Title: Dealing with Difficult Students
1Dealing with Difficult Students
- Types of Difficult StudentsDifficult students
may manifest themselves as such in various ways.
These include
The Angry, Arguer, or Grade Grubber
The Excuse Making Student
The Needy Student
The Cheating, Plagiarizing Student
2Angry and Aggressive
- Angry and aggressive students may fall into many
categories including those who
Violate rules
Manipulate instructors and/orother students
Post abusive or inflammatory remarks in
discussions
Make unwarrantedcritical or abusiveremarks to
professors or other students
3Excuse Making
- Excuse making students can often be very
creative, supplying instructors with detailed
excuses for not submitting their assignments (the
cat died, the computer is down, mother had
surgery, etc.).
4Needy Students
- Needy Students are those who require an unusually
high amount of feedback and interaction with the
professor. If given the opportunity, they will
dominate the professors time, flooding the
instructor with e-mails, pressuring for immediate
feedback. This type of student should be attended
to, but not allowed to dominate the instructors
time. A word of caution the instructor should
keep an eye on this type of student, because
he/she has the potential to turn into the angry,
hostile student.
5Cheating, Plagiarizing Student
- The Cheating, Plagiarizing StudentWhile some
students purposely engage in cheating, other
students may unknowingly violate plagiarism rules
by incorrectly citing material or paraphrasing
anothers work without properly giving credit.
6Preventing Difficult Students
- Although there is no fool proof way of inhibiting
- difficult behavior online, there are some things
that - can be very effective in preventing students from
- turning into difficult students.
Preventing Cheating Plagiarism
Preventing the Angry or Excuse Making Student
7Preventing Plagiarism
- Here are some suggestions for preventing problems
with cheating and plagiarism
Post Universitys Academic Code
Provide Definitionsand Examples
Consider Creating an Academic Honesty Contract
Create Varying Assessment Formats
8Provide Definitions Examples
- Provide clear definitions and examples of
different forms of plagiarism. For example, show
students examples of acceptable citations and
paraphrasing, compared to unacceptable examples
of each.
Definitions
Examples
Avoiding Plagiarism in an Online Environment
9Example Definitions of Plagiarism (Crawford,2002)
- Ghostwriting when a person takes credit for work
that someone else is writing. - Patchwriting when parts of a paper are taken
from another source without giving credit. - Inappropriate citation and reference when a
reference is overused or other authors' names
were added to the reference list to make the
paper look much better than it is. - Inappropriate quotation when a person fails to
put qutation marks around verbatim remarks from
the text of another author, but cites that author
correctly, or when a person uses too many quoted
materials in a paper. - Contextual Fraud the deliberate changing of
words quoted from another author with the intent
of changing the meaning of the passage.
10Examples of Plagiarism
- One excellent strategy in preventing plagiarism
is to provide students with examples. Princeton
University provides some excellent online
examples of textual plagiarism.
11Varying Assessment Formats
- Another excellent strategy in preventing
plagiarism among students is to break assignments
into sections. For example, for a writing
assignment, students may be required to first
submit a title or subject, then a general
outline, followed by a bibliography, and last,
the entire paper.
12Varying Assignments (contd)
- By incorporating varying assessment formats into
the course, instructors are able to get a better
sense of each students understanding of the
subject matter and way of communicating.
Get to know your students skill levels
Create assignments based around personal
experiences (eg., journal writing)
Provide opportunitiesfor students to resubmit
work
Break assignments into sections
13Academic Honesty Contract
- Consider having students sign a contract that
advises students of the consequences of
plagiarizing, their responsibilities regarding
this matter, and agreeing to the consequences,
should they intentionally plagiarize.
Sample Contract
14Preventing Angry Students
- Excuse making and angry students are placed
together in this section because the excuse
making student can easily turn into an angry
student without proper preventive measures.There
are some important steps instructors can take to
prevent encountering excuse making or angry
students.
ProvideClear Expectations
Make Yourself Available
Practice Good Communication
Promote InternalLocus of Control
15Provide Clear Expectations
- Provide clear expectations for your students.
This is best accomplished through the use of
learning objectives and specific
directions/instructions for required activities.
Other important things to consider are
Provide clear deadlines for assignments
Provide a policy on late work
Build a series of graded penalties, based upon
how late a paper is.
Maintain a file of all communicationwith
students.
16Make Yourself Available
- Post office hours and times that you will be
available to correspond with students through
instant messenger, e-mail, or telephone.
17Communication Styles in Feedback
- Communication is a key factor in preventing angry
or excuse making students. Some vital
communication techniques are
Listen carefully respect students opinions.
