Teaching Conflict Resolution and Problem-Solving in K-3
Conflict between peers is normal and, when taught to handle well, becomes a powerful social learning opportunity. Teaching explicit conflict resolution steps helps students practice real-life negotiation and empathy.
Why Teaching Conflict Resolution Matters
Research on classroom management (Jones & Jones, 2013) consistently shows that teacher time spent handling minor conflicts is among the greatest instructional time losses. Students who are taught explicit conflict resolution strategies resolve disputes themselves significantly more often — freeing teachers for instruction and giving students transferable life skills. CASEL identifies conflict resolution and problem-solving as components of the relationship skills competency that predicts both social and academic outcomes.
The 5-Step Conflict Resolution Process
Teach This Process Explicitly
- Stop and cool down. Before anyone talks, both people take three slow breaths or count to 10. Unregulated brains can't solve problems.
- Each person says what happened and how they feel. No interrupting. "When you took the marker without asking, I felt angry." Use "I feel... when... because..." statements.
- Each person restates what they heard the other say. "I heard you say you felt angry because I took your marker." This is the hardest step and the most important — it requires actual listening.
- Brainstorm solutions together. "What could we do so both of us are okay?" Generate at least two options together. Both people choose one.
- Try the solution and check back. "Let's try that and check in after recess to see if it's working."
Distinguishing Conflict From Bullying
Not all peer disputes are conflicts appropriate for peer resolution. Bullying — which involves power imbalance, repetition, and intentional harm — requires adult intervention, not a peer mediation process. Asking a student who is being bullied to "work it out" with their bully is inappropriate and can cause further harm. See the Bullying Prevention guide for these situations.
Conflict resolution is appropriate for: disagreements between peers of roughly equal power, misunderstandings, arguments over shared resources, disputes about rules in games, and hurt feelings that were unintentional.
When to Involve an Adult
Teach students: "If someone is hurt, scared, or unsafe — get an adult immediately. That's not tattling. That's keeping people safe." Tattling (reporting something to get someone in trouble) is different from reporting (telling an adult because someone needs help). Teach this distinction explicitly.
Teaching Conflict Resolution as a Class, Not Just When Conflict Happens
The least effective time to teach conflict resolution skills is during an actual conflict. When students are in the middle of an argument, their prefrontal cortex — the part of the brain that handles reasoning and impulse control — is significantly less active than usual. Teaching a six-step conflict resolution process to a furious 7-year-old who just had their pencil grabbed is unlikely to produce learning. The skills need to be taught explicitly during calm, structured lessons so they become available to students when they need them under stress. Dedicate 15-20 minutes per week to SEL lessons that include explicit conflict resolution skill practice using role-play scenarios, literature, and regular class meetings.
The Difference Between Conflict and Bullying
A critical distinction for both students and teachers: conflict involves two parties with roughly equal power who disagree or have incompatible needs. Bullying involves repeated behavior where one person has more social power and uses it intentionally to harm or exclude. These situations require different responses. Conflict resolution strategies — compromise, "I" statements, taking turns — are appropriate for genuine conflicts. They are not appropriate for bullying situations, where asking the targeted student to "work it out" with the student who has been harming them can cause further harm. Teach students this distinction explicitly and address each type of situation with the appropriate response.
Restorative Conversations After Conflict
After a conflict has been resolved, a brief restorative conversation helps both parties process the experience and rebuild the relationship. A simple structure: What happened? How did it affect you? How did it affect the other person? What can make it right? What will you do differently? This conversation is not a punishment — it's a learning experience. For K-3 students, it should be brief (5-10 minutes) and guided by an adult who keeps it focused on repair rather than blame. Students who experience this process consistently develop conflict repair as a genuine skill they can apply with decreasing adult support over time.
Related Resources
- Friendship Skills & Peer Relationships
- Behavior Management: Conflict Resolution
- Bullying vs. Conflict: How to Tell the Difference
Research Backing
- Johnson, D. W., & Johnson, R. T. (1996). Conflict resolution and peer mediation programs in elementary and secondary schools: A review of the research. Review of Educational Research, 66(4), 459–506.