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Emotion Regulation Board

Using an Emotion Regulation Board at Home

An Emotion Regulation Board uses pictures of feelings plus calming choices to help your child name emotions and settle. Build it together, practise when calm, offer it gently during upsets, and keep it visible in daily routines.

Using an Emotion Regulation Board at Home
Emotion Regulation Board: Calm Skills at Home — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Big feelings don't have an off-switch — but with a simple board on your fridge, your child can learn to spot the storm and find calm.

In short

An Emotion Regulation Board is a visual tool — pictures or simple words for feelings, plus calming choices — that helps your child name what they feel and pick a way to settle. Used calmly and consistently at home, it turns overwhelming moments into chances to practise. The aim isn't to stop feelings, but to help your child recognise and respond to them.

How to use it at home

Build it together
  • Make a simple board with 4–6 feelings: happy, sad, angry, scared, tired, calm. Use photos, drawings or printed faces.
  • Add a small "calm-down" side: deep breaths, a hug, a quiet corner, squeezing a soft toy, counting to five.
  • Let your child help choose the pictures — ownership makes them more likely to use it.

Practise when calm, not only in meltdowns

  • Each day, point to the board: "How are you feeling right now?" Name your own feelings too — "I feel tired, so I'm taking a slow breath."
  • Read a story and pause to ask which feeling a character has. This builds the vocabulary before they need it.

Use it in the moment, gently

  • When upset, get down to their level, stay calm, and offer the board: "Show me how you feel." Pointing is fine — words aren't required.
  • Once they've named it, guide them to a calming choice from the board. Praise the trying, not just the calming down.
  • Keep your own voice low and slow; your calm is the strongest co-regulator they have.

Make it part of the day

  • Keep the board somewhere visible — fridge, bedroom door, near a play area.
  • Use it at predictable wobble-points: before school, at bedtime, during transitions.

The Pinnacle way

Every child's emotional pace is different, and progress looks like small, real wins — a tantrum that ends sooner, a feeling named instead of thrown. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care; a home board supports practice, it does not assess or diagnose. Our therapists can show you how to tailor an Emotion Regulation Board to your child and weave it into daily routines, alongside behavioural therapy where helpful.

Trusted sources

Aligned with American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren.org guidance on supporting children's emotional development, and ASHA resources on building emotional and communication vocabulary at home.

Next step — book a developmental assessment to get a board and home plan made for your child — reach the Pinnacle team on WhatsApp: +91 91001 81181.

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.

What to watch

If big feelings stay overwhelming most days, lead to harm, or your child shows little interest in naming or noticing emotions over several weeks, mention it at a developmental check rather than waiting.

Try this at home

Name your own feelings out loud at the board each day — "I feel tired, so I'm breathing slowly" — modelling teaches faster than any prompt.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · 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

What age can I start using an Emotion Regulation Board?

Most children can begin with simple feeling pictures from around 2.5 to 3 years, when they start understanding basic emotions. Younger children benefit from you naming feelings out loud, even before they can point to the board themselves.

What if my child ignores the board during a meltdown?

That's normal. When a child is very upset, their thinking brain is offline. Stay calm, offer comfort first, and use the board afterwards to talk through what happened. The real learning often happens in calm practice between meltdowns.

Should I make my child use the calming choices?

Offer, don't force. Forcing turns a calm tool into a battle. Model the choices yourself, praise any attempt, and let your child pick what works for them — ownership makes the board far more effective.

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