Do you have a child with attachment disorder in your classroom? Here are strategies for teachers of students with Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD).

Are you trying to support a child with RAD? These strategies will help you understand what may help this student and your classroom environment. Typical teaching methods will not work. You need a new strategy!
7 Ways to Teach Students with RAD
Here are specific methods to implement when you are teaching a child with insecure attachment, attachment issues, or a RAD diagnosis.
Be sure to also check out the companion article to this one, 3 Resources to Help Kids with RAD at School, which is especially for parents and caregivers to know how to advocate for their child.
1. Line of Sight Supervision
The most important thing to consider when supervising a child with RAD is safety. A child with attachment disorder can present as cooperative but can make highly unsafe choices. For example, a child with an attachment disorder is often terrified of rejection. They believe that others will reject them, and they often have a very strong response when they feel left out, betrayed, or rejected.
When a RAD child is triggered, they can become a danger to themselves and others. Some common behaviors to expect are throwing things, stealing, hitting, and other “payback” behaviors.
This payback mindset allows the RAD child to save face and gain some level of control. Additionally, they often feel justified in their payback actions and lack remorse or insight.
Children with RAD may perceive just about anything as a rejection, so it is not always clear when the payback may be coming or who will be the victim. To minimize the danger to other children, you must maintain line-of-sight supervision. A responsible adult should always maintain a visual observation of the child.
Strategies for Line of Sight Supervision
Here are ways to manage line of sight supervision while teaching.
- Request extra support staff for your classroom and review IEP to be sure the student has the necessary support.
- Put up mirrors to ensure you can see all around your room from your desk location.
- Provide different passing times in hallways.
- Do not allow children to go in groups to the bathroom or other less supervised areas of the building.
- Do not send a child with RAD to the nurse or office without an adult in the hallway to observe.
2. Listen to the Caregiver
It is essential to understand that a child with attachment disorders comes from a perspective of self-preservation. Because children with RAD believe they will be rejected and are not good enough, they will not feel remorse or wrong for being dishonest.
Typically, the primary caregiver of a child with an attachment disorder is the person the child fears rejection from the most. (This is often the mother but can also be a foster mother, grandmother, father, or other caregiver.) This also means the caregiver is the person with whom the child will exhibit the most testing behaviors.
In other words, expect the child to show the least compliance and most aggression towards the caregiver they feel most bonded to. This behavior is confusing for the caregiver and the child. The child feels their caregiver is trying to care for them and connect. The child will often respond by testing the limits of the caregiver or projecting past traumas onto the current caregiver.
As a teacher, you are a mandated reporter. We suggest you follow your school’s policy on reported allegations or observations of abuse and neglect. However, we also strongly recommend you trust the caregiver. Look for inconsistencies in the story or outright dishonesty.
Understand that the caregiver of a child with an attachment disorder is likely isolated from their support, exhausted, and needs your support. Click here for more help on how to communicate with parents of a child with RAD.
Strategies for Listening to the Caregiver
Here are ways to support the RAD child’s primary caregiver.
- Communicate your support. Let them know you are here for them and non-judgmental.
- Ask the caregiver what rules are necessary to follow at school. If it doesn’t make sense, believe them and support their rules.
- Expect the child to complain about home, family members, or anyone the child believes is trying to make a loving connection. These are the people the child will test the most.
- Don’t blame the caregiver for the child’s behaviors. The caregiver is likely doing all they can to support and guide their child. Cut them slack in areas where you may press other parents.
- Communication and documentation are extremely helpful to caregivers. Expect that the child will be dishonest with you about what is going on at home and dishonest with their caregivers about what is happening in school. Documenting and supporting behaviors at school can help the treatment team develop a plan for service continuation and reduce triangulation.
3. Plan for a Power Struggle
A child from a hard place is used to living a life where they lack control. The child often feels out of control and is desperate to gain a sense of control. A typical student will look to adults for guidance and direction. A child with RAD believes adults will not make good decisions; thus, they want power and control of all situations.
Your goal as a teacher is to control the environment in a classroom. Expect that students with an attachment disorder will resist and push back if they believe they are being controlled.
