Picture this. You’re in the middle of teaching a grammar lesson when one student interrupts — again. Another is scrolling through their phone.
A third refuses to speak during the speaking activity, arms crossed, face blank. And somewhere in the back, two students are whispering and giggling at everything you say.
If you’ve spent any time in a classroom, you recognize this scene. Knowing how to handle difficult students in English class is one of the most important skills a teacher can develop. And yet, most teacher training programs spend very little time on it.
After more than ten years of teaching English in physical classrooms, language institutes, and online platforms — I can tell you this: there is no such thing as a “bad” student. Some students are bored, anxious, misunderstood, undertested, or simply struggling in ways they don’t know how to express.
I will give you real, practical strategies to handle those students — and in many cases, turn them into some of your most engaged learners.
Understanding Why Students Become Difficult
Before we talk about solutions, let’s talk about causes. This step is often skipped, and it’s the most important one.
Difficult behavior in an English class almost always has a root cause. Once you understand that cause, the behavior becomes much easier to manage.
Here are the most common reasons students act out or disengage in English class.
Fear of speaking. English learners, especially beginners, are often terrified of making mistakes in front of their peers. This fear shows up as silence, resistance, distraction, or even aggression. The student who refuses to answer isn’t lazy — they’re scared.
Boredom. A student who already knows the material has nothing to gain from sitting quietly. They will find something more interesting to do. That something is usually disruptive.
Feeling invisible. Students who feel like the teacher doesn’t notice them or care about their progress often stop trying. Disengagement is their way of checking out.
Personal issues outside class. Family stress, peer conflict, lack of sleep, and emotional difficulties all show up in the classroom. The student who is suddenly aggressive or withdrawn may be dealing with something you can’t see.
Language anxiety. This is especially common in English classes. Research consistently shows that anxiety is one of the biggest barriers to language learning. Students who feel anxious about their English skills often protect themselves through avoidance or disruption.
Understanding these causes doesn’t mean accepting bad behavior. It means responding to it intelligently instead of reactively.
How to Handle Difficult Students in English Class: Core Strategies
These strategies have worked for me across hundreds of classes, with students ranging from young children to working adults, in classrooms and online environments.
1. Build Relationships Before You Need Them
The single most effective classroom management tool is a genuine relationship with your students. And you need to build it before problems start — not after.
In the first week of class, learn every student’s name. Learn something personal about each one. What do they do outside school? What music do they like? What’s their goal for learning English? This investment pays dividends for the rest of the term.
I had a student in one of my adult English classes who was consistently dismissive and rude during discussions. Instead of confronting him publicly, I stayed after class one day and simply asked how things were going. He told me he had been placed in the class by his employer and had no interest in being there. He felt humiliated learning alongside younger, more fluent colleagues.
That one conversation changed everything. I adjusted his tasks slightly, gave him opportunities to use his professional knowledge during discussions, and acknowledged his experience in class. Within two weeks, he was one of the most engaged students in the room.
Relationships don’t fix everything. But they fix a lot.
2. Set Clear Expectations from Day One
Ambiguity breeds difficult behavior. When students don’t know the rules, they create their own.
On your first day of class, be explicit about expectations. Not in a threatening way — in a clear, friendly, businesslike way. Here’s what I tell my students in the first session:
“In this class, we speak English as much as possible. We make mistakes — that’s the point. We respect each other’s efforts. Phones go away during activities. And if something isn’t working for you, come talk to me.”
Short. Clear. Respectful. It sets the tone without sounding like a list of punishments.
For younger students, involve them in creating the class rules. When students help write the rules, they feel ownership over them and are more likely to follow them.
3. Don’t Punish Silence — Invite Participation Differently
One of the most common mistakes English teachers make is calling out the quiet, reluctant student in front of the class. You ask a question, nobody answers, and you pick on the student who looks most uncomfortable. Now that student is mortified. Now they trust you less. Now the behavior gets worse.
Instead, create low-pressure pathways into participation.
Use pair work before whole-class sharing. Let students rehearse their answer with one person before saying it to the group. This dramatically reduces anxiety and increases the quality of responses.
Use written warm-ups. Ask students to write their answer first, then share. Writing gives students time to think and reduces the performance pressure of speaking on the spot.
Use anonymous response tools in online classes. Polling tools, chat boxes, and shared documents allow quieter students to contribute without the spotlight. I’ve seen students who never spoke in live sessions become incredibly articulate contributors in the chat.
Give advance notice. If you’re going to ask someone a question in the next activity, tell them two minutes before. “I’m going to ask you about this in a moment — have a think.” This removes the terror of being caught off guard.
4. Address Disruption Privately and Calmly
When a student is disruptive, your instinct might be to address it immediately and publicly. Resist that instinct. Public confrontations usually escalate the problem rather than solving it.
Instead, use the “quiet word” approach. Move close to the disruptive student, crouch to their level if they’re seated, and speak quietly. “Hey, I noticed you seem distracted today. Is everything okay? I need you to focus for the next ten minutes — can you do that for me?” Then move away without waiting for a dramatic response.
This approach respects the student’s dignity. It doesn’t create an audience. And it often works remarkably well.
If the behavior continues, have a private conversation after class — not in front of peers. Explain clearly what you observed, how it affects the learning environment, and what you need from them going forward. Then listen. Really listen. You may be surprised what you learn.
5. Use Engaging Activities to Reduce Problem Behavior
Here is a truth I learned early in my teaching career: the best classroom management is great lesson planning. When students are genuinely engaged, most difficult behavior disappears on its own.
For English classes specifically, activities that require active production — speaking, debating, storytelling, role-playing — are far more effective at keeping students engaged than passive activities like listening to lectures or copying notes.
