An area of student need, based on his/her demonstrated behaviour.
• Use preferential seating, close to the teacher or peers who will model appropriately, and away from sources of conflict, when possible.
• Provide a cool-down/time-out location, and establish parameters for when the student can access this location.
• Speak privately to the student when possible.
• Provide anger reduction tools (doodle pad, stress ball, iPod).
• Post clear and descriptive classroom rules that focus on what students are expected to do to behave appropriately in class.
• Give advance notice of tests and assignments (e.g. one week/month notice on a written calendar).
• Provide a range of assessment options to permit student choice.
• Allow the option of open book tests.
• Minimize distractions/consider an alternative testing location.
• Chunk tests and assignments into small tasks when necessary.
• Reduce the quantity of test/assignment items.
• Provide additional time.
• Allow periodic supervised breaks.

Acts of frustration and aggression either verbal (insults, threatening, name calling, yells, swears), non-verbal (running, inappropriate gestures) and/or physical (physical confrontations with others or objects: kicks, hits, throws, bites, etc; temper outbursts) and/or inward (self-harm, non-compliance, refusal to move/speak, etc.).
Resources
What anger is, why it needs to be managed, and how it should be managed. From The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids).




