
I no longer talk about Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) the same way I used to. And honestly? I am behind the times. This shift didn’t come from being “soft,” trendy, or anti-accountability. It came from learning more, sitting with kids longer, listening to families, reflecting on past experiences, and watching how labels land in real classrooms with real humans.
The more I’ve learned, the harder it’s been to call ODD a diagnosis in the way we usually mean it.
You may recall previous posts I’ve written here and on instagram, as I have worked with TONS of children with the diagnosis of Oppositional Defiant Disorder over the last 10+ years. There’s such a stigma here, such an over diagnosis of boys of color, and there’s so much that just doesn’t add up.
I’m realizing this is because what we call ODD is not a root cause, it’s a description of behavior.
What ODD Actually Describes (Not Explains)
If you look at the criteria, Oppositional Defiant Disorder boils down to patterns like:
- Frequent arguing with adults
- Refusal to comply with requests
- Anger, irritability, or spitefulness
- Defiance that shows up across settings
That’s not a disorder in the way sleep apnea or ADHD are disorders. That’s a pattern of stress responses!!!!
ODD doesn’t tell us why a child is acting this way, it tells us how their distress shows up, which is a hugely important distinction.
The Hard Truth: ODD Is Always Pointing to Something Bigger
I’m going to say this plainly, because clarity matters more than comfort here: oppositional behavior does not come out of nowhere. Every student I’ve ever worked with who carried an ODD label had something else underneath it. Always.
Common roots include:
- Chronic stress or trauma
- Anxiety and/or OCD
- Learning disabilities
- ADHD
- Autism
When kids don’t feel safe, competent, or understood, they protect themselves, and naturally that protection looks like defiance at times.
Why the Label Can Do Harm in Schools
Here’s where my discomfort really set in. In classrooms, Oppositional Defiant Disorder often turns into shorthand for:
- “This kid is difficult.”
- “They’re choosing this behavior.”
- “They don’t respect authority.”
- “They just don’t care.”
That framing changes adult behavior fast. Once a child is seen as oppositional by nature, we respond with:
- More power struggles
- Harsher consequences
- Less curiosity
- Less patience
- Lower expectations for growth
And ironically, those responses are the exact conditions that make oppositional behavior worse!!!!
A Diagnosis vs. A Working Theory
Doctors diagnose, while us teachers observe patterns.
And ethically, our job is not to enforce a medical label. Our job is to ask: What does this child need in order to feel safe enough to cooperate? How can I support them in accessing learning?
That means holding Oppositional Defiant Disorder the way we should hold most behavior labels in schools: As information and a starting point rather than an identity or a conclusion.

So What Should Teachers Actually Do?
Here’s the part that matters most.
1. Stop Taking the Behavior Personally
Oppositional behavior is not about you. It’s about control, safety, and nervous system overload.
When adults stay calm and neutral, power struggles lose oxygen. (Promise!)
2. Shift from Compliance to Regulation
Before asking, “How do I get them to comply?” ask:
- Are they regulated enough to comply?
- Do they understand the demand?
- Is the demand flexible or negotiable?
A regulated brain is far more cooperative than a threatened one.
3. Offer Predictability
Kids who resist control often crave structure.
- Clear expectations
- Advance warnings
- Choices within boundaries
- Consistent follow-through
This isn’t letting kids win, it’s removing the actual need to fight in the first place.
4. Look for Skill Gaps, Not Character Flaws
Ask yourself:
- Do they know how to transition?
- Do they have the language to express frustration?
- Can they tolerate demands without escalating?
If the answer is no, discipline won’t teach it. Instruction will. It’s a can’t do, rather than a won’t do.
5. Partner With Families Without Blame
Families are often exhausted by the time ODD enters the conversation.
Approach with:
- Curiosity
- Shared problem-solving
- Respect for what they’re carrying
You are on the same team, whether the system has made it feel that way or not.
A Better Way to Think About Oppositional Defiant Disorder
If we’re going to use the term at all, I think it belongs here: ODD is a description of how distress shows up when a child lacks the tools, safety, or support to meet expectations.
It’s not a personality trait, a moral failing, a direct result of poor parenting, or a reason to give up.
Final Thought
Every child who is labeled “oppositional” is already being told, in a thousand small ways, that they are too much, too hard, or too defiant.
What they need most is an adult who says consistently: “I see this behavior. And I’m going to figure out what’s underneath it.”
