threat brain). No amount of logic, reasoning, or consequences will work while they're in this state. Your job is to help them feel safe and calm so their rational brain comes back online.
Colvin's escalation cycle research shows that adult responses directly impact whether a student escalates to peak crisis or de-escalates. Calm, validating responses move students down the escalation curve. Punitive, demanding responses move them up.
Trauma-informed practice recognizes that many young students carry stress or trauma. What looks like defiance or aggression is often a stress response. These students need safety, predictability, and co-regulation before they can self-regulate. Van der Kolk's research on trauma shows that our nervous systems regulate through connection and safety, not through punishment.
Build your crisis management and trauma-informed practice:
Download de-escalation protocols, the escalation cycle visual, breathing exercise cards, and crisis prevention planning templates from the free Resource Library.
Browse Free ResourcesTeacher-tested books and classroom supplies we recommend for this topic. Explore the full list on our Recommended Resources page.
Harry & Rosemary Wong
The classic guide to starting the year with clear procedures and routines — the backbone of any well-run K-3 classroom.
View on Amazon →Daniel J. Siegel & Tina Payne Bryson
12 strategies grounded in brain science for helping young children handle big feelings and difficult moments.
View on Amazon →Ross W. Greene, PhD
A collaborative, skills-based approach for understanding and supporting easily frustrated, chronically inflexible children.
View on Amazon →Carol McCloud
The bucket-filling metaphor that teaches kindness and empathy — a classroom-community staple for K-3.
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