Some activities I use regularly with even my most challenging groups:
Debate in pairs. Give two students opposing positions on a simple topic. “Is it better to live in a city or the countryside?” They have three minutes each to argue their position. This gives reluctant speakers a structured role and creates genuine investment.
Error correction games. Put sentences with deliberate mistakes on the board and ask students to find them. Students who usually disengage often light up when they spot an error the teacher made. It feels like winning something.
Storytelling circles. One student starts a story with one sentence. The next student adds a sentence. It goes around the room. This is low-pressure, funny, and completely unpredictable — which makes it compelling even for disengaged students.
Vocabulary challenge. Give students a word and see who can use it most creatively in a sentence. This works brilliantly online with the chat function. Even students who won’t speak will often type a clever sentence for the competition.
Managing the Most Common Types of Difficult Students
Not all difficult behavior looks the same. Here are specific approaches for the most common types I’ve encountered.
The Talker. This student talks constantly — to peers, off-topic, over you. They’re usually social, energetic, and not malicious. Channel that energy. Give them a role: discussion leader, timekeeper, group spokesperson. They need a legitimate outlet.
The Refuser. This student says “I don’t know” to everything and refuses to attempt tasks. Don’t push — it triggers shutdown. Instead, make the entry point easier. Ask a yes/no question instead of an open one. Give them a written option. Start with one-word answers. Build up slowly. Every small response is a win.
The Phone Addict. Phones are one of the biggest challenges in modern classrooms. Rather than constantly fighting phone use, I’ve had more success integrating phones into learning. “Use your phone to look up the meaning of this word.” “Use your phone to find an example sentence.” When phones become a learning tool rather than a contraband item, the power struggle dissolves.
The Challenger. This student debates everything you say, sometimes aggressively. In my experience, challengers are often highly intelligent and deeply bored. Engage their intellect directly. Ask their opinion on the topic you’re teaching. Give them a research task. Assign them as a peer tutor. Challengers become allies when they feel respected and intellectually stimulated.
The Invisible Student. This student is not disruptive but is completely disengaged. They sit quietly, do the minimum, and seem to be elsewhere. Don’t let this student disappear. Check in privately. Find out what interests them. Find ways to connect the English content to those interests. Even one small connection can bring an invisible student back.
What Works in Online Classes Specifically
Online English teaching creates a specific set of challenges that offline classrooms don’t have. Here’s what I’ve found most effective.
Keep cameras on when possible, but don’t mandate it as a punishment. Explain from the start why cameras help everyone learn. Students who see each other’s faces feel more connected and are less likely to disengage.
Use breakout rooms for difficult students. Sometimes a student who acts out in a large group is perfectly cooperative in a small group of two or three. I’ve had students who were nightmares in the main room become model participants in a breakout session.
Use the chat box actively. Some students who won’t speak will write. Acknowledge chat contributions verbally in the lesson. “I see Kenji wrote something interesting in the chat — let’s hear his idea.” This validates the student without forcing them to speak.
Follow up after class. Online, it’s easy to send a quick private message. I regularly message students after sessions: “You seemed a bit quiet today — everything okay? Looking forward to hearing more from you next time.” This takes thirty seconds and can completely change a student’s relationship with the class.
Common Teacher Mistakes When Handling Difficult Students
Even experienced teachers fall into these traps. Watch out for them.
Taking behavior personally. When a student is rude or disengaged, it’s rarely about you. It’s almost always about them. The moment you take it personally, you start responding emotionally instead of professionally.
Reacting in the moment without thinking. Public scolding, sarcastic comments, or power struggles in front of the class almost always make things worse. Slow down. Respond, don’t react.
Giving up on difficult students. It’s human to invest more in cooperative students. But the difficult student often needs you more. A little extra attention in the right way can produce breakthroughs you won’t see with easy students.
Being inconsistent. If rules apply sometimes but not others, students lose respect for the rules entirely. Be consistent, firm, and fair — every class, every time.
FAQs: Handling Difficult Students in English Class
How do I handle a student who refuses to speak English during class?
Start by understanding why. Is it fear? Is the level too high? Is the topic unengaging? Reduce the pressure by using pair work, written first drafts, and low-stakes tasks. Never force a student to speak — invite them.
What should I do if a student is constantly disruptive and nothing works?
Document the behavior, involve school support staff or parents if appropriate, and have a structured private conversation with the student. Be honest: “This behavior is making it hard for everyone to learn, including you. What do you need to make this work?” Sometimes the answer surprises you.
How do I manage a student who dominates every discussion?
Use structured turn-taking. Use a timer. Assign roles so no one student can carry the whole activity. You can also speak privately with the dominant student and reframe their energy as a leadership asset — then give them a specific leadership role that channels it productively.
How do I handle disrespect in an online English class?
Address it calmly and privately — use the private message function. Make expectations clear and consistent. If behavior continues, involve a supervisor or parent. Don’t ignore it; online disrespect can spread and affect the whole group’s culture quickly.
Can a difficult student become a good student?
Yes — regularly. Some of my most remarkable student transformations have come from students who started as my most challenging. The key is patience, consistency, genuine care, and refusing to write any student off.
Conclusion
Knowing how to handle difficult students in English class is not just a classroom management skill — it’s a human skill. It requires patience, creativity, empathy, and a commitment to seeing beyond the behavior to the person underneath it.
There is no magic formula. What works with one student may not work with another. But the principles are consistent: build real relationships, set clear expectations, reduce anxiety, engage students actively, and always address problems privately and calmly.
The difficult student sitting in the back of your class — the one who challenges you, ignores you, or makes your Tuesday afternoons exhausting — is also the student who might remember you for the rest of their life. Not because you were strict. Because you didn’t give up on them.
That’s what teaching English — at its best — looks like. Keep going. It’s worth it.