Effective Ways to Handle Child Tantrums | Child Mind Institute
Master the art of dealing with child tantrums and toddler meltdowns. Uncover the causes, learn to respond effectively, and promote better behavior in your child.
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Toegevoegd op
25 maart 2026
Gerelateerde situatie
Doelgroep
parent
Schooljaar
Kleuterschool–Groep 5
Paginatype
Article
Inleiding
Managing and Preventing Child Tantrums
- Understanding Tantrums: Tantrums are often learned responses to situations where a child feels overwhelmed by emotion (fear, frustration, anger, or sensory overload) and lacks the maturity to communicate or cope effectively.
- Functional Assessment: Parents should identify patterns by observing what happens immediately before, during, and after an outburst. Frequent meltdowns may indicate underlying issues like ADHD, anxiety, or learning disorders.
- Prevention Strategies:
- Modify the Environment: Adjust routines to reduce triggers (e.g., provide warnings before transitions, break difficult tasks into smaller chunks, or offer frequent breaks).
- Manage Expectations: Ensure demands are developmentally appropriate for the child’s age and maturity level.
- Proactive Planning: Anticipating triggers allows parents to structure activities to make compliance easier for the child.
- Responding to Outbursts:
- Withdraw Attention: For non-dangerous outbursts, ignore the behavior entirely. Even negative attention (reprimanding or reasoning) can reinforce the tantrum.
- Avoid "Giving In": Never reward a tantrum by granting the child's demand, as this creates "intermittent reinforcement," making the behavior harder to extinguish.
- Do Not Reason During Meltdowns: Wait until the child is calm to discuss problems or negotiate.
- Teaching Positive Skills:
- Positive Reinforcement: Lavish attention and praise on appropriate behaviors, such as compliance, compromising, or using words to express frustration.
- Self-Soothing: Teach children tools like slow breathing, counting, and mindfulness to manage big emotions.
- Modeling: Parents should model calm behavior and take their own "time-outs" when they feel their own anger rising.
- Clear Expectations: Use concrete, observable instructions (e.g., "stay seated during mealtime") rather than vague commands like "behave."
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