Levelling Behaviour: When Students Try to Even the Playing Field
In every classroom, there are moments when a student suddenly pushes back - hard. They might snap, mock, refuse, storm off, or say something that sounds deeply unkind. These moments can feel personal, challenging, or really confusing.
But many of these behaviours are not actually about defiance or disrespect.
They are often levelling behaviours. These are what Kristy Forbes describes as equity-seeking behaviour or attempts to ‘even the playing field’ with an adult or peer when a student feels overwhelmed, powerless, or disconnected.
Understanding this lens changes everything.
Levelling behaviour is not about control. It’s about protection. It’s a young person saying:
“I feel too small right now, so I need to bring you closer to my level.”
Image from Canva by Maglara from Getty Images Pro
You may also be interested in my other blogs ‘Demanding Respect from PDAers in the School Setting: Why Hierarchy Backfires & What Builds True Connection Instead’ ‘PDAers and Compliance: Understanding the Real Challenge, Blog’, and ‘Bumpy vs Spiky Learning Profiles: Why the Difference Matters More Than You Think’
Why Students Level
Levelling behaviours often appear when a student senses:
An unspoken hierarchy
You’re the adult, you have all the power
Vulnerability
I might get in trouble, You’re disappointed in me
Overwhelm
This work is too hard, Too much noise, Too many demands
Disconnection
You don’t understand me, I don’t feel safe right now
Shame
I made a mistake, I don’t want you to see me struggle
When their nervous system spikes into survival mode, the young person instinctively tries to reduce the power gap. If they can bring the adult down (through insults, mockery, refusal), or bring themselves up (through bravado, exaggeration, threats), the dynamic feels more manageable.
It’s reactive. It’s protective. And it’s often unconscious.
Common Levelling Behaviours
Levelling behaviours are not a sign of poor character or choice. They are responses to stress.
They can show up through words or actions and may intensify when early cues are overlooked or misunderstood.
These behaviours are reactive and protective in nature. Students use them in moments where they feel overwhelmed, unsafe, powerless, or disconnected. They are often an attempt to regain control or restore a sense of safety.
1. Verbal Levelling
Attempts to regain control through language.
Name-calling, e.g. “You’re stupid,” “You’re mean”
Personal insults
Rejection statements, e.g. “I hate you,” “You’re not my teacher”
Blame-shifting, e.g. “You made me do it!”
Threats, e.g. “I’m never coming back,” “I’ll run away”
Mocking or mimicking tone
Sarcasm or dismissiveness
Calling for a “better” adult, e.g. “I want someone else”
Exaggeration, e.g. “Everyone hates me”
Public calling-out of an adult or peer
2. Relational Levelling
Attempts to break or avoid connection.
Using humour/silliness to deflect
Over-confident bravado, e.g. “Whatever,” “I don’t care”
Withdrawing or shutting down
Walking away or turning away sharply
Destroying connection attempts, e.g. rejecting help, pushing away comfort
3. Boundary-Testing Levelling
Checking: Are you still safe if I push harder?
Rapid “no” cycle
Tone escalating quickly
Defiant refusal, e.g. “You can’t make me!”
4. Physical Levelling
Expression of overwhelm through movement or disruption.
Knocking items off tables
Pushing over chairs
Slamming doors/cupboards
Snapping pencils or breaking small items
Throwing objects
Ripping work (their own or others’)
Scratching or scribbling on surfaces
Kicking furniture
Pulling down displays
Hiding or discarding classroom items
Dumping trays, boxes, or resources
Damaging their own belongings
Breaking shared materials
These are often last-resort behaviours when a young person no longer has the internal resources to communicate their needs safely.
What Levelling Is Not
Levelling is not:
A deliberate attempt to upset staff
A sign that a student doesn’t care
Evidence of poor motivation
“Manipulation”
young people in distress don’t scheme, they react
Solved by punishment or power struggles
Levelling is a signal for help.
How Adults Can Respond Without Escalating
Students often level because they feel small. We do not help them feel bigger by making ourselves bigger.
Safe adult responses:
Stay steady:
Your calm nervous system is the intervention.
Reduce the hierarchy
The young person needs to feel “with,” not “under.”
You can do this by:
Sitting instead of standing over them
Moving slowly and quietly
Using warm, neutral language
Offering choices rather than commands
Protect their dignity
Shaming or calling out levelling behaviour deepens the disconnect.
Acknowledge the feeling, not the behaviour
“You’re having a really hard moment,”
not
“You’re being rude.”
Offer connection before correction
Support now, teach later.
Don’t personalise the words
The child is fighting the feeling, not you.
Why Understanding Levelling Matters
When we recognise levelling as a stress response, we shift from reactive discipline to relational safety.
A teacher who understands levelling might think:
“They’re overwhelmed, not oppositional.”
“They’re seeking safety, not hurting me.”
“My steadiness matters more than my authority.”
“They’re trying to protect their dignity.”
This perspective helps us adults stay connected even in challenging moments. And this also helps students learn that they don’t need to tear someone down or push them away to feel safe.
When we meet levelling with compassion, we transform behaviour into belonging.
Thank you for being here,
Laura Hellfeld
RN, MSN, PHN, CNL
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Disclaimer: The information shared in this blog is for informational purposes only and is not intended to replace medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Please consult a licensed healthcare provider for personalised support and care tailored to your specific needs.
Signposting and Resources
Forbes, K. (2025). PDA parenting isn’t perfect, it’s real, raw and relational. InTune Pathways. Retrieved November 27th, 2025, from https://www.kristyforbes.com.au/blog/pda-parenting-isn-t-perfect-it-s-real-raw-and-relational
Gabby’s Glimmers: An Affirming Story of an Autistic Child and their Favourite Food
Bumpy vs Spiky Learning Profiles: Why the Difference Matters More Than You Think, Blog
PDAers and Compliance: Understanding the Real Challenge, Blog
Getting to Know More About PDAers: The Less Discussed Characteristics, Blog
Distress Language: How to Tune into What Your Child Can’t Say, Blog




