Title: WHAT ARE WE FACING
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2WHAT ARE WE FACING?
- 9th graders experience more depressive symptoms
and lower levels of school belonging than 8th
graders - More pressure in high school due to no more
playing and this determines where you are going
to be in life can set the tone for entire
school experience - More failures in 9th grade most drop-outs occur
at the age of 16 (10th grade) - Single parent homes show less behavior control
and parental warmth following disruption - Decrease in intrinsic and extrinsic motivation
from 8th-10th
- Increased stress, decreased self-esteem,
deteriorated academic performance, and risk of
maladjustment - Increased number of students (little fish, big
pond) - Schools with 2 transitions experience more
drop-outs - Typically characterized by greater control and
authority, more rigid discipline, and less
personal attention - Minority and low SES students 2x more likely to
be retained - At current rate, 1 out of 7 students born today
in US will not graduate
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4TRANSITIONING TO A POSITIVE SCHOOL RELATIONSHIP
- CONNECTING STUDENTS AND SCHOOLS WITH CHOICE
THEORY AND CULTURAL-RELATIONAL THEORY
5CHOICE THEORYDr. William Glasser
- Relationship is the key.
- Unhappiness is the cause of all problems.
- We choose everything that we do.
65 BASIC NEEDS
- SURVIVAL
- LOVE AND BELONGING
- POWER
- FREEDOM
- FUN
7TOTAL BEHAVIOR
8QUALITY WORLD PICTURES
9EXTERNAL CONTROL PSYCHOLOGY
- People and things outside myself make me behave.
- I can control the behavior of others.
- Not only do I know what is good for me, I know
what is right for everyone.
107 DISCONNECTING BEHAVIORS
- CRITICIZING
- BLAMING
- COMPLAINING
- NAGGING
- THREATENING
- PUNISHING
- BRIBING
117 CONNECTING BEHAVIORS
- CARING
- TRUSTING
- LISTENING
- SUPPORTING
- NEGOTIATING
- ENCOURAGING
- ACCEPTING
12SCHOOLING
- INFORMATION ONLY USEFUL IN SCHOOLS AND NO WHERE
ELSE
13QUALITY SCHOOL WORK
- Schools are the only places that accept
- non-competent work to succeed.
- School prepare students for an essay world with a
fill in the blank curriculum. - All schoolwork must be quality.
146 CONDITIONS OF QUALITY SCHOOL WORK
- Create a warm, supportive classroom.
- Ask students to only do quality work.
- Always ask students to do their best work
possible. - Have students evaluate their own work and improve
it. - Quality work always feels good.
- Quality work is never destructive.
15QUALITY SCHOOL ENVIRONMENT
- Listen
- Accept no excuses
- Remain optimistic
- Remember total behavior
- Have confidence
- Stay in the present
- Avoid punishment
- Avoid coercion
- Allow consequences
- Keep your cool
16LEADER VS. BOSSDr. Demings Aspects of a Leader
- Engage students in discussion of quality work.
- Show work and ask for input.
- Ask students to evaluate their own work.
- Provide best materials and atmosphere possible.
17SUGGESTIONS FOR QUALITY CLASSROOMS
18CULTURAL/RELATIONAL ASPECTS
- Isolation is the major source of suffering.
- Mutual empathy and empowerment are at the core of
growth-fostering relationships. - Real engagement and authenticity are necessary
for development of relationship. - Power plays a major role. The more powerful
person is responsible for encouraging growth of
authenticity and full voice of less powerful
person. - Not about equality, roles are different. It is
about the quality of engagement and being real
with constant awareness of emotional impact.
19CULTURAL/RELATIONAL ASPECTS(cont.)
- Youth place high value on respect, mutuality, and
authenticity in relationships with adults. - Express a high desire for strong relationships
with adults. - Desire to just have fun and authenticity with
adults-when you just play, you can build trust - Need for genuine care for who student is rather
than because of a certain behavior. - Believe adults should provide limits and adjust
relationship to meet developmental capacities. - Capture attention by not downplaying authority
but by coupling strictness with sense of respect.
20COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT
- Use caregivers as partners, not punishers.
- Use initial letters and/or contact.
- Stay in constant contact with caregivers.
- Utilize adults in community as tutors, helpers,
etc. - Use classroom sponsors.
