The Whole-Brain Child
Daniel J. Siegel & Tina Payne Bryson
12 strategies grounded in brain science for helping young children handle big feelings and difficult moments.
View on Amazon →Anxiety is among the most common mental health challenges in childhood. Knowing how it shows up in young children — often as behavior, avoidance, or physical complaints — helps you respond with clarity instead of frustration.
The CDC estimates that approximately 9.4% of children aged 3-17 have diagnosed anxiety disorders, making it the most common childhood mental health condition. In classrooms, the actual number of children experiencing significant anxiety is likely higher, since many children with anxiety do not receive a formal diagnosis. Anxiety in young children often looks different from adult anxiety — and can easily be misread as defiance, laziness, or attention-seeking.
This page is for recognition and supportive response — not diagnosis. If you believe a student has significant anxiety, refer them to your school counselor. Clinical assessment and treatment are outside the scope of classroom teaching.
The most effective classroom response to anxiety validates the feeling while not reinforcing avoidance. "I can see you feel worried about this presentation. That makes sense — new things feel nerve-wracking sometimes. I'm going to help you prepare, and you can do it." The goal is not to remove the anxiety trigger but to build the child's confidence that they can manage it.
Avoid: allowing indefinite avoidance of feared situations (this strengthens the anxiety). The gold-standard treatment for anxiety involves gradual, supported exposure — doing the feared thing with help — not avoidance.
Anxious students struggle most with unpredictability and transitions. A visual schedule, warnings before transitions, and advance notice about activities ("Tomorrow we're having a guest speaker — here's what that will look like") significantly reduce anxiety responses.
Teach breathing, grounding, and self-talk strategies to all students so anxious students have tools. "When I feel worried, I take three slow deep breaths and say to myself, 'I can do this.'" Practice during calm moments so strategies are available when anxiety is high.
Refer to your school counselor when: anxiety is significantly interfering with learning, the student's anxiety is worsening despite classroom support, school refusal is a pattern, or the child is expressing extreme distress. Anxiety is highly treatable with appropriate intervention — don't wait.
Anxiety in young children rarely presents as a child saying "I'm anxious." It more often shows up as physical complaints (stomachaches on school days, frequent bathroom requests before tests), behavioral avoidance (refusing to try new things, school refusal, extreme distress at transitions), social withdrawal, perfectionism, or excessive reassurance-seeking ("Is this right? Are you sure? Is this right?"). These behaviors are communication — the child's nervous system is signaling threat, even when no objective threat exists. Recognizing anxiety as the underlying cause of these behaviors changes how you respond: the goal shifts from "stop the behavior" to "reduce the felt threat and build coping capacity."
The most powerful classroom anxiety reducer is predictability. Anxious students do significantly better when they know what to expect: a consistent daily schedule posted and reviewed each morning, advance notice of transitions and changes, clear explanations of new activities before they begin, and consistent enforcement of classroom rules that make the social environment feel safe and fair. Anxiety is fundamentally about uncertain threat; predictability directly reduces that uncertainty. Small investments in routine and advance warning produce disproportionate gains in anxious students' ability to participate and learn.
Classroom support is appropriate and often sufficient for mild situational anxiety. But when anxiety is significantly interfering with a student's daily functioning — preventing participation in normal activities, causing frequent physical symptoms, producing extreme behavioral distress — professional support is warranted. Consult your school counselor first. They can provide direct support, connect with the family, and help determine whether an outside mental health referral is appropriate. When communicating with families about anxiety concerns, describe what you've observed specifically and avoid using diagnostic language: "I've noticed Marcus becomes very distressed before tests and often complains of stomachaches in the morning" rather than "I think Marcus has an anxiety disorder."
Teacher-tested books and classroom supplies we recommend for this topic. Explore the full list on our Recommended Resources page.
Daniel J. Siegel & Tina Payne Bryson
12 strategies grounded in brain science for helping young children handle big feelings and difficult moments.
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A beloved picture book that helps young children name and sort their emotions — perfect for a feelings read-aloud.
View on Amazon →Carol McCloud
The bucket-filling metaphor that teaches kindness and empathy — a classroom-community staple for K-3.
View on Amazon →Patrice Karst
A gentle read-aloud about connection that comforts children through separation, big worries, and loss.
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