Home > Case Studies > Helping Educators Respond to Challenging Behavior Without Damaging Relationships
Organization
250+ Teachers
Length of Project
Multiple Cohorts
Expertise
De-escalation Skills
Student Care Practices
Mediation Training
Leadership training
Group coaching and facilitated workshops
Our Team
4 Trainers
2 Assistant Trainers
The Context
Every teacher can think of a student who comes to mind immediately.
The student who shuts down when they’re frustrated.
The student who seems angry before the day even begins.
The student who challenges authority, disrupts class, or reacts strongly to seemingly small situations.
For one school district, these moments were becoming increasingly common.
Teachers found themselves navigating classroom disruptions, emotional outbursts, conflicts between students, and difficult conversations that often pulled attention away from learning. While educators remained deeply committed to supporting their students, many felt caught between two competing responsibilities: maintaining classroom expectations while also responding to the emotional needs students were bringing into school each day.
What made these situations particularly challenging was that many educators understood that the behavior they were seeing was often only part of the story.
Behind the disruption might be anxiety.
Behind the defiance might be embarrassment.
Behind the withdrawal might be fear, frustration, or something happening outside of school that no one else could see.
The district wanted to give teachers practical tools for responding to these moments in ways that maintained accountability while preserving the relationships that help students learn and grow.
Our Approach
Working alongside administrators, instructional leaders, counselors, and educators, we developed a customized de-escalation training program centered around the realities teachers faced every day.
Rather than focusing solely on behavior management, the training explored how emotions influence behavior and how educators can recognize escalation early, remain regulated themselves, and respond in ways that lower emotional intensity rather than increase it.
Through interactive discussions, classroom-based scenarios, roleplays, and guided practice, participants learned how to:
- Recognize early signs that a student is becoming overwhelmed
- Respond to challenging behavior without creating power struggles
- Use active listening and curiosity to better understand student needs
- Set clear boundaries while maintaining connection and respect
- Re-engage students after a conflict or disruption has occurred
- Maintain calm and confidence during emotionally charged moments
The training was designed around situations educators regularly encounter, from classroom disruptions and peer conflict to emotionally intense interactions with students and families.
Results
- More than 250 teachers, counselors, administrators, and support staff participated in the training
- Training satisfaction averaged 98% across participant evaluations
- Skill assessments improved by 62%, demonstrating a stronger understanding of de-escalation and conflict management techniques
- 94% of participants reported greater confidence responding to challenging student behavior
- Educators reported feeling more equipped to address conflict without escalating situations further
- School leaders observed greater consistency in how staff responded to emotionally charged situations across campuses
- Follow-up feedback revealed that participants continued applying the skills throughout the school year in classrooms, hallways, and family interactions
One teacher shared that the training helped her see certain student behaviors differently—not as problems to solve immediately, but as signals that a student might need support before they could successfully engage in learning.
That shift became one of the most meaningful outcomes of the program.
When educators feel prepared to navigate difficult moments with confidence and care, students benefit as well.
Classrooms become calmer. Relationships become stronger. And students are more likely to experience school as a place where they feel respected, understood, and capable of success—even on their hardest days.







