1 / 21

Misbehavior

Misbehavior. And how to Handle it. Outline. Verbal intervention Guidelines to using verbal intervention Levels of verbal intervention Hints Questions Requests/demands When verbal intervention fails Use of logical consequences. Outline continued. Chronic misbehavior

kater
Download Presentation

Misbehavior

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Misbehavior And how to Handle it

  2. Outline • Verbal intervention • Guidelines to using verbal intervention • Levels of verbal intervention • Hints • Questions • Requests/demands • When verbal intervention fails • Use of logical consequences

  3. Outline continued • Chronic misbehavior • What chronic misbehavior looks like • How to deal with chronic misbehavior • Relationship building • Cycle of disencouragement • Private conferences • Management techniques • Self monitoring • Anecdotal records • Behavior contracting • Group activity • conclusion

  4. Guidelines to Verbal Intervention • 1.When possible, use non verbal interventions first • 2.Keep verbal interventions private (if possible) • 3.Make verbal intervention brief • 4.Speak to the situation, not the person

  5. Guidelines continued • 5. Set limits on behavior, not feelings • 6. Avoid sarcasm and other responses that are demeaning • 7. Begin by using a technique that fits the student and the problem, try to allow as much student control as possible • 8. If the first verbal intervention is unsuccessful, then try a second one closer to the teacher end of the control spectrum

  6. Guidelines continued • 9. If more than one verbal intervention fails, then it may be time to move to logical consequences.

  7. Levels of verbal intervention • Move from student controlled to teacher controlled. • The three levels include: • Hints • Questions • Requests/demands

  8. Hints • Adjacent peer reinforcement • Calling the student by name • Using humor

  9. Questions • Questioning awareness of effect

  10. Requests/demands • Sending an I-message • Using direct appeal • Using positive phrasing • Using “are not for” • Reminding students of rules • Asking Glasser’s triplets • Using explicit redirection • Broken Record Strategy

  11. Verbal Intervention failed…Now what? • Use of logical consequences • Goal is to emphasize that the student must change their behavior, or consequences will be faced. • “you have a choice” • Once teacher moves to this stage, No more dialogue. Student now faces a consequence. • Consistency, consistency, consistency • Punishment must fit the behavior.

  12. Classroom Interventions for Chronic problems (Ch.9)‏ Chronic Behavioral Problems Disrupt learning Two-step trap Strategies

  13. Relationship Building One of the most effective strategies Disregard any negative qualities Look for any positive qualities Be persistent, consistent, and predictable Teacher must monitor their own behaviour

  14. Breaking the Cycle of Discouragement Stop negative teacher responses to negative student behaviours Engage in behaviours to help meet students Needs 4 questions Positive Feedback Sense of Virtue

  15. Private Conferences Makes student aware that their behaviour is a problem Basic step to a positive relationship Helps student take ownership of the problem

  16. Receiving Skills 1. Use silence and non-verbal attending cues 2. Probe 3. Check Perceptions 4. Check Feelings

  17. Sending Skills 1. Deal in the here and now 2. Make eye contact and use congruent non-verbal behaviours 3. Make statements rather than asking questions 4.Use “I”- take responsibility for your feelings

  18. Sending Skills cont. 5. Be brief 6. Talk directly to the student, not about him/her 7. Give directions to help the student correct the problem 8. Check student understanding of your message

  19. Techniques for Managing Students with Chronic Misbehaviour 1)Self-monitoring 2)Anecdotal record keeping 3)Behavioural contracting *exclusion (last resort)

  20. Group Activity

  21. Conclusion

More Related