Thursday, April 3, 2014

"A Positive Approach to Managing Behavior"

As the end of the year looms ahead, I have been thinking seriously about how I will manage my classroom next year.   Being in English 1 classes, my eyes have opened to the importance of managing behavior.  I truly believe that managing behavior is an art form and is how great teachers are measured.  Because of my struggles with managing behavior in freshmen classes, my cooperating teacher gave me a great resource called Discipline in the Secondary Classroom:  A Positive Approach to Behavior Management by Randall S. Sprick, Ph.d. 

According to Sprick, the first way teacher can improve behavior is to first maintain high expectations for all students:  “…it is essential that you maintain and communicate high and positive expectations.  Research has repeatedly demonstrated what we know from common sense:  low expectations predict low achievement.” (Sprick 13)  High expectations equal high achievement.

As teachers, it is important to have high expectations for students’ academic and behavioral performance.   You should have these high expectations at all times.  Every time a teacher makes critical comments about a student to another teacher, that teacher is lowering their expectations for that student.  Here are some comments that communicate low expectations for students:

“What can you expect from a kid like that?”
“You can’t expect any better from a student with that kind of home life.”
“They have ADHD, so what can you do?”
“I wish he weren’t in my class.”

Also, being aware of the kind of language that you are using with your students is important.  Watch out for the following:

"Here, let me give you something easier."
"Grow up!"
"This group will work with me because they've proven they can't work alone."
"What's the matter with you?  Use your head."

How often have we heard, or used, versions of the above statements?  The first step to raising expectations is stopping these comments and encouraging success in your students – even those students who have behavior problems.   “You must believe in their success before expecting it.  Try to identify specific negative phrases you may be using, and make an effort to stop.  Then think of phrases you can use that embrace positive qualities about your students instead of negative ones.” (14)

I am a generally positive person but I have caught myself getting irritated with student behavior.  Sprick offered the following suggestions to help maintain a positive attitude:  take care of yourself, maintain a positive and realistic vision of student success, be reflective about your plan, don’t take it personally, make an overt effort to interact positively with every student, and consult with colleagues.  (15)  The tip that resonated with me was “don’t take it personally.”  I often catch myself taking negative comments and behavior issues personally.  I have committed to reminding myself that most students are not singling me out, but probably treat most adult/teachers in the same way.  

Maintaining high expectations, a positive attitude, and eliminating negative speak would foster better behavior from your students.  After my reading, I have made an attempt to have high expectations for all of my students (even the disrespectful kids) and have also made an attempt to stop taking student behavior personally.  I hope to improve behavior in my freshmen classes and also hope to incorporate these ideas into my own classroom management next year.

Sprick, Randall S. Discipline in the Secondary Classroom:  A Positive Approach to 
          Behavior Management.  2nd. ed. San Francisco:  Jossey-Bass, 2006. Print




4 comments:

  1. Emily,

    First, a note of encouragement: I've totally popped in during the class I think you're talking about and I have to say, you ALWAYS appear calm and in control. Your CT has mentioned to me that he is impressed that you always keep your cool and are never sarcastic. I'm glad you've resolved to remind yourself that it's not personal because I've been in other CWC freshman classes in the building and they all seem to be the same. I tried to help another teacher facilitate a Socratic seminar in his CWC freshman class and it failed horribly. Went down like a paper airplane on fire. Tragic.

    Anyway, I've heard some great things about Sprick and am excited your CT gave you that book! It sounds like something maybe we should all check out as we head into our first classrooms in the fall. Let me know what you try in your class this year and whether it works for you. It'll get better!

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  2. Emily,

    During the past couple of months I have heard every single item on your list of comments that communicate low expectations of students from various teachers. As student teachers I think we still have that hope that we can get through to all of the students, but just by talking to veteran teachers from the district and hearing stories it seems like this hope slowly fades and teachers get stuck in the mindset that some students just can't be reasoned with or educated. I have a fear of losing this hope and becoming one of those teachers who says and means such things However, you offer really good advice: don't take it personally. You worded this idea so well. It isn't just me or you, its probably how the student treats all adults and continuing to have high expectations for the student will only help them in the long run. This is advice I will remember throughout my career.

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  3. Ms Tanner,

    I am a huge fan of Sprick and I do hope that you will find great resources in his material. Classroom management is the hardest part of teaching, in my opinion. Once you find your niche, it will be easier and more enjoyable. You are a leg ahead by knowing not to take it personally. Students will meet your expectations in this area, if you set it up correctly and continue to re-teach and address expectations throughout the year.

    Might I suggest you make sure to put your expectations into your syllabus and combine this with a class contract. AVID has a wonderful lesson on how to teach this and set this up. The wonderful thing is that you can put in your non-negotiables and they can also let you know what their individual needs are. Their voices are heard and they tend to have more buy-in when you allow them to help with this aspect. It is also a good playing card for later, when you do have issues at a later time. You can remind them that they helped to build the rules of the class.

    I would also add that it is very important try to keep a positive attitude at all times and to eliminate the negative speak. These are very hard to do at times and it is hard to find the balance to know when you need to be more forceful and how to deal with the kids who really need the attention and will get it any way they know how (which usually entails interrupting the entire class). Hopefully, you will have a strong administration who also holds kids accountable for their actions. This will help tremendously.

    I was at a training once, with Sprick. He talked about being pro-active. Standing at your door at the beginning of class and trying to identify any problems, before class, is crucial. You will get to know you students and will be able to tell who you need to give a bit of encouragement before they enter and which ones need a bit more positive energy before the lesson.

    Making sure you have a strong routine at the beginning of class helps to eliminate many of your problems and sets the tone for the class. A quick pace does not allow much time for "messing around" and does not provide time for students to get off task. This goes for the closing, also. Work to the end. Are you going to have students who will not work? Yes. Pick your battles. Calling them out in class makes it worse. You will figure out what works for you and each individual student.

    I hope that you have the opportunity to go to a Sprick and Archer training session. They work well together and have made my classroom much better for my students and for me.

    All the best to you. Have a wonderful rest of the year and good luck in your endeavors.

    Mrs. Quincy

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  4. It interesting how you say to aviod growing up. I need to stop using this language perhaps. I have Seniors and I am always telling them it's time to be adults and grow up. Sometimes they get loud and lazy with their work. My reaction is they are about to be 18 and get jobs. How will they survive? I am now thinking of substitute phrases.
    I always set my expectations high and worry that they are too high. I know this is something we have learned since day one but sometimes I wonder if I'm alone in setting high goals. Nice to know you are practicing high expectations as well. I am looking up the Sprick book tonight. Thank you for the reference.

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