If you’re searching for how to deal with a disrespectful child, you’re probably tired — and frustrated. Maybe your child rolled their eyes at you this morning. Maybe they talked back, slammed a door, or said something that left you speechless. Maybe it’s been going on for weeks and you don’t know where to start.

A mother and son in a calm, cozy moment — how to deal with a disrespectful child without yelling

You’re not alone — and this is not about blame. It’s about building something better.

I’ve spent years teaching children’s manners and character the old-school way — the kind of firm, kind, consistent guidance that actually sticks. In this article I’m going to walk you through seven steps that work. No yelling. No shaming. No power struggles. Just calm, practical habits that restore respect at home.


Why Children Become Disrespectful — And Why It’s Not the End of the World

Before you dive in, take a breath: dealing with a disrespectful child is a season, not a sentence. As the American Academy of Pediatrics reminds parents, children respond far better to correction when the adult stays calm and consistent — which is exactly the approach these seven steps are built on.

Before we talk about what to do, let’s talk about why it happens.

Children become disrespectful for a few common reasons:

  • They’ve never been clearly taught what respectful behavior looks like. Respect is a skill, not an instinct. If no one modeled it or practiced it with them, they don’t have the tools.
  • They’re testing boundaries. This is developmentally normal, especially between ages 8 and 14. It doesn’t mean you’ve failed — it means they need structure.
  • They’ve learned that disrespect works. If eye-rolling or back-talk gets a reaction, kids learn to repeat it. You can break that cycle.
  • They’re carrying stress or frustration they don’t know how to express. Disrespect is sometimes a sign of something deeper that needs your attention.

Understanding the reason doesn’t mean excusing the behavior. It means responding to it more effectively.


7 Steps to Deal With a Disrespectful Child — Calmly and Consistently

Consistency is where most of the change happens. The parenting team at KidsHealth points out that fair, predictable limits help a child feel secure — and a disrespectful child usually settles once those limits feel steady instead of shifting day to day.

Step 1: Stay Calm — Your Reaction Sets the Tone

When a child is disrespectful, the natural instinct is to react immediately and emotionally. That’s understandable. But the moment you raise your voice or match their energy, you’ve handed them control of the situation.

Instead, pause. Take a breath. Lower your voice rather than raising it. A calm, firm tone communicates authority far more powerfully than volume.

Try this: When your child talks back, respond with a steady voice: “I’m not going to respond to that tone. When you’re ready to speak respectfully, I’ll be right here.” Then stop talking. Don’t lecture. Don’t argue. Just wait.

Silence is a powerful tool. Most children will reset faster than you expect.


Step 2: Name the Behavior — Not the Child

There’s a critical difference between saying “You’re being disrespectful” and saying “That tone of voice is disrespectful.” One attacks your child’s identity. The other addresses a specific behavior they can change.

Children who are told they are disrespectful often become more disrespectful over time because they start to believe that’s who they are. Children who are told a behavior is not acceptable learn that they can choose differently.

Try this: Replace “You’re rude” with “The way you just spoke to me was disrespectful. That’s not how we talk to each other in this house.” Specific. Clear. Not personal.


Step 3: Set a Clear Expectation — Before the Moment

One of the biggest mistakes parents make is only addressing disrespect when it happens. That puts you in constant reaction mode.

A better approach: talk about expectations when things are calm. At dinner, in the car, during a relaxed moment — not in the middle of a conflict.

Try this: “In our house, we speak to each other with respect. That means no eye-rolling, no talking back, and no slamming doors. I expect that from you, and you can expect it from me too.” Keep it short. Say it once. Then hold the line.

When your child knows the standard in advance, there’s no argument about what’s acceptable. The rule was already made.


Step 4: Use Consistent, Calm Consequences

Consequences work when they are calm, consistent, and connected to the behavior. Punishment that happens in anger — grounding for a month, taking every privilege away at once — rarely teaches anything except resentment.

Small, immediate consequences are more effective:

  • Loss of a screen privilege for the evening
  • A task added to their chore list
  • Being asked to leave the room until they can return respectfully
  • Losing an activity they were looking forward to

The key is following through — every single time. One warning. One consequence. No negotiating.

Try this: “That was disrespectful. You’ve lost your phone for tonight. When you can speak to me respectfully, we’ll talk about getting it back.” Then move on. Don’t re-litigate it.


Step 5: Model the Respect You Want Your Disrespectful Child to See

Children learn how to treat people by watching how the adults around them treat people.

If you want your child to speak respectfully to you, ask yourself: How do you speak to your child? How do you talk about other adults — teachers, neighbors, relatives — in front of your child? How do you handle frustration in the home?

