Professional Edition · Clinicians · Educators · SENCOs

The ROOTS
Framework.

Regulate First · Own It · Open Curiosity · Teach the Skill · Stick With It. A consultation and training framework for supporting children's emotional regulation and development.

Read the framework → ← Professional resources
📘 Professional Edition — clinicians, educators & SENCOs
A 37-page consultation and training guide. Includes the full ROOTS framework, WINDOW regulation tools, scenario vignettes for each domain, PPLF appendix with practical language guide, consultation worksheet, personal action plan, weekly reflection checklist, and full evidence base.
Clinicians Psychologists SENCOs Teachers Teaching Assistants CAMHS CPD & supervision
Get the Professional Edition — £7.99 Parent Edition — coming soon

"Children borrow regulation before they develop regulation. Your regulated presence is not a luxury — it is a developmental necessity."

What ROOTS is

ROOTS is a consultation and training framework for supporting children's emotional regulation and development, developed by Dr John Connolly, Senior Clinical & Health Psychologist. It is designed to be used across clinical, educational, and family settings and provides a coherent, memorable structure for thinking about what effective support requires.

ROOTS is not a manualised treatment programme. It is a conceptual framework and reflective practice guide — a way of organising thinking about what a child, young person, or family needs. At its heart is a simple idea: meaningful change begins beneath the surface.

What's in the Professional Edition

The consultation flow

Behaviour observed Regulate First Open Curiosity Identify skill or need Collaborate Practise & review

Regulation before reflection · Connection before correction · Skills before consequences

The five domains

R

Regulate First

Your window, then theirs — the foundation everything else rests on

Your regulation is one of the strongest influences on your child's ability to regulate. Before any intervention, the first question is: Am I regulated enough to help?

The Professional Edition includes the WINDOW framework — six tools for understanding and teaching regulation: Window of tolerance · Identify the flip · Nurture through co-regulation · Drain and understand the bucket · Own your toolkit · Weather the storm.

O

Own It

Model what you want to see — give to get

Children learn more from what we repeatedly do than what we occasionally say. What am I modelling?

  • Give to get: If you want apology, model apology. If you want self-control, demonstrate it.
  • Repair after rupture: Secure attachment is characterised by consistent repair, not the absence of rupture.
  • Emotional honesty: Naming your own emotions out loud teaches the entire regulation sequence: notice, name, pause, act.
O

Open Curiosity

Approach with openness — understand before you intervene

Curiosity is the opposite of judgement. What can I understand before I intervene?

  • Ask, don't tell: Telling does the cognitive work for the child. Asking invites them to do it themselves.
  • Plan B: Collaborative problem-solving — adult and child solve the problem together with genuine openness to the child's perspective.
  • Scaffolded autonomy: Provide exactly the support needed — not more — and withdraw it as capacity develops.
T

Teach the Skill

Behaviour is a missing skill, not a bad choice

Children do well if they can. When they can't, something is getting in the way. What skill is missing?

  • Name the lagging skill specifically: Generic descriptions ('defiant') describe the adult's experience, not the child's difficulty. Specific descriptions open interventions.
  • Teach when regulated: Skill teaching is significantly less effective outside the window of tolerance. Regulate first, then teach.
  • Psychoeducation: Explaining how the brain works shifts self-understanding from 'I am bad' to 'my brain works differently and I can learn to work with it.'
S

Stick With It

The knowledge–action gap closes with practice, not insight

You will recognise yourself in this framework. You will try it and it will not always go as planned. This is not failure. What is my next step?

  • Change is not linear: Relapse is information, not failure.
  • Notice and return: The core skill is noticing when you've drifted and returning, without self-criticism, to your valued direction.
  • Celebrate micro-progress: Behaviour change is visible in small increments before it is visible in large ones. Name the small wins — they compound.

The knowledge–action question

After each section, ask yourself: not 'do I know this?' but 'how consistently do I actually do this — especially when I'm stressed, tired, or triggered?' The gap between your answers is where the work is.

How to use the Professional Edition

The framework is designed to be used flexibly — as a consultation guide with families, a training resource in CPD or staff development, and a personal reflective practice tool for practitioners.

About this framework Developed by Dr John Connolly, Senior Clinical & Health Psychologist, BCUHB / North Wales ADHD Assessment. Drawing on: Barkley (2015); Bowlby (1969); Greene (2014) Collaborative Problem Solving; Hayes et al. (2012); Linehan (2015) DBT; Lupien et al. (2009); McEwen (1998); Neff (2011); NICE NG87 (updated 2023); Porges (2011); Shaw et al. (2007); Siegel (1999). Free to use in professional and educational contexts with attribution. Not for commercial reproduction without permission. © 2026 theadhdfamilyguide.com.
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