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Teacher Student Relationships. Chapter 4. Classroom Management. High Dominance Clarity of purpose and strong guidance High Submission Lack of clarity and purpose
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Teacher Student Relationships Chapter 4
High Dominance Clarity of purpose and strong guidance High Submission Lack of clarity and purpose • Teacher provides purpose and guidance relative to the content addressed in class as well as the behavioral expectations in class through strong guidance Dominance versus Submission
High Cooperation Characterized by a concern for the needs and opinion of others and a desire to function as a member of a team as opposed to an individual High Opposition Active antagonism toward others and a desire to thwart their goals and desires Cooperation versus Opposition
Dominance Cooperation Moderate to high dominance and moderate to high cooperation is optimal Optimal Teacher Student Relationship
Rules rewards/punishments • Follow rule get rewarded / break rule get punished Relationship/listening style • Attend to student concerns with little emphasis on discipline Confronting/contracting • Direct attention to disciplinary problems but not in a inflexible way **Confronting / contracting was voted most popular by grades 4-6. It executes negative consequences for negative choices but demonstrates a concern for students’ needs and preferences Classroom Management Styles
TESA – Teacher Expectations and Student Achievement • Response opportunities • Equitable distribution of positive types of responses • Helping individual students • Response latency • Types of questions • Feedback • Affirmation of correct performance • Praise and reasons for praise • Listening • Accepting feelings • Personal regard • Proximity • Courtesy • Personal interest • Touching • Desisting Staff Development Programs
Use specific techniques to establish an appropriate level of dominance in the classroom • Exhibit assertive behavior • Use of assertive body language • Use appropriate tone of voice • Persist until the appropriate behavior is displayed • Establish clear learning goals • Clear about goals and provide feedback • Learning goal + rubrics will promote students to take ownership of their learning Step One
Use specific behaviors that communicate an appropriate level of cooperation • Provide flexible learning goals • Take a personal interest in students • Use equitable and positive classroom behaviors • Respond appropriately to students incorrect responses Step Two
Be aware of the needs of different types of students • Passive • Aggressive • Attention problems • Perfectionist • Socially inept Step Three