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Classroom Management

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Title: Classroom Management


1
Classroom Management
  • Theories

2
Principles of Management
  • The teacher is responsible for maintaining
    classroom control.

3
Principles of Management
  • 2. Classroom management must be established
    before instruction can begin.

4
Principles of Management
  • 3. Effective classroom management includes
    planning and implementing teaching strategies
    thoroughly, keeping students actively engaged in
    meaningful learning, and preventing disruptions
    through proactive management strategies.

5
Five systems in a well-managed classroom
  • Limit setting (stops misbehaviour)
  • Professional-administrative backup system
    isolating a student, help from colleagues, etc.
  • Incentive system (maintains, increases, and
    speeds up desired student behaviour)
  • Encouragement system (encourages positive
    behaviour
  • Management/classroom structure (establishing or
    creating rules and organizing classroom objects
    and students to support and maintain desired
    behaviour)

6
Three Models
  • The Behavioural Analysis model
  • Positive Discipline model
  • Assertive Discipline model

7
Behavioural Analysis Model
  • Basic assumption on Motivation
  • Children are not born with self-control we
    must help them mold it
  • Deal only with outward (external) behaviour
  • Use scientific techniques to demonstrate
    effectiveness
  • Be concerned with unacceptable behaviour and what
    interventions can be applied to change it
  • The cause of the behaviour exists outside the
    environment.
  • (cont.)

8
(basic assumptions cont.)
  • Motivation reinforcers
  • - positive something we like
  • - negative something we dislike
  • - primary relating to basic body needs
  • - secondary abstracts, symbols
  • The consequences, more than any other factor,
    determine behaviour

9
Teacher Behaviours
  • Teacher controlling the situation, imitation and
    shaping, fading, and directive statements for
    contingency contracting
  • Explicit modeling for imitation, foreward and
    backward chaining, saturation, time out, rewards
    for reinforcement of desired behaviours, commands
    as directive statements
  • Using conditioners in the form of material and
    verbal rewards
  • Using variable intervals and variable ratios

10
Guidelines in planning, or Preparatory Actions
  • Reinforcing only the behaviour to be increased
  • Before beginning behaviour modification
  • 1. select the behaviour to be changed
  • 2. collect and record baseline data
  • 3. identify appropriate reinforcers
  • 4. collect intervention data
  • Graphing baseline and intervention data to
    evaluate effectiveness
  • Changing reinforcers periodically
  • Reinforcement schedules

11
Behavioural analysis techniques
  • Behavioural objectives
  • Target behaviour
  • 1) a behavioural deficit something that is
    lacking in the students daily activities (using
    the paintbrush incorrectly, getting to class
    late, etc)
  • 2) a behaviour that is correct in form and
    function but is displayed excessively or at the
    wrong time (asking too many questions, talking
    during test taking, etc.)

12
Behavioural objectives
  • In order to understand the desired behavioural
    changes and to communicate them to staff members,
    you must establish a behavioural objective that
    identifies the following
  • 1. The learner
  • 2. The antecedent condition under which the
  • behaviour is to be displayed
  • 3. The target behaviour
  • 4. Criteria for desired performance

13
Collecting data
  • Event recording
  • Graphing
  • Anecdotal report

14
Reinforcement and other consequences
  • Positive reinforcement
  • Punishment
  • Negative reinforcement
  • Use punishment and negative reinforcements
    sparingly (often good for only short-term)
  • Emphasize positive reinforcement

15
Types of reinforcers
  • Primary appeals to the five senses (sight of a
    favourite character, the sound of music or
    mothers voice, the taste or smell of food, the
    feel of the students favourite blanket. These
    are important in early years.
  • Edible reinforcers crackers, juice, pudding
  • Sensory reinforcers exposure to controlled
    visual, auditory, tactile, taste or kinesthetic
    experience (mixing colours of paint)

16
Secondary Reinforcers
  • Tangible reinforcers, such as stickers and
    badges,
  • privilege reinforcers, first use of a toy,
  • activity reinforcers chance to help make
    cookies,
  • Generalized tokens, points or credits
  • Social - teacher gives her/his attention and
    reinforces student - expression, proximity,
    words and phrases.

