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Why Compliance Isn’t the Goal

Why Compliance Isn’t the Goal

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In this episode of Teaching Autism and Special Education with Nikki, we’re exploring a question that sits right at the heart of education and behavior support: should compliance really be the goal? For years, many of us were taught that quiet, obedient children who follow instructions without question are the definition of success. But in this episode, we unpack why compliance alone tells us very little about a student’s actual wellbeing, understanding, regulation, or sense of safety.

We dive into the difference between true engagement and silent survival, and why some highly compliant students may actually be masking, overwhelmed, anxious, frozen, or operating from a fear-based “fawn” response. I also talk about how compliance can hide confusion, suppress communication, and teach students to ignore their own discomfort and body signals in order to please adults. Especially in special education, prioritizing obedience over autonomy can unintentionally silence the very communication skills we want students to develop.

This episode is full of gentle but important mindset shifts around regulation, autonomy, boundaries, and skill building. We discuss how to maintain safety and structure without relying on power-based approaches, how to create space for choice and communication, and why teaching students to advocate for themselves is far more valuable long term than teaching blind compliance. Instead of asking, “Did they do what they were told?” this episode encourages us to ask, “Did they feel safe, understood, and supported enough to genuinely engage?” That shift changes everything.

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