Tantrums
Supporting a 2-Year-Old's Tantrums in Class
Tantrums in a 2-year-old are a normal part of development. A teacher helps most by staying calm and co-regulating, naming the feeling, keeping routines predictable, noticing triggers, and offering small choices. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
A two-year-old's tantrum isn't bad behaviour — it's a big feeling in a brain that hasn't yet learned the words or calm to manage it.
In short
For a 2-year-old, tantrums are a normal, expected part of development — at this age children feel powerful emotions but don't yet have the language or self-control to handle them. As a teacher, the most powerful supports are staying calm, naming the feeling, keeping routines predictable, and preventing overwhelm before it builds. Most toddlers settle far faster when an adult co-regulates with them rather than reasoning or disciplining in the heat of the moment.How a teacher can help
- Stay calm and lower yourself to their level — your steady voice and body are the child's "borrowed" calm. A quiet, unhurried adult helps the storm pass sooner.
- Name the feeling simply — "You're upset. You wanted that toy." Putting words to emotion is exactly the skill the child is still building.
- Keep routines predictable — visual schedules, the same sequence each day and gentle transition warnings ("two more minutes, then tidy-up") prevent many tantrums before they start.
- Notice the triggers — hunger, tiredness, too much noise, a hard transition or wanting something they can't have. Adjusting the environment often reduces frequency.
- Offer small, safe choices — "red cup or blue cup?" gives a toddler the sense of control they're hungry for at this age.
- Keep everyone safe and wait it out — don't reason mid-tantrum; once calm, reconnect warmly and move on without shaming.
The goal is never to stop a child feeling — it's to help them feel and recover, again and again, until the skill becomes their own.
When a check may help
Tantrums at two are typical. A developmental check is worth considering if outbursts are very frequent, intense or long, if a child often hurts themselves or others, if they have few words to communicate their needs, or if they seem unusually hard to soothe or settle compared with peers. This isn't about labelling a toddler — it's about ruling out an unmet need (such as language or sensory) that, once supported, makes daily life easier for everyone.The Pinnacle way
This is general guidance, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care. If a child's tantrums seem tied to difficulty communicating, our speech therapy team can help build the words behind big feelings, while a structured developmental profile shows where gentle support might help. Explore more about [child development support](/).Trusted sources
CDC "Learn the Signs. Act Early." milestone and behaviour guidance; American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org) on toddler tantrums and emotional development; WHO Nurturing Care framework on responsive caregiving.Next step — Worried a child's tantrums point to an unmet need? Book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician.
What to watch
Watch for tantrums that are very frequent, very long or very intense, frequent hurting of self or others, very few words to express needs, or a child who is unusually hard to soothe compared with peers.
Try this at home
Give gentle transition warnings — 'two more minutes, then tidy-up time' — and offer small choices like 'red cup or blue cup?'. Feeling a little in control prevents many toddler meltdowns before they start.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Are tantrums normal for a 2-year-old?
Yes. At two, children feel powerful emotions but don't yet have the language or self-control to manage them, so tantrums are a normal and expected part of development. They usually become less frequent as language and self-regulation grow.
What should a teacher do during a tantrum?
Stay calm, lower yourself to the child's level, and name the feeling simply — 'You're upset.' Keep everyone safe and avoid reasoning or disciplining mid-tantrum. Once the child is calm, reconnect warmly and move on without shaming.
When should a 2-year-old's tantrums be checked by a professional?
Consider a developmental check if outbursts are very frequent, intense or long, if a child often hurts themselves or others, if they have very few words to communicate, or if they are unusually hard to soothe compared with peers.