Have a resource suggestion? Please take a moment and complete the survey to ensure we accurately identify relevant materials for future development.
Resource Suggestion5 Things is a Mindfulness strategy that can connect students to their senses, centering the body and mind.
View PDFBehavior & the Brain highlights parts of the brain and their respective function.
View PDFButterfly Breathing encourages students to feel relaxed and free. Use this strategy to encourage students to self-regulate when they feel stressed, anxious, or upset.
View PDFThis icon-focused plan encourages students of all abilities to identify emotions and the tools to return to a regulated state. This plan provides a template for adults to engage students in discussions about different feelings and ways to regulate unwanted or uncomfortable emotions.
View PDFThis resource provides adults with observable signs of dysregulation and strategies to regain student focus.
View PDFColoring can help engage the brain without a lot of effort. When a student cannot focus,
coloring is a re-connection strategy.
The Cup of Calm helps students engage different senses to promote self-regulation.
View PDFThese are strategies to help when attempting to de-escalate dangerous behaviors.
View PDFDistract Your Mind Trace A Line is a strategy to actively refocus student attention from current stressors toward a busy activity requiring active motor skill coordination.
View PDFFeather breathing is a relaxation technique that encourages deep, slow breathing to promote relaxation and reduce stress.
View PDFLearning how to connect emotional events to what’s going on in the body gives students a personal resource to turn to when they are not sure what they're feeling. Feelings Bookmarks provide students with visual prompts to clearly identify the emotions they experience and example strategies for regulation.
View PDFFigure 8 is a breathing strategy that can help students relax when they feel anxious or dysregulated.
View PDF'Getting it Together!' is a student-focused tool to guide thoughts following a problem with staff or a peer that may require a restorative conversation to resolve the issue and repair the school community.
View PDFThe Growing Your…provides tips on what to say or do to facilitate growth in these areas.
View PDFThe Growing Your…provides tips on what to say or do to facilitate growth in these areas.
View PDFThe Growing Your…provides tips on what to say or do to facilitate growth in these areas.
View PDFThe Growing Your…provides tips on what to say or do to facilitate growth in these areas.
View PDFHand Breathing allows students to visually follow how their body is engaged when using relaxing breathing strategies.
View PDFStudents may not be able to identify what they need to regulate when upset. This resource provides students with ideas of ways to regulate before becoming dysregulated. Staff then keep this resource available as a future reference for intervention.
View PDFThis regulation visual is a reminder that children often need help with regulation before they will ever be able to reason.
View PDFThis visual will give educators a quick set of intervention tips for supporting a struggling student.
View PDFMindfulness is being fully aware of the moment-by-moment thoughts/feelings/actions in oneself. Teaching students mindfulness, a relaxation technique, enables them to have a positive mindset.
View PDFChildren may be unable to identify what they need to regulate when upset. This resource asks parents/guardians to supply ideas for interventions to assist staff in supporting their child's regulation. Staff then keep this completed resource for future reference.
View PDFThis tool allows students to review what will happen in their restorative circle before it begins. Providing advanced notice of what to expect and coaching socially appropriate responses helps reduce anxiety for some students.
View PDFMy Circle Rules offers three different versions, allowing staff to choose a tool that fits the needs of their students for learning restorative circle rules.
View PDFTo understand the few instances when intensive behavioral interventions may be warranted, here are five specific definitions that outline the legal statutes and minimum standards that must be applied before engaging in Restraint and Time-Out (RTO)
View PDFThe Sensation poster is a visual for helping students grow their sensation vocabulary list.
View PDFThe Signs of Distress handout provides school staff with examples of physical signs that may indicate a student is in distress.
View PDFThis regulation strategy involves a sequence of physical movements paired with controlled breathing to help calm the body and mind. Focusing on the superhero imagery and mindful breathing promotes relaxation and stress relief.
View PDFSupporting Your Family is specifically written to help know what to do when a family has a child
experiencing trauma and grief.
The Feelings Packet is a set of resources for students functioning at the 3-9 year old range. Included are a feelings compass, feelings scale, student dictionary, teacher definitions, drawing prompts, writing prompts, and cards differentiated at three different levels. Use this packet to help build an emotional vocabulary with your students.
View PDFThinks Sheets are reflective activities designed to help students focus on their body sensations that occurred during a time of dysregulation. The activity helps a student to identify sensations and feelings they may have experienced and helps to identify strategies for self-regulation when experiencing similar sensations in the future.
View PDFThis resource outlines strategies to support a child who has experienced trauma.
View PDfVisual Pacing Strips are flexible tools that allow adults to control the visual progression of time-based on student response or age and vary accordingly. They are effective for class-wide application and as a layer of additional support for individual students.
View PDFThe Window of Tolerance visual will remind educators how a student that has experienced trauma may have less tolerance than a student who has not experienced trauma.
View PDF