17
Thinning reinforcements by using schedules
  • After target behaviour established/performed.
  • Student repeats the desired behaviour. We keep
    reinforcing it may be too time consuming to
    keep up --- need to thin reinforcement
  • Fixed-ration schedule ex. Student receives
    reinforcement after 4 math problems completed,
    may be changed to after 6.
  • important to seek the right amount of work
    given to the reward schedule
  • usual produces consistent work

18
Variable-ration schedule
  • Target response is reinforced on the average of a
    specific number of correct responses, about once
    every ten times. This makes it unpredictable for
    the student.
  • Student will normally maintain or increase the
    pace of the output

19
Fixed-interval schedule
  • Student must perform the behaviour at least once,
    and then a specific amount of time must pass
    before his behaviour is reinforced the first time
    (does one puzzle) and then a specific amount of
    time must pass (four minutes) on the very next
    puzzle completed after the four minute wait, the
    student is once again reinforced. Reinforcement
    may be thinned by increasing the wait time to
    six, then eight mins.
  • Student may realize that reinforcment is time
    based wait until time nearly up, then complete
  • Easy for teachers based on time

20
Variable-interval schedule
  • The interval between reinforcers will vary and be
    unpredictable to the student, but the interval
    differing but maintaining a consistent average
    length.
  • Students behavioural performance is higher and
    steadier because he cannot determine the next
    time interval that will be used to make the
    reinforcement available

21
Shaping
  • Yelling on the playground is acceptable, but loud
    talking in class is not.
  • Use of reinforcers can help bring the students
    existing behavioural skills under control of the
    teacher
  • Shaping is like it game (hide an object)

22
Decreasing Misbehaviour Steps
  • Step 1 Extinction
  • Simply stopping the positive reinforcers that
    have been maintaining an inappropriate behaviour.
    (student shouting)
  • Step 2 Differentiated Reinforcement
  • reinforces certain behaviours selectively
  • Reinforce decreased rates of misbehaviour
  • Reinforcing the omission of the misbehaviour
  • Reinforcing incompatible and alternative
    behaviours

23
Omission of the misbehaviour
  • Same example student out of seat
  • Establish 6 time intervals of five mins. Each
  • Teacher tapes a 3X5 inch card in front of student
    and places a check mark on the card if not out of
    seat for that 5 min. period.
  • At end of 30 mins. if 2 checks on the card
    during the first week he earns an activity
    reinforcer, not week 3 checks

24
Lowered rates of the misbehaviour
  • Example
  • Student out of seat (15 X in 30 mins.) at lunch
  • - stopping completely not realistic
  • - positive reinforcement he can help
    janitor if only 5 times O/S in 30 mins.
  • - also, reinforces student by commenting when
    he stays in seat
  • Check after lunch how many times O/S, if 5 or
    lower, let him help janitor, next week lower to
    3 times
  • Question What about a student who always talks?

25
Incompatible behaviour and alternative behaviour
  • When differentially reinforcing an incompatible
    behaviour, a response is chosen and reinforced to
    make it physically impossible for student to
    engage in inappropriate behaviour. An
    inappropriate behaviour is reinforced.
  • Example of student who shouts out answers
    teacher gives students new instructions when
    they have an answer they must cover their mouth
    with their left hand (impossible to speak) and
    raise right hand.

26
Step 3 Response-Cost procedure (removal of
desirable stimuli
  • Taking away from student some item(s) that
    student likes.
  • Given back to student when behaviour improves

27
Step 4 Time out
  • Nonseclusionary Time out
  • Deals with minor disturbances deny student
    reinforcement by removing the materials that are
    being used materials inappropriately
  • Also having students put their heads down on
    their desks
  • Student is not removed from classroom

28
Time out (cont.)
  • Contingent Observation
  • Student is removed to the edge of the activity so
    he can still observe the other students being
    reinforced.
  • Exclusionary time out
  • Removal of student from an activity
  • Seclusionary time out
  • Complete removal of the student from the
    classroom or environment. When time out over
    bring student back to classroom in a calm manner

29
Strengths/Weaknesses of model
  • Strengths
  • Behaviour is broken down into smaller parts so
    student have success
  • Student feels successful as he learns appropriate
    behaviours and receives verbal, social and
    material rewards
  • Can be used with all students
  • Teacher can scientifically test positive use of
    behavioural analysis

30
  • Weaknesses
  • Attempts to change a students observable
    behaviour
  • Some problems may be the result of inner
    problems (student who is physically abused may
    take out hostility on classmates)
  • Reduces student mishaviours may help teacher but
    not the student (abused student)
  • May be time consuming measuring, observing,
    tabulating, record-keeping

31
Exercises
  • A gr. 6 special needs student daily chews her
    hand until, near the end of the day, it is
    bleeding.
  • The industrial arts teacher, who has a classroom
    filled with power machines (drill presses, table
    saw, sander, etc.) has one child who refuses to
    wear protective glasses because it is not cool
    and runs in the classroom with the danger that he
    will bump a classmate using the power equipment.
  • A kindergarten child, to amuse his peers, stuffs
    an entire peanut butter sandwich into his mouth
    and is in the danger of choking.

