Emotional regulation is not something students either have or don’t have. It is a skill that develops over time, and for many students with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), it requires direct support, modeling, and practice.
When a student becomes overwhelmed, frustrated, or anxious, they may not yet have the ability to calm themselves independently. This is where co-regulation becomes essential.
Co-regulation is the process of an adult helping a student manage their emotions through calm presence, connection, and support. Before students can regulate themselves, they often need someone to guide them through it.
This article explores what co-regulation is, why it matters, and how educators can use it to create calmer, more supportive classrooms.
Co-regulation is the act of supporting a student’s emotional state through your own calm and regulated behavior.
It includes:
Co-regulation is not about controlling behavior. It is about helping a student move from a state of distress to a state where they can think, learn, and engage again.
Research in child development shows that emotional regulation develops through relationships. Students learn how to regulate by experiencing regulation with others (Shonkoff & Phillips, 2000).
Students with autism may experience:
Because of this, emotional responses can escalate quickly. Without support, students may shut down, withdraw, or have a meltdown.
Co-regulation helps:
Regulation always comes before instruction.
Co-regulation is often quiet and subtle. It is not a scripted intervention. It is a consistent approach to how adults respond to students.
Examples include:
Students are highly responsive to adult energy. When adults remain calm, students are more likely to follow.
Research in child development and education consistently shows that students learn emotional regulation through supportive relationships and modeled behavior (Shonkoff & Phillips, 2000; Perry & Szalavitz, 2006). In the classroom, this translates into simple, intentional strategies that educators can use every day.
Here are five practical co-regulation strategies you can begin using immediately:
1) Regulate Yourself First
Students cannot borrow calm from an adult who is dysregulated.
Before responding:
Your tone and body language communicate more than your words.
2) Reduce Language During Escalation
When a student is overwhelmed, their ability to process language decreases.
Instead of giving multiple instructions:
Less language leads to less overwhelm.
3) Create a Safe Space for Regulation
Students need a place where they can reset without feeling punished.
The goal is to support regulation, not remove the student from learning long-term.
4) Stay Present Without Pressure
Sometimes the most effective support is simply staying nearby.
Presence builds trust.
5) Follow Up After the Moment
Co-regulation continues after the student is calm.
This is where learning happens.
It is important to understand the difference between co-regulation and compliance-based approaches.
Compliance focuses on stopping behavior quickly. Co-regulation focuses on understanding and supporting the student.
When students feel safe, behavior improves naturally. When they feel controlled or misunderstood, stress increases.
Long-term success comes from teaching regulation, not forcing compliance.
Co-regulation is not just for students with autism.
A regulated classroom environment supports everyone.
Students are not born knowing how to manage strong emotions. They learn through experience, relationships, and support.
Co-regulation gives students a model for calm, a pathway back to learning, and a sense of safety in the classroom.
When educators lead with connection, patience, and understanding, they do more than manage behavior. They teach lifelong skills.
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