ADHD Science & Strategies

How to Manage Your Child’s Toughest Behavioral Problems

Behavioral Problems: ADHD Parenting Guidance

Parents, especially of younger children, comprise the first line of defense against behavioral problems because they are truly the agents of change. This is not to say that parents are at fault for behavioral problems, but rather that their influence over the solution cannot be overstated.

When caregivers are well-versed in the tried-and-true approaches proven to remedy ADHD behavioral problems, it leads to a positive parent-child relationship and to a happy, healthy, and successful child who is better equipped to cope with ADHD symptoms and other challenges.

These behavioral techniques should follow a hierarchy that looks like the following:

[Click to Read: How to Reinforce Good Behavior]

Behavioral Problems: At-Home Strategies for Parents

1. Rapport and Relationship Building

Despite many reminders, your child won’t get off their video game and go to bed. Annoyed, you raise your voice, hoping that will get their attention. Instead, they yell back, and you lose your temper. At last, they either stop playing, or you give up your requests. Either way, it’s an exhausting pattern that is only reinforced by its repetition.

Too many of these types of interactions can create feelings of anger and resentment from both sides. To set the stage for success, begin by building and reinforcing your relationship with your child by creating more moments of genuine joy. This is the first step toward effective behavioral changes.

A few times each week, do the following:

Establishing a warm relationship with your child helps them feel appreciated, and it boosts your intrinsic authority as their parent. It also helps strike a balance between structure and nurture, which is at the heart of being an effective behavior manager.

[“You Are Wonderful!” How Praise Triggers Better Control in the ADHD Brain]

2. Observe Behavioral Problems and Causes

There is a logic to your child’s behaviors. Carefully taking note of behaviors and their contexts is the second step toward eventually changing them.

Use any kind of note-taking system to record answers to the following questions:

Breaking down behaviors in this format allows for opportunities to de-escalate and reinforce positive behaviors in ways that work for your child, rather than resorting to consequences right away. The focus is not on eliminating the “big moment,” which can take time to mellow out, but in noticing the little trends toward positive change at every turn.

3. Set the Stage for Success

Third, put supports in place, especially with a focus on ADHD symptoms and their unique challenges, to steer your child toward positive behaviors. Supports should center on clear rules and routines, visual cues, and creative reminders to prompt your child toward desired behaviors, consistent limits and corrective feedback, and frequent positive feedback, rewards, and other incentives to increase motivation toward target behaviors.

If your child struggles with routines, for example, post in a prominent area a chart or checklist of required tasks labeled and listed with times for each.

Similarly, and especially if your child is younger and learning from home, I recommend creating a chart that lists appropriate behaviors and expectations for remote learning, like keeping muted, turning on the camera, and raising their hand to speak.

4. Provide Positive Feedback

Praise your child for the behaviors you’d like to see more of:

At the same time, withdraw attention from difficult behaviors like whining, arguing, and interrupting, and provide positive feedback around a preferred behavior occurring subsequently or simultaneously instead. Eventually, the problem behavior will decrease as your child recognizes that their undesirable behavior is not serving a function.

5. Give Instructions Effectively

Getting your child to listen to you largely depends on how you’re delivering instructions:

6. Create a Behavior Plan and Reward System

Clear behavioral goals and rewards are great for motivating and stimulating children and teens with ADHD toward positive behaviors. Use behavior charts and point systems to keep track of up to three target skills and behaviors at a time. On the chart, be sure to positively phrase the task (i.e. what to do instead of what not to do) and be specific: “Focus on lessons for 30 minutes”; “Get started on schoolwork right at 4 pm.”

Reward systems can vary based on age. Young children respond well to simple systems like sticker charts, while older children can follow a points system and pick rewards from a co-created menu. Teenagers can follow a more sophisticated point system, where they can “deposit” and “withdraw” points depending on the task, and where point values increase with task difficulty.

7. Enforce Consequences Sparingly

It’s a fallacy that harsh punishments will make your child think long and hard about what they’ve done. In fact, harsh punishments are quite ineffective, as they:

If you do pursue consequences for misbehavior, follow these guidelines:

With practice and persistence, these strategies will improve your child’s behaviors and decrease family conflict at home – now, and years into the future.

The content for this article was derived from the ADDitude Expert Webinar “Discipline Strategies for ADHD: How to Manage Your Child’s Most Challenging Behaviors” [Video Replay & Podcast #346] with David Anderson, Ph.D., which was broadcast live on March 2, 2021.

Behavioral Problems Associated with ADHD: Next Steps


Updated on May 9, 2025

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