32
(No Transcript)
33
Positive discipline model
34
Basic assumptions about motivation
  • Based on behavioural analysis principles and
    constructs
  • Attempts to make behavioural principles practical
  • Borrowed elements from neurobiology and
    anthropology to round out and justify practices
  • Uses teacher proximity and eye contact as a mild
    form of punishment to get students back on task
  • Uses various systems limit-setting, backup,
    responsibility training, omission training, and
    classroom structure

35
Teacher behaviours
  • Limit setting
  • Fight-or-flight response
  • Proximity
  • Camping out
  • Relaxing breaths
  • Body movements
  • Moving in/moving out
  • Palms

36
Guidelines, planning, or preparatory teacher
actions
  • Controlling the seating arrangement
  • Organizing the space and other classroom actions
    that can be taken before the student arrive

37
Backup responses (private/semi-private) Small
back-up responses
  • Ear warnings
  • Private meetings
  • Think and talk
  • Warning and delivery

38
Medium backup responsesLarge backup responses
  • Responsibility Training (stopwatch)
  • Bonuses
  • Give time
  • Hurry-up bonus
  • Automatic bonus
  • Penalties
  • PAT (preferred activity time)

39
Medium backup responsesLarge backup responses
(cont.)
  • Omission Training
  • Private meeting
  • Class meeting
  • Structure (management)
  • Teach rules/structure
  • Say, show, do
  • Desk arrangement
  • Work the crowd

40
Limit setting
  • Objective of all limit setting is to calm
    students and get them back on task
  • Important to remember that many disruptions in
    class are minor one however, if multiplied 10
    times in half an hr. can cause problems for
    teacher.

41
Flight or flight response
  • Think back to a time when you were driving your
    car and stopped at a red light. The light
    changed and you slowly pulled into intersection,
    but another driver ran the red light and barreled
    through the intersection. You slammed on your
    brakes, turned to avoid other car.
  • Notice adrenaline pumped through your body,
    your heart was in your throat, your face was
    warm, and you clenched your teeth, legs wobbly
    you were experiencing the results of a flight or
    fight response.

42
  • In some classrooms we have students who are
    extremely confrontational toward us.
  • Student power game have teacher regress to a
    state where he/she has lost her cool
  • Teacher is out of control students control the
    classroom amusing to students as he/she tries
    to gain classroom control

43
Eye contact and Proximity
  • Non-verbal body messages
  • Eyes are the most expressive nonverbal
    communication tool
  • Unswerving eye lock with an individual is the
    most powerful confrontational stance
  • Eye contact is a direct challenge or exercise of
    power, when one person breaks visual lock it is
    read as capitulation
  • Importance of personal space - proximity

44
Steps in limit setting
  • Step 1 Eyes in the back of your head
  • Effective teachers have with-it-ness
    repeatedly check out what is happening in room
  • Impt for teacher to see as much of room as
    possible
  • Impt to arrange classroom

45
Steps in limit setting
  • Step 2 Terminate instruction
  • If you see student not working
  • Stop what you are doing, stare at student I am
    not amused facial expression, hands behind back
  • Impt to remember discipline comes before
    instruction if you ignore misbehaviour it
    will only get worse

46
Steps in limit setting
  • Step 3 Turn, look, and say the students name
  • Turn and face
  • Look them in the eye (eye contact)
  • Facial expression (the teacher) relax
  • Additional body cues wide foot stance
  • Saying the students name
  • Relaxing breaths (two controlled slow, shallow
    breaths, let out slowly)
  • To move in, or not to move in has student
    gotten the message - read student

47
Steps in limit setting
  • Step 4 Walk to the edge of the students desk
  • Teacher walks slowly toward the student, never
    breaking eye contact, stop at desk
  • back talk denying, helplessness, blaming,
  • Do not be taken in, do not respond

48
Steps in limit setting
  • Step 5 Prompt
  • We are now in students comfort bubble
  • Reach in with our hands and signal a prompt to an
    action that you want i.e., reach out and turn
    to page in text or question .