Remember, this child may have learned that adults can not be trusted. If that is the case, they do not believe your instructions are in their best interest. This will look like non-compliance, defiance, aggression, or even delinquent behaviors. The key is to look beyond the behavior and understand what the student is trying to communicate.
Strategies for a Power Struggle
Here are strategies for managing power struggles in the classroom.
- Expect the student to ask a lot of questions about rules. Give short, confident explanations then move on. Don’t get stuck answering endless questions.
- Expect the student to say rules are dumb (or other negative comments).
- Understand that this child needs you to be the one in control. They need you to stick it out and be consistent. This is the only way they will eventually learn that adults can be trusted.
- Have a strategy for implementing rules or additional restrictions. For example, if you cannot allow your student with RAD to have scissors while the other children can, expect to have to explain why to them. Focus on wording such as “safety” and “good choices.” Let the students know your rule is a way to help keep them safe and is for their benefit.
- Above all else, you have to maintain control. If the child can gain power, their behaviors will become more intense, and they will learn that manipulation is how they fill their needs. Be kind, but be firm and consistent.
4. Have Strict Personal Space Boundaries
A child with attachment disorder does not understand healthy relationships or boundaries. This means the student can be overly familiar, ask for special treats, or violate social norms. For this reason, it is essential that the school work alongside the caregiver to support and enforce boundaries.
A typical example of boundaries violated by a child with attachment disorder is excessive physical touch. A child with an attachment injury may seek out strangers and hug, kiss or hang on them. This is a maladaptive behavior that comes from their attachment issues and can be harmful to the child.
When children hang on, touch, or otherwise invade the personal space of others, they are making themselves open to victimization. They are often rejected by their peers or other adults who are made uncomfortable by the excessive touch. This child may be physically touching you as a trauma response, not for average physical comfort.
If you set clear boundaries and stick to them, you are another adult in their lives who is teaching them social norms. This sets them up for healthier relationships in the future.
Strategies for Having Strict Personal Space Boundaries
Use these methods to maintain strict physical boundaries.
- Do not give hugs or physical touch as a reward. This can send a mixed message to a child who already struggles to understand healthy touches.
- Do not allow the student to touch their peers excessively.
- Have rules about touch, such as, “In my classroom, we ask permission before we give hugs,” or, “In my class, we do high fives and not hugs.”
- Observe the boundaries that the student struggles with and try to incorporate ways to teach healthy boundaries without shame or judgment.
5. Watch for a Shift in Behavior
Children with attachment issues often have difficulty verbalizing or expressing emotions. This means that behavior may be the most common form of communication when feelings change for the student.
A shift in behavior can mean that the student is reacting to stimuli in the environment. Be aware and monitor changes in behavior. For example, an increase in anxiety-driven behaviors such as skin picking, nail-biting, or hair pulling can indicate this.
Another notable shift can occur when a special event or holiday is approaching. Children with a trauma history can often be triggered or overstimulated on field trips, class parties, or other unstructured times.
Strategies for Watching for a Shift in Behavior
Pay attention and use these methods for behavior shifts.
- Watch for a change in behavior at times of holidays or special events.
- Take note of a change in behavior around adults or other students.
- Documenting what occurred before or after a meltdown may help you determine the trigger.
- Notice if routine changes occur or if new behaviors appear throughout the school year.
6. Give Other Students Special Instructions
It can be difficult for other students in your classroom to understand the needs of a classmate with RAD. Being sensitive to this will help the child with attachment issues and make classroom management go more smoothly.
While you must keep confidentiality, it’s fair to explain differences in a factual way that students can understand. Be forward-thinking and plan to give instructions in advance about differences students will see. This helps prevent the “no fair” chorus from happening when the student with RAD needs different rules.
Children with attachment issues struggle to make friends. They can be demanding, manipulative, and controlling. They want friends but don’t understand healthy give-and-take relationships.
Continue to monitor peer-to-peer interactions carefully and supervise all situations because children with more severe attachment issues lack a conscience. They will hurt their peers and lack remorse for doing so.
