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Transformative Classroom Management. Webinar #11 of 12 S ucceeding with Challenging Students Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement. Transformative Classroom Management Series . Series of Twelve Sessions Facilitator and Participant Guide Clips of Skills in Practice
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Transformative Classroom Management Webinar #11 of 12 Succeeding with Challenging Students Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement
Transformative Classroom Management Series • Series of Twelve Sessions • Facilitator and Participant Guide • Clips of Skills in Practice • Other Resources • Virginia Department of Education Web site
VDOE Guidelines for Uniform Performance Standards and Evaluation Criteria for Teachers • Offers professional development for Performance Standard 5: Learning Environment
Transformative Classroom Management (TCM) Professional Development Series • Data shows Transformation Classroom Practices Increase Achievement • Moving up the Function Continuum • Classroom Environment and Social Learning • Creating Clear and Effective Classroom Expectations • The Technical Management of a Classroom • Motivating Students to Learn • Creating a Class Social Contract and Logical Consequences • Implementing a Consequence and Dealing with Power Struggles • Instruction – Assessment - Management Connection • Facilitating Effective Cooperative Learning • Succeeding with Challenging Students • Creating the 1-Style Classroom
Purpose The purpose of the eleventh webinar is to: Understand the nature of many of the most challenging student issues Become skilled at dealing with those issues in a way that makes us more hopeful, sane and effective, and promotes growth and behavior change for the student
Presenter - John Shindler • Dr. John Shindler is a Professor of Education at California State University, Los Angeles, and the Director of the Alliance for the Study of School Climate.
Today’s Agenda Welcome and Reflections from Webinar ten Make sense of Level IIb Problems Understanding the “Gap” Negative Identity Reality Therapy Reflections and Activities (See TCM Guidebook)
Why Care? Students who become comfortable with a habit of disruptive, aggressive and/or anti social behavior tend to maintain that pattern as they move through the grades. Therefore, if we do nothing, these patterns do not change themselves.
Your Experience Think about a student who you felt brought a deeply conditioned behavior into a classroom (yours or someone else’s). What was the nature of the problem? What was the intervention taken by the school personnel at the time?
Making Sense of Level llb • Students who experience a GAP between what they want, feel, and the way they view the world versus what they see as what the teacher is offering. • Students who have developed a “Negative-Identity” Pattern. • Students who have become accustomed to externalizing their responsibility.
Approaching Level IIb Problems To succeed with Level IIb types of problems, we need to take on an intentional, proactive and positive mindset. Therefore we need to begin by doing the following: • Stop owning the student’s behavior and/or taking it personally. • Avoid self-limiting labels such as “bad students” or “behavioral problem.” When we label the student (even mentally) we reinforce the idea that problem is a fixed condition. We make a challenge into a plight and go from being a teacher to a victim.
Approaching Type IIb Problems • Acknowledge we do have the ability to change the pattern or at least get things moving in the right direction if we are systematic and consistent. We need to let go of our resentment, and fatalistic thinking that is common in these situations. Instead, we must take positive action. Action is the antidote to despair. • Let go of assumptions that negativity, punishment, passive- aggressiveness, or projecting disappointment are doing anything but making things worse. Look the student in the eye and send these messages: a) we like them and believe they can do better; b) what they are doing is going to change; and c) it needs to change ASAP. • Avoid relying on external authorities to solve the problem.
Gaps that Keep us Disconnected • Sometimes students experience a “gap” between the way they view things and the way that we do. It is like a generation gap. • The main gaps look like: • An unsatisfied student • A minimalist student • A student who sees the teacher as the enemy
Bridging these Gaps To bridge each of these gaps we will need to 1) Bring awareness to the existence of the gap, and 2) Make a connection – close the gap
Gap type - Unsatisfied • The teacher’s agenda is not satisfying to the student in terms of what the student feels would meet his/her needs. These needs may not be desirable or healthy, or those that we would ultimately like to satisfy (i.e., familiar forms of stimulation like TV & internet, cell phone, emotional/ego dramas, addiction to instant gratification, etc.), but they define the world of the student – or at least the student’s mental world.
Gap type – Minimalists • Doing the minimum. Some students are very comfortable with a fixed ability pattern (Dweck, 2000), and are resistant to any efforts to think about work outside that pattern. They see tasks as things to get “done” rather than opportunities to learn. They will make statements such as, “do we need to do this?” “this is for points, right?” “I’m OK, I’ll do it later.” They have gotten comfortable essentially turning schoolwork into something that they need to do.
Gap type – Teacher as Enemy • Occasionally some students adopt a mindset that the teacher is the enemy to some degree. To them, the teacher may represent a different generation, ethnicity, gender, value system, class, etc. There may or may not be anything that you have done to justify this perception, but it does not have to based in reality to be real to them. As a result they find ways to penalize the teacher, often in the form of poor performance – “I will punish you by my failure.”
Negative Identity Pattern What is reinforcing the negative behavior at this first stage of the pattern?
Group Exercise: Identifying what is keeping the pattern in place. • Alone or in your group, for your given negative-identity type, identify the external triggers that may reinforce and/or activate the student’s pattern. • Your description is in your webinar guide.
Negative Identity Pattern: Stage 3 At this third point of the cycle, what does the student need, and conversely what will undo our efforts? We will likely need to think in terms of shaping and encouraging new behavior and self-perceptions.
Negative Identity Pattern: Stage 4 At this last point of the cycle, what does the student need, and conversely what will undo our efforts? We will need to help the class encourage new behaviors in the student and support his/her new identity.
Creating Individualized Student Behavioral Contracts (Glasser) • Establish connection to student • Focus on the behavior • Get student to accept responsibility for his/her actions • Help student evaluate his/her behavior • Have student develop a plan • Promote commitment to the plan • Follow-up and follow-through
Upcoming TCM Webinars The final webinar in the series provides an explanation for how to create the student-centered classroom community or 1-Style Classroom. • Data shows Transformation Classroom Practices Increase Achievement • Moving up the Function Continuum • Classroom Environment and Social Learning • Creating Clear and Effective Classroom Expectations • The Technical Management of a Classroom • Motivating Students to Learn • Creating a Class Social Contract and Logical Consequences • Implementing a Consequence and Dealing with Power Struggles • Instruction – Assessment - Management Connection • Facilitating Effective Cooperative Learning • Succeeding with Challenging Students • Creating the 1-Style Classroom
References • Glasser, W (1975) Reality Therapy: A New Approach to Psychiatry. New York: Harper and Row. • Shindler, J. (2010) Transformative Classroom Management. Jossey-Bass. San Francisco, CA