49
Steps in limit setting
  • Step 6 Palms
  • Place hands palms down on students desk
  • Telling student your willing to camp out
  • Note when bending over students desk
  • female teachers wear a high buttoned blouse
  • male teachers if leaning over a female
    student avoid leaning over

50
Steps in limit setting
  • Step 7 Camping out in front

51
Steps in limit setting
  • Step 8 Camping out from behind
  • If there is another student involved.
  • If two students gang up on you, you will not win
    if you deal with them at the same time we
    divide and conquer by putting up a wall between
    them and dealing with them one at a time

52
Steps in limit setting
  • Step 9 Moving out
  • By this point, student has given up and begins to
    work
  • We then begin to move away
  • However, need to deal with second student --

53
Guidelines for room arrangement
  • Dont let janitor dictate the desk arrangement
  • Furniture arrangement is best when it puts the
    least distance and fewest barriers between the
    teacher and students
  • Place the teachers desk on the side or in the
    rear and get the entire class as close as
    possible to the chalkboard
  • Compact the students desk together
  • Teacher goes to students, students do not come
    and wait for teacher
  • Place well-behaved, cooperative students in the
    most distant seats
  • Place misbehaving students in the middle of the
    interior loop and as close to the teacher as
    possible

54
Backup system
  • If one student is a chronic discipline problem
    and our limit setting techniques fail despite
    being applied correctly move on to backup system

55
Backup system
  • Warning
  • Conference with student
  • Time out, being sent to the office, detention
  • Conferencing with parent
  • Conference with teacher, parent and principal
  • In-school suspension
  • Out-of-school suspension (1 day)
  • Out-of-school suspension (3 days)
  • Expulsion and/or a special program

56
Responsibility training
  • Penalty stopwatch, PAT
  • The rule of penalties Class, I am counting to
    10, I want everyone in their seats, all paper of
    the floor, and the desks in neat, orderly rows.
    For each number I count before this is
    accomplished, you will lose that much time from
    your afternoon prep rally. One two
  • Every penalty implies a corresponding bonus
  • This is impt not always negative

57
Preferred Activity Time (PAT)
  • Let students choose activities
  • Popcorn parties, dvds, games, sports

58
Omission training
  • Student who is chronically provocative toward the
    teacher or toward peers, who take the attitude I
    dont care about PAT, and you cant make me!
  • Individualized program of incentives for the very
    defiant student, encouraging him to earn rewards
    through the omission of unwanted behaviour.
  • Private meeting
  • Class meeting
  • Process

59
Private meeting
  • Inform student that he may drop out of the PAT,
    or may individualize the Pat to his liking.
  • A special rewards program is set up for him
  • He can give rest of class bonus time if he
    behaves

60
Class meeting
  • Discuss fact that the student has been causing
    the entire class to lose time because he has
    trouble controlling his behaviour.
  • He can no longer hurt the class
  • Continue to work with student on individual
    program

61
Process
  • Once student has behaved well inform class that
    he has given the class bonus time for PAT
  • Over time, student behaviour should improve

62
Review
  • Visual looking
  • Naming
  • Questions
  • Commanding (backup systems)
  • Modeling (teach rules/structure, desks setup)
  • Reinforcement (responsibility training, bonuses,
    omission training)
  • Acting (large backup response)

63
Strengths and limitations
  • Strengths
  • All of it component parts combine to form a
    holistic view of how to achieve good classroom
    discipline and management
  • Concept of proximity and teacher self control
  • Omits the role of parents

64
Discussion
  • Mikes clowning
  • Mike could be labeled as the class clown. He has
    been seen blowing chocolate milk bubbles through
    his nose in the cafeteria, placing his backside
    on the edge of the stool in chemistry class,
    using movable Bunsen burner to light his farts to
    produce a flame, and often dressing in a T-shirt
    with the words suck city on the front. When
    asked to stop these behaviours, he gives the
    teacher the deer in the headlights look with a
    slight smile. He does not stop, but with an hour
    or two he has a new action to gross out the
    class members and disrupt the teachers teaching.
    Today, with his hand underneath his armpit he
    produces a flagrant sound by pumping his elbow up
    and down. Using these sounds, he attempts to
    play Jingle Bells cracks up the class, and
    of course disrupts your teaching.

