School Regulation Programs

A Regulation Program for Children

Where movement becomes
a language for the body

A neuroscience-informed, play-based program that helps children build the tools to understand and regulate themselves — from the inside out.

Each session follows a carefully sequenced arc — moving from activating input toward calm, connected awareness. Here's what that looks like in practice.

1
Opening Ritual

Arriving Together

Every session begins the same way. A consistent, predictable opening signal helps children's nervous systems shift from whatever they arrived with — a rushed morning, a hard day — into presence and readiness. When children know what to expect, the body can begin settling before the first activity even starts.

This might look like
  • A welcome breath done together as a group — in for three counts, slowly out
  • A shared greeting song or simple movement sequence used every session
  • A body check-in: one hand on the heart, one on the belly, just noticing
  • A signature "shake-out" from fingertips to toes to signal: we're here now
2
Vestibular Activation

Intentional Movement + Play

We begin by giving the nervous system the input it most needs to come into balance — movement through space. Through rolling, rocking, spinning, and reaching, we activate one of the body's most powerful organizing systems: the vestibular system, located in the inner ear. This input forms the foundation for everything that follows.

This might look like
  • Rocking and rolling on the mat — in a ball shape, or stretched long like a log
  • Slow head movements: reaching up, then down, tracing gentle figure-eights with the nose
  • Spinning and twisting with awareness of how the body lands and steadies
  • All of this layered with specially engineered binaural beat music to deepen the organizing input
Why we start here

The vestibular system connects directly to the brainstem — the part of the brain that governs arousal, attention, and emotional regulation. Giving it rich, rhythmic input early in the session helps organize the whole nervous system before we ask children to do anything else.

3
Core + Proprioception

Strength + Stability as a Joyful Foundation

With the nervous system engaged, we move into building strength and stability through playful, body-centered challenges. Pushing, pulling, carrying, and resisting give muscles and joints feedback that is deeply regulating — helping children feel grounded and present in their own bodies. This is joyful, energetic, and filled with laughter.

This might look like
  • Bear crawl races and animal walks — crab, frog, elephant — that load the joints
  • Plank challenges: holding stillness while balancing a stuffed animal on the back
  • Partner mirror movements — one child leads strong, slow poses while another follows
  • Tug-of-war with a stretch band, or wheelbarrow walks with a partner
4
Breath Work

The Breath as a Bridge

Following active movement, the breath becomes our most accessible regulation tool. Placed here intentionally — right after physical activation — children learn to use breathing as a conscious shift: from energized to settled. Practiced regularly, this becomes a real-life skill they can call on anywhere.

This might look like
  • "Box breathing" traced in the air: in for four, hold, out for four, hold
  • Bumblebee breath — humming on the exhale, which vibrates and soothes the body from the inside
  • Belly breathing with a small stuffed animal resting on the stomach, watching it rise and fall
  • Paired breathing: two children face each other and breathe in, then out, together
  • Blowing a feather or pinwheel slowly to make the exhale long and steady
Why this moment matters

Slow, extended exhales activate the body's calming system. Practicing this while the body is mildly activated — right after movement — teaches children the most important regulation lesson: I can shift my own state.

5
Integration + Joy

Yoga Sequences + Playful Games

With the nervous system organized and the breath settled, children are ready for more complex, connected movement — sequences, stories, and games that require creativity, coordination, and real engagement. This is where we play most freely, and where joy does its most important work.

This might look like
  • Storytelling yoga: poses that build an adventure narrative together
  • Freeze dance yoga: free movement, then freeze in a held pose when the music stops
  • Cooperative poses: small groups building a shape together — a bridge, a star, a wave
  • Balance challenges: tree pose while passing a balloon, warrior pose with a beanbag
  • "Simon Says" with body-awareness language: squeeze your shoulders to your ears, then let them melt
6
Interoception

Body Awareness + Inner Sensing

As children become more connected to their bodies, we introduce gentle practices for noticing and naming what's happening on the inside. The ability to recognize body signals early is one of the most important skills a child can have for navigating emotions, social situations, and self-care.

This might look like
  • Body scan: lying down, gently noticing each body part — warmth, weight, tingling
  • "Emotion weather reports": what's the weather inside your body right now? Stormy? Sunny? Breezy?
  • Heartbeat check: placing a hand on the chest and noticing how it changes in stillness
  • Signal spotting: identifying early warning signs that regulation might be needed
  • Feeling cards: matching body sensations to simple illustrations to build emotional vocabulary
7
Agency + Collaboration

Co-Creating the Play

Children are always invited to be co-creators, not just participants. Having agency — contributing ideas, shaping the experience, seeing your imagination reflected in the group — is itself regulating. We buzz better together, and joy is an essential ingredient in all of it.

This might look like
  • "My pose" spotlight: each child invents a pose and teaches it to the group, who names it together
  • Story starters: a child picks a setting and the group builds a movement sequence around it
  • Group rhythm-making: a clapping or stomping pattern passed around and built upon
  • Building a personal "regulation recipe": each child's own favorite breath, movement, and calming strategy
8
Closing Ritual

Completing the Circle

Every session ends the same way. A consistent closing ritual signals integration and completion — giving the nervous system a clear, gentle cue that this experience is whole. It also helps children transition gracefully back to the wider world, carrying something of what they found here with them.

This might look like
  • A "glimmer moment": what was one thing that felt good in your body today?
  • A gratitude breath: name something your body did well, breathe it in
  • A shared closing phrase or gesture used identically every session
  • Each child whispers one word for how their body feels now compared to when they arrived

Want this program to bee at your child’s school?

Well, that makes two of us then! Reach out and let’s see if we can’t get something growing.