This is not easy to hear, but it’s true: disrespectful children often live in homes where disrespect goes both ways. That doesn’t mean it’s your fault. It means the solution starts with you.

Apologize when you lose your temper. Show your child what it looks like to repair a conversation. Say “please” and “thank you” at home, not just in public. The lessons you model quietly every day go deeper than any lecture.


Step 6: Teach — Don’t Just Correct

Correction tells a child what NOT to do. Teaching shows them what TO do instead.

Many children are disrespectful simply because no one has ever sat down and taught them what a respectful response actually sounds like. They don’t know. They need to be shown.

Practice phrases with your child:

  • Instead of “Whatever”“I understand, but I disagree.”
  • Instead of “That’s not fair” (with an attitude) → “Can I explain how I feel about that?”
  • Instead of eye-rolling → making eye contact and nodding, even when they disagree
  • Instead of slamming doors → walking away, taking a breath, and coming back when calm

Role play these situations. Make it a game. Practice at a neutral time, not in the heat of the moment. When the real situation comes, your child will have a tool in their pocket.

Step 7: Catch Them Getting It Right

This step is the one most parents skip — and it may be the most important of all.

When your child handles a frustrating moment with maturity, notice it. Name it. Praise it specifically.

“I noticed you were upset with your sister earlier, and you walked away instead of saying something unkind. That took real self-control. I’m proud of you.”

Children repeat what gets noticed. If the only time you comment on behavior is when it’s bad, you’re unintentionally training them to act out for attention. When you catch them doing it right, you build the behavior you actually want.

One sincere moment of specific praise is worth more than ten corrections.

a Disrespectful Child

A Quick-Reference Script for Common Disrespect Moments

Here are ready-to-use responses you can keep in your back pocket:

  • Eye-rolling: “I saw that. Let’s try this again — look at me and respond respectfully.”
  • Talking back: “You can disagree with me. Say it respectfully and I’ll listen.”
  • “I hate you”: Stay calm. “That was hurtful. I love you. We’re not going to talk to each other that way.”
  • Ignoring you: Get to eye level, make contact. “I need you to hear me. Look at me, please.”
  • Storming off: Don’t chase. “Come back when you’re ready to talk calmly. I’ll be here.”

When Disrespect Runs Deeper

If you would like a simple framework to lean on while you work with a disrespectful child, the CDC’s positive parenting resources emphasize that warm, steady guidance shapes behavior far more than any punishment ever could.

If your child’s disrespectful behavior is intense, frequent, or getting worse despite your consistent effort, it may be worth a deeper conversation — with your child directly, or with a school counselor or family therapist. There’s no shame in getting support. The families I most admire are the ones willing to ask for help before a small problem becomes a big one.


Start Building Respectful Habits Today

If these steps speak to you, you will find the full old-school method — calm scripts, daily habits, and the reasons behind them — in my book, Teaching Kids Good Manners the Old-School Way. It is the same warm, firm approach that has helped families guide a disrespectful child back to respect, one calm moment at a time.

Learning how to deal with a disrespectful child is not a one-day fix — it’s a daily practice. Consistency, calm, and connection will get you further than any single technique.

If you want to go deeper, the Respect for Adults Toolkit at Manners Matter Now was built exactly for this. It includes weekly habit guides, printable checklists, and parent scripts that walk you through building a culture of respect at home — step by step, the old-school way.

Get the Respect for Adults Toolkit — $7.99 →

Manners aren’t magic. They’re practice. And every day is a new chance to build them.

— Vernon J. DeFlanders Sr.
Manners Matter Now

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How to Handle a Disrespectful Child: Two Common Questions

How do you handle a disrespectful child in the heat of the moment?

Slow down before you respond. The way to handle a disrespectful child in the moment is to lower your voice, name the behavior plainly, and state the expectation once: “We don’t speak that way. Try again, kindly.” Then give them room to correct it. Reacting big rewards the behavior. Staying calm takes the power out of it.

What about handling a disrespectful child in a group or classroom?

Handling disrespectful children in a group works best when the rules are the same for everyone and you address the behavior quietly, not in front of the crowd. Pull the child aside, name what you saw, and remind them of the expectation. Public correction invites a showdown; a calm, private word invites a change.

author avatar
Vernon J. DeFlanders Sr.
U.S. Air Force veteran, retired federal logistics engineer, grandfather, and author of Teaching Kids Good Manners the Old-School Way — 104 reviews, 4.8 stars on Amazon. Vernon has spent decades studying what works when teaching children real-life values: respect, responsibility, and gratitude. He writes for parents, grandparents, and educators who want practical, old-school tools that actually stick.