While you can encourage friendships, please do not force them either. Part of what a child with RAD needs to learn is the natural consequences of their unhealthy behaviors. Other children don’t want to play with you when you are mean.
Remember that all the students in the class will benefit from learning to manage each person’s individual needs. These important life skills will better prepare them for growing up and adulthood.
Strategies for Giving Other Students Special Instructions
Here are ideas for giving additional instructions to other students in the class.
- Provide a separate place for RAD students to put their bookbags or personal items. This way, it will be evident if the RAD child is near the belongings of others.
- Provide a quiet place in the classroom where students can get a break.
- Expect that children with RAD can have difficulty reading social cues. You may need to provide classmates with a strategy to alert the adults if a child violates their boundaries or engages in other inappropriate interactions.
7. Realize that the Child’s Attitude Toward You Will Shift
Deep down, we all want to be liked. You, as a teacher, are no exception. While we know we are the authority figure and not the student’s friend, it’s normal to want positive back-and-forth interaction. This is the basis for all human behavior. You are a teacher, but you are also a person and not a robot.
As such, managing RAD is tough. Children with attachment issues lack empathy, and in more severe cases, they cannot love. Children who heal from their attachment problems are more open to healthy relationships.
Recognize that the child’s attitude and behaviors toward you may have wild swings as they struggle with trust issues. This isn’t a reflection on you as a person but rather shows the child’s lack of a healthy sense of self.
Expect that you might get triggered by the child’s back-and-forth behavior and learn to manage your own emotions. You are the adult, and your job is to continue to have emotional regulation no matter where the child is emotionally or behaviorally. This is a tall order, but we know you are up for the task.
The better teacher you become, the more you can step back and examine the situation without becoming overly emotionally engaged. Give yourself breaks when needed, and recognize that teaching children with RAD is extremely difficult. Even the most gifted, experienced teachers struggle with managing kids with attachment problems.
Strategies for When the Child’s Attitude Toward You Shifts
Use these ideas when you see a shift in the child’s attitude toward you.
- Do not take it personally. It is typical for a child with an attachment disorder to begin a new relationship with overly affectionate behavior. As the adult sets limits and boundaries, don’t be surprised if affection quickly turns into negative behavior.
- Expect that as you set limits and boundaries, a child with attachment issues will become frustrated and may begin to say hurtful things or accuse you of disliking them.
- Understand that a sudden shift in attitude can be an attempt to manipulate or gain control.
- A shift in attitude can also indicate that the adult is getting too close to the child or the child is worried they may get rejected. It is scary for a child with RAD to become attached to others. Familiarity is a source of anxiety because it opens possible avenues to attachment.
- Recognize that a change in attitude will occur and that it should not impact your consistent response.
- Give yourself breaks when needed, and step back emotionally. Teaching in a class with a student with RAD is some of the most demanding teaching you will do.
Classroom management is a difficult skill to develop in a typical school setting. It is made even more difficult when you have a student with an attachment disorder. The strategies you found helpful with other students will not work for a child with RAD. We hope this resource has provided you with some valuable strategies.
Don’t give up, and don’t lose heart. Your impact on this child will be important for them this year and benefit them for years.
Have you taught in a classroom with a child with RAD? What strategies worked? Share in the comments below.
Click here for a free PDF printable checklist of the 7 steps to take when your child needs residential treatment.

More Related Posts:
How Do I Know If My Adopted Child Has Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD)?
Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD) at School: 3 Resources to Help Kids, Parents, & Teachers
7 Things You Need When Parenting a Child with Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD)
When this article says “Recognize that a change in attitude will occur and that it should not impact your consistent response” what is the consistent response educators need to be using? There is a lot of red tape and it is difficult because what we feel we can’t do, is likely what the RAD student needs (nothing abusive but we literally can’t do anything but let the student manipulate and run things bc of the laws in our State). What is something you can suggest we implement for RAD students who are getting more and more out of control?
That’s a great question. I encourage the teachers I work with to have a flat affect and monotone when my child becomes escalated. What most people don’t understand is that high emotional intensity and a long period to return to baseline is a real thing for children with RAD.