Building Resilience in Children and Teens
Resilience is the ability to cope with challenges, recover from setbacks, and keep going – even when life is difficult. For children and teens who have experienced trauma, loss, or instability, building resilience is not about “being tough”; it grows through safe relationships, consistent support, and opportunities to succeed.
What Resilience Really Means
Resilient children and young people are not unaffected by adversity. Instead, they:
- Feel safe enough to express emotions
- Believe at least one adult cares about them
- Learn ways to cope with stress and challenges
- Develop a sense of identity, hope, and self-worth
Resilience is built over time, not something children are born with.
Keyways to Build Resilience
1. Build Strong, Trusting Relationships
Supportive relationships are the strongest protective factor.
- Be consistent, reliable, and emotionally available
- Show interest in the child’s thoughts and experiences
- Repair relationships after conflict
- Let young people know they matter
One safe adult can make a lifelong difference.
2. Create a Sense of Safety and Predictability
Children cope better when life feels manageable.
- Keep routines as consistent as possible
- Prepare children for changes in advance
- Use clear, age-appropriate boundaries
- Respond calmly during stressful moments
Safety helps children take healthy risks and grow.
3. Support Emotional Understanding and Regulation
Resilient children can recognise and manage feelings with support.
- Help children name emotions
- Validate feelings without judgement
- Teach calming strategies (breathing, grounding, movement)
- Model healthy ways of coping with stress
Children learn emotional skills through experience, not instruction alone.
4. Encourage Problem-Solving and Independence
Confidence grows when children feel capable.
- Break challenges into achievable steps
- Encourage effort, not perfection
- Allow age-appropriate choices
- Support learning from mistakes
Success builds belief in their own abilities.
5. Recognise and Build on Strengths
Every child has strengths, even if they are hard to see.
- Notice what the child enjoys or does well
- Praise effort and persistence, not just outcomes
- Encourage hobbies, interests, and talents
- Celebrate progress, however small
Strengths help children see themselves as more than their difficulties.
6. Support Identity and Belonging
A strong sense of identity supports resilience.
- Help children understand and value their story
- Respect cultural, family, and personal identity
- Avoid labels that define children by behaviour or diagnosis
- Promote a sense of belonging at home, school, and in the community
Children thrive when they feel accepted for who they are.
7. Teach Hope and Future Thinking (Especially for Teens)
Adolescents need reasons to believe in the future.
- Talk about goals, dreams, and possibilities
- Break future plans into realistic steps
- Encourage positive role models
- Acknowledge worries without dismissing hope
Hope is a skill that can be nurtured.
Supporting Teens Specifically
Teenagers may show resilience differently.
- Respect their need for autonomy
- Listen more than you advise
- Validate strong emotions
- Keep boundaries clear and consistent
Connection remains essential, even when teens push it away.
What to Avoid
- Expecting children to “just cope”
- Minimising struggles (“others have it worse”)
- Overprotecting to the point of limiting growth
- Labelling children as “difficult” or “unmotivated”
Resilience grows through support, not pressure.
Remember
Building resilience is not about removing all difficulties from a child’s life, it is about walking alongside them, helping them feel safe, valued, and capable of facing challenges as they grow.
Looking for More Guidance?
Our Fostering Information Hub is full of practical articles designed to support foster carers at every stage of their journey. From understanding children’s behaviour and trauma to building resilience, supporting teens, and caring for yourself, you’ll find a wide range of resources to explore. Visit our Fostering Information Hub to discover more articles you may find helpful and relevant to your fostering experience.