21SUGGESTIONS FOR TRANSITION
226 SYMPTOMS OF CYNICISM
- You start counting the hours before you finish
your first cup of coffee. - Nothing works. Youve tried it before, and it
didnt work then. - It is more important to teach material than for
students to learn it. - Everyday feels the same.
- You have lost your love of your own learning.
Tedium has taken the place of wonder. - You often question why no one is doing anything
to make things better.
236 SUGGESTIONS FOR FIGHTING CYNICISM
- Remember why you became a educator. Remember why
you remain an educator. - Adopt a hopeless student.
- Adopt a cynical educator.
- Do one activity you love everyday.
- Communicate with those who affect you in school.
- Apply Choice Theory and Relational/Cultural
Theory.
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25QUOTES
- To learn without thinking is in vain.
- -Confucius
- The fault, dear Brutus, lies not in our stars,
but in our selves. - -Julius Caesar
- It is our choices, Harry, that show what we
truly are, far more than our abilities. - -Albus Dumbledore
- We are what we think
- All that we are arises
- With our thoughts.
- With our thoughts
- We make the world.
- -Buddha
- All we have to do is decide what to do with the
time that is given to us. - -Gandalf the Gray
- He who conquers himself is the mightiest
warrior. - -Confucius
26Transition References
- Alspaugh, J. W. (2001). Achievement loss
associated with the transition to middle school
and - high school. Journal of Educational Research,
92(1), 20-26 - Akos, P., Galassi, J. P. (2004). Gender and
race as variables in psychological adjustment to - middle and high school. Journal of Educational
Research, 98(2), 102-108. - Cangelosi, J. S. (2000). Classroom management
strategies Gaining and maintaining students - cooperation. New York John Wiley Sons, Inc.
- Carley, K. M., Jovanovich, D. (2006).
Developing an effective transition program for
students - entering middle school or high school. Clearing
House, 80(1), 15-25. - Curwin, R. (2004). Motivating the hopeless,
disinterested, and unmotivated learner.
Presentation - in Nashville, TN.
- Curwin, R., Menler, A. (1998). Discipline with
dignity. Alexandria, VA ASCD. - Cushman, K. (2006). Help us make the 9th grade
transition. Educational Leadership, 63(7), - 47-52.
- Deming, W. E. (1982). Out of the crisis.
Cambridge, MA MIT. - Dinkmeyer, D., McKay, G., Dinkmeyer, D. J.
(1980). Systematic training for effective - teaching. Circle Pines, MN American Guidance
Services. - Freeman, H. S., Newland, L. A. (2002). Family
transition during the adolescent transition - Implications for parenting. Adolescence,
37(147), 457-475.
27Transition References (cont.)
- Holland, H., Mazzoi, K. (2001). Where everybody
knows your name. Phi Delta Kappan, - 83(4), 294-303.
- Hertzog, J. (2006). Planning for the transition
to high school. Principal, 86(2), 60-61. - Holcomb-McCoy, C. (2007). Transitioning to high
school Issues and challenges for African- - American students. Professional School
Counseling, 10(3), 253-260. - Jordan, J. V. (2001). A relational-cultural
model Healing through mutual empathy. Bulletin
of - the Menninger Clinic, 65(1), 92-103.
- Jordan, J. V. (2000). The role of mutual empathy
in relational/cultural therapy. Psychootherapy - in Practice, 56(8), 1005-1016.
- Kline, A. (1989). The healing power of humor. New
York Penguin Putnam, Inc. - McIntosh, J., White, S. H. (2006). Building for
freshmen success High schools working as - professional learning communities. American
Secondary Education, 34(2), 40-49. - Mizelle, N. B. (2005). Moving out of middle
school. Educational Leadership, 62(7), 56-60. - Nelson, J., Escobar, L., Ortolano, K. (2001).
Positive discipline A teachers A-Z guide. New - York Random House, Inc.
- Newman, B. M., Newman, P. R., Griffen, S.,
OConner, K., Spas, J. (2007). The relationship
- of social support to depressive symptoms during
the transition to high school. - Adolescence, 42(167), 441-459.
- Otis, N., Grorzet, F. M. E., Pelletier, L. G.
(2005). Latent motivational change in an academic
28THANK YOU FOR ATTENDING TODAY
- If you have any questions, comments, or
suggestions, please feel free to contact me. - Eric Davis
- edavis76_at_ufl.edu