65
Linda the passive
  • Linda is a tall thin girl who is nearly always
    seen with her head down on her desk and her
    gangly long legs wrapped around the legs of her
    chair. She constantly has her first three
    fingers in her mouth, sucking them to the point
    that she has sucked off one fingernail. She has
    a body odor that is noticeable to everyone and
    often looks as if she has not bathed for many
    days. It is November, and she has not done no
    homework, answers no questions when called on,
    and when questioned by the teacher in one-to-one
    situations, grunts yes or no to all questions.
    Other children laugh at her, calling her a host
    of derogatory names. The parents do not have a
    phone number, and you have not been able to
    contact them for a conference. Other teachers
    have never seen the parents.

66
Assertive Discipline
67
Outline of Assertive Discipline
  • Basic Assumptions
  • All students can behave regardless of their
    family histories, SES, or physical/mental
    exceptions
  • Student behaviour continues when teachers do not
    enforce the same standards for all students
  • Teaches have the right to request behavior from
    students that meets the needs of the teacher and
    ensures an optimal learning environment
  • Teachers have the right to ask assistance from
    parents, principals, and other school personnel

68
Teacher Behaviours
  • Using hints to alert students that there is a
    problem with their behaviour. Class we should be
    doing
  • Disguising commands as a question Would you
    stop ?
  • Giving I-message (If you dont stop, then you
    have been chosen ) and broken record demands
    to avoid being sidetracked.
  • Using a steady gaze and low voice when talking to
    students.
  • Giving rewards for appropriate behaviour
    (positive notes home, calling on a student, token
    coupon, marble system to reward whole class) and
    punishments for inappropriate behaviour (loss of
    privilege, detention, note home).
  • Using systematic exclusion (to another classroom,
    principals office, home, etc.)

69
Preplanning
  • Teacher writes out a discipline plan, gives a
    copy to the principal for approval, and sends it
    home to the parents asking for feedback and
    suggestions. Also, give it to the students.
  • Requires clear statement of classroom rules,
    posted, positive recognition actions ,
    statement of consequences if rules broken, and a
    severity clause if student is endangering self,
    fellow students, or property

70
Discipline Plan
  • Classroom rules
  • follow directions
  • be in the classroom and seated when
    bell rings
  • do not swear
  • 2. Positive recognition
  • Praise
  • positive notes sent home to parents
  • privilege pass
  • Consequences
  • First time Warning
  • 2nd time Stay in class one minute after
    bell
  • 3rd time Stay in class two minutes after bell
  • 4th time Call parents
  • 5th time Send to principal
  • 4. Severity clause Send to principal

71
Classroom Rules
  • Must be observable (keep hands to yourself
    rather than no fooling around)
  • Each rule is posted (ideally no more than four,
    and never more than six)
  • Students should be involved in the establishment
    of rules.

72
Guidelines, Planning, or Preparatory Teacher
Actions
  • Determining differences among assertive,
    nonassertive, and hostile responses.
  • Establishing a uniform classroom discipline plan
    of relatively few but specific rules and
    consistent actions for enforcing them.
  • Write the plan down and share it with the
    principal and parents
  • Using mental rehearsal to explain the classroom
    plan and enforcement procedures and to prepare
    for handling student violations.

73
Positive Recognition
  • Encourages students to behave appropriately,
    increase their self-esteem, reduce discipline
    problems, create a positive classroom climate,
    and create and establish a positive relationship
    between teacher and students.
  • Praise
  • Positive notes and phone calls home
  • Special privileges
  • Certificate and rewards
  • Tangible rewards

74
Consequences
  • Assertive discipline views consequences for
    breaking as a students choice, as when teacher
    says, Harry, the rule is no swearing, and you
    have chosen to break the rule. Therefore you
    have chosen the consequence of staying one minute
    after class.
  • Consequences are made clear to students
  • Consequences listed in a discipline hierarchy
    moving from a warning

75
Teacher behaviour continuum
  • Looking, proximity
  • Naming, (class we should be), proximity,
    praise
  • Questioning/warning (what should we be doing?)
  • Command (I want )
  • Modeling/Reinforcing (warning, consequence also,
    teacher relating to students interests, home
    visits, get well cards, greet students)
  • Acting (severity clause)

76
Teach the discipline plan and rules
  • Explain why you need the rules
  • Teach the rules
  • Check for understanding
  • Explain why you have consequences
  • Explain how you will reinforce students who
    follow the rules
  • Check for understanding
  • Follow Say, Show, and Check

77
Strengths and limitations
  • Use of punishment does not work
  • uniform discipline without regard to individual
    differences
  • Low priority for communicating and understanding
    a students behaviour
  • emphasis on teachers assertiveness and
    clearness in direction and expectations
  • use of a uniform plan for all students
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