In theory, consequences are meant to teach. Punishment is meant to control. But in practice, the line between them is often blurry—and for neurodivergent students, the impact is rarely neutral.
Consequences are often described as respectful, relevant, and connected to a child’s behaviour. The idea is to help students understand how their actions affect others and to support growth without shame. But when consequences are imposed without consent, co-regulation, or true understanding, they can quickly become punitive in effect—even if the language is softer.
Punishment, by contrast, is explicitly about control. It is usually top-down, emotionally charged, and meant to produce immediate compliance. It often takes the form of public correction, exclusion, or humiliation.
Collective punishment—punishing many for the actions of one or a few—is the most corrosive of all. It undermines fairness, fractures trust, and teaches students to fear each other and their teachers. It disproportionately harms neurodivergent, disabled, and racialised students, who are already more likely to be misunderstood and overdisciplined.
What matters most is not the terminology, but the lived experience of the child. A “logical consequence” that feels coercive or shaming is still punishment. A restorative practice that isn’t voluntary becomes another demand.
We need to stop debating the semantics of discipline and start listening to the students who are living through it.







