Connection Before Correction: Why Teaching Fails During Dysregulation
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If you’ve ever thought, “Nothing is teaching my kid,” this episode is for you.
Many parents of neurodivergent kids spend their days correcting, explaining, setting consequences, and trying again — only to face the same hard moments over and over. It can leave you wondering whether your child is learning at all, or whether you’re failing them somehow.
In this episode, pediatric psychologist Dr. Mark Bowers offers a critical reframe: correction doesn’t work during dysregulation — because dysregulation is not a teachable state.
You’ll learn:
- Why teaching and consequences often backfire when a child is overwhelmed
- What’s actually happening in a dysregulated brain and nervous system
- What “connection before correction” really means (and what it doesn’t)
- How connection helps prevent escalation rather than reward behavior
- A simple, practical structure for what to do in the moment — without being permissive
This episode isn’t about lowering expectations or letting things slide. It’s about choosing the order that works: regulation first, teaching later.
If parenting has felt harder than you expected, and you’re looking for understanding instead of blame, this conversation will help you make sense of what’s happening — and show you how connection can become the bridge back to learning.
Support the show
Beneath the Behavior is an educational podcast for parents and caregivers of neurodivergent kids.
The information shared is not therapy or a substitute for working with your own provider. Episodes are intended to offer understanding, context, and language—not individual advice.
If you’re looking for ongoing support grounded in the same science-not-shame approach, check out the Neurodivergent Parenting Collective.
