Clear, respectful definitions for behaviour support, emotional regulation, and everyday coping language.
Welcome
This glossary explains common terms used in behaviour support and regulation conversations (home, school, disability support, and therapy settings) — in calm, plain language.
“Support helps skills grow — not shame.”
Gentle content note
Some terms describe distress, safety, and crisis support. Definitions are written to be educational and non-graphic. You can use the search bar, skip sections, or take breaks — there is no rush.
Quick model
A helpful way to notice patterns — without blaming the person.
| Part | What it means | Gentle example |
|---|---|---|
| Antecedent | What happened before the behaviour | The room got loud and busy. |
| Behaviour | What the person did (what we can observe) | Covered ears, left the space, yelled “stop”. |
| Consequence | What happened after (response/impact) | Adult offered quiet space + headphones; noise reduced. |
Regulation supports
Support that helps the nervous system settle (then skills can happen).
| Support | When it helps | Why it helps |
|---|---|---|
| Predictability | Transitions, new places | Reduces uncertainty + threat signals |
| Low words | Overwhelm, shutdown, meltdown | Less processing demand |
| Choice | Power struggles / stuck moments | Restores control safely |
| Sensory tools | Noise/light/touch overload | Supports regulation through the body |