Mr. Funky Teacher (Nicholas Kleve)

This is Mr. Funky Teacher with BeAFunkyTeacher.com. I’m coming to you with another Be a Funky Teacher podcast. Welcome back, everyone. Today’s episode is called The Myth Of The Bad Kid: What Adults Often Miss. There’s a truth I believe with every part of my educator heart. Some of the kids who look the hardest to love are the ones who need love the hardest. Before we get into the episode, I want to share three things I’m thankful for. First, I’m thankful for fun science experiments. They spark curiosity, create joy, and remind kids that learning is an adventure, not just an assignment. Second, I’m thankful for a supportive principal. Leadership that listens and encourages doesn’t just shape culture. It lifts teachers and kids every single day. Third, I’m thankful for my wife’s handy skills. She replaced our son’s electric window motor all by herself. That’s superhero-level problem solving, and I was incredibly impressed. Now let’s get into the main topic. There is no such thing as a bad kid. Kids don’t wake up thinking they want to ruin someone’s day. What they do wake up carrying is grief, hunger, fear, stress, exhaustion, loneliness, pressure, unmet needs, and trauma. Many kids behave in ways adults don’t like not because they want to, but because they don’t yet have the skills to express what’s happening inside them. Behavior is communication, always. Adults often see talking back, shutting down, refusing work, acting silly, avoiding eye contact, or seeking attention. What’s actually happening underneath may be anxiety, shame, panic, overstimulation, hunger, fear of failure, sensory overload, learning struggles, or emotional overwhelm. Adults often interpret the surface and miss the whole story. Many students carry hidden loads that would overwhelm most adults. Some experience loss, family separation, violence, housing or food insecurity, chronic stress, caregiving responsibilities, health struggles, bullying, or identity pressures. Kids rarely say, “I’m overwhelmed” or “I’m grieving.” They say it through their behavior. Labels like bad, lazy, defiant, dramatic, or trouble can wound deeply. When students hear those labels, they may begin to believe they don’t belong or that school isn’t for them. Labels limit futures, but connection can rebuild them. Every child deserves to be known by their name, not by their behavior. Connection is the intervention. Many kids don’t need punishment. They need a person. Connection sounds like, “I’m glad you’re here,” or “Something feels off, can you tell me what’s going on?” It says, “You’re not in trouble. I’m trying to understand.” Connection does not remove accountability. It restores it. Kids try harder for adults who truly see them. Seeing the child behind the behavior means choosing curiosity over judgment, protecting dignity, offering resets instead of lectures, and recognizing effort even when results aren’t perfect. Kids need boundaries, consistency, routines, and accountability. They also need compassion, second chances, repair, and adults who believe in them, even when behavior is messy. High expectations matter. High empathy matters. Together, they create classrooms where kids can grow. Before correcting behavior, remember the child. Before assigning consequences, ask a question. There are no bad kids, only kids trying to communicate with the tools they have. When adults choose understanding instead of assuming, reactions turn into relationships. That shift can change a child’s story and sometimes their life. I hope this episode gave you something to think about. Remember to inspire greatness in young people. And don’t forget—be a funky teacher. Bye now.