Monday, July 29, 2019
Trends in Classroom Management
Current Trends in Classroom Management Classroom DisciplineWongââ¬â¢s Pragmatic ClassroomKagan, Kyle, and Scottââ¬â¢s Win-Win DisciplineMorrishââ¬â¢s Real Discipline Strengthsâ⬠¢Wongââ¬â¢s approach ââ¬Å"pragmaticâ⬠where it is ââ¬Å"built from practical ideasâ⬠pieced together from multiple sources (Charles, 2008, pg. 130). This theory does not fit with cookie cutter classrooms and can be modified to fit the teacher, content, or student group. â⬠¢Encourages the idea that ââ¬Å"discipline problemsâ⬠will ââ¬Å"largely disappearâ⬠when the classroom management is in check (Charles, 2008, pg. 0). â⬠¢Ã¢â¬Å"Rules of behavior set limitsâ⬠where they ââ¬Å"create a work-oriented atmosphereâ⬠(Charles, 2008, pg. 133). Behavior issues are simply violations of procedure and have specific and logical consequences that were clearly laid out on the first day of school. â⬠¢Ã¢â¬Å"Student needsâ⬠are strongly represented were the ââ¬Å"primary goalâ⬠is to ââ¬Å"help students develop long-term, self-managed responsibility. â⬠¢Encourages a spirit of teamwork between the teacher and student where the end result is where ââ¬Å"students manage themselves responsiblyâ⬠(Charles, 2008, pg. 151). A precursor to Kaganââ¬â¢s win-win strategy because it ââ¬Å"teaches students right from wrong,â⬠high expectations of adult authority, ââ¬Å"and encourages them to make choices about behavior that are sufficiently mature and experienced to doâ⬠(Charles, 2008, pg. 227). â⬠¢Ã¢â¬Å"To acquire essential [behavioral norms] skills, they need supportive guidance from enlightened, caring teachersâ⬠where it does not put the teachers and students on the same plane; however, it does not completely separate them. Weaknessesâ⬠¢Requires intense planning and execution by the teacher to ensure that consistency of procedures is followed in order for this to succeed. If there needs to be a ch ange in classroom management style in the middle of the school year, Wong gives little detail on how that should be handled. They focus heavily on the first day and first few weeks of school. â⬠¢Sees disruptive behavior as ââ¬Å"merely studentsââ¬â¢ ineffective attempts to meet certain unfulfilled needsâ⬠all the time (Charles, 2008, pg. 151). Where behavior issues could come from students not even trying at all. â⬠¢Since the relationship needs to be based on the fact that the student and teacher must work together for the student to gain that responsibility, what happens when they do not gain that type of utlook? â⬠¢This strategy may feel like an anarchy government where the students have little to no say in the classroom and their learning, where the teacher is the sole authority in the classroom. Advantagesâ⬠¢States that ââ¬Å"a well-managed classroom is task oriented and predictableâ⬠and it can be a ââ¬Å"smoothly functioning learning environment â⬠(Charles, 2008, pg. 132). â⬠¢When students learn the win-win strategy, they learn life skills that can help with ââ¬Å"developing self-management, responsibility, and other autonomous life skillsâ⬠(Charles, 2008, pg. 151). Does not separate the teacher/student dynamic too much with authority and does not give the student too much power without clear expectation. Disadvantagesâ⬠¢If a teacher does not the set the procedures and expectations in the classroom before the end of week two, research has shown that they will not have good classroom management â⬠¢Procedures can seem daunting and intense and very little wiggle room for students. â⬠¢This discipline type does not take preemptive strikes against disruptive behavior but rather ââ¬Å"considers disruptive behavior to be a starting pointâ⬠(Charles, 2008, pg. 152). This strategy may be easily confused with mistrust for their students and lowering oneââ¬â¢s standard of expectation for the studen ts just because of their age. Agree/Disagreeâ⬠¢Solid expectations in an environment with crisp infrastructure is an idea that resonates with my strategy of teaching. â⬠¢I do not agree with this particular strategy where it states that we should wait for students to misbehave so we can address the idea of responsibility or re-directing. I do not believe in setting up the students for failure and put my best effort forward for them to succeed on the first try, not wait for them to mess up to fix it. However, I do agree with the idea of encouraging autonomy from the students and stating that they are their bets advocates for their own education. â⬠¢This strategy does expect high expectations from the students to follow the rules but they are not in a true in a democracy like the previous strategy. There are no unrealistic expectations of maturity level and one will expect a student to act their age. The students are not set up to fail, but have a firm teacher foundation. Re source Center: Charles, C. M. (2008). Builidng Classroom Discipline (9thth ed. ). Boston, MA: Pearson Education. Retrieved November 13, 2012
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