Respond to studentswork in a positive manner.
Promote communication social skills among
students.
Let students knowahead of time ifyou will be
out of town.
18Responding to Students Work
- Avoid potential eruptions by responding to
students work in a positive manner and without
discouraging your students. Avoid using
accusatory remarks, such as You did not follow
the directions of the assignment correctly.
Instead, say something like, Please go back and
review the directions for this assignment.
19Communication Among Students
- One way to promote communication and social
skills among students is to incorporate a
cooperative group activity. By laying down clear
guidelines for social interaction you can
encourage respect for other peoples beliefs.
20Notify Students if Leaving Town
- Most students expect instructors to respond to
their e-mails and assignments within a certain
amount of time.If you plan on going out of town
and anticipate sketchy Internet connectivity, let
your students know. It is better to tell them up
front to prevent student frustration.
21Promote an Internal Locus of Control
- Locus of control refers to the types of
attributions we make for our successes and/or
failures in academic tasks. - A students locus of control can have a profound
impact on academic achievement (Anderman and
Midgley, 1997). If a student, in turn, does well,
he/she is less likely to become a problem
student.
Internal Locus of Control
External Locus of Control
How to promote an internal locus of control
22Internal Locus of Control
- If someone believes that his/ her successes and
failures are due to factors within his/her own
control, such as ability or effort, then that
person is said to have an internal locus of
control. - Persons with an internal locus of control
attribute poor performance to a lack of important
skills or to poor study habits, and are more
likely to persist in the future (Anderman and
Midgley, 1997).
23External Locus of Control
- If someone believes that his or her successes and
failures are due to factors outside of his/her
own control, such as fate or luck, then that
person is said to have an external locus of
control. - This person may feel that working hard is futile
because his/her efforts have only brought
disappointment (Anderman and Midgley, 1997).
24Promoting an Internal Locus of Control
- One way to promote an internal locus of control
is to incorporate a Mastery Learning (Guskey,
1997) approach. This allows students to learn
material in increments, by breaking down material
into subskills. Students are not allowed to
proceed to the next level of material until they
have mastered the pre-requisite knowledge. - Another approach is to promote learning goal
orientation among students rather than
performance goal orientation. In other words,
promote a desire to learn and master the material
rather than to perform at a certain level. This
can be accomplished by designing multidimensional
learning spaces (Dweck, 1988Self-Brown and
Mathews, 2003).
25Multidimensional Virtual Classrooms
- Multidimensional classrooms tend to incorporate
the following components into the virtual
classroom structure (Lotan, 1997) - More varied materials and methods of assessments
- Assessment methods where students are not openly
compared to one another. - Higher degree of student autonomy
- Collaborative learning activities
- Active participation
- Contingency contracts
26Handling Difficult Students
- Even in well-planned courses, where goals,
instructional objectives, and criteria for
assessment are clearly identified, there exists
the potential for misunderstandings or
interpersonal conflicts to arise. What do you do
when this happens? - You can often de-escalate a heated situation if
something like this happens in your course, if
you show support, encouragement, respect and
empathy towards your student.
27Handling Angry Students
- Proper communication is essential in handling the
angry student.
Communicating withAngry Students
28Communicating with Angry Students
- Communicate with student in a private setting.
- Rephrase what is being said in an attempt to
identify the issue(s) at the heart of the
situation. - Acknowledge students opinion and be positive
about his/her input. - Remain calm and nonjudgmental, no matter how
agitated the student becomes. - Stay open minded-the student may have a point.
- Be careful about your language.
29Angry Students (2)
- Use evidence when disagreeing with a student.
- Avoid beginning critical statements with I.
- Ask the student to clarify using the class
material, rather than dismissing an idea
immediately. - Avoid making an issue out of a small incident.
- Maintain your professionalism by not responding
as if you feel personally attacked. - Do not continue trying to reason with a student
who is highly agitated.
30Angry Students (3)
- Consider your response carefully and seek other
opinions before submitting if you are concerned. - Copy and save all communications with students.
- Notify your administrator if you have a student
who is abusive, threatening, or uses foul
language. - In the event that you meet face to face with your
student, look for warning signs that the person
is about to explode (changes in physical demeanor
such as visible tensing of the body, assuming an
aggressive stance, etc).
31Detecting Plagiarism
When paragraphs dont flow well, or students
writing techniques seem markedly different than
previously submitted work, it is always a good
idea to check for plagiarism. Two popular ways of
doing this are through search engines (such as
Google) or anti-plagiarism tools, such as
turnitin.com.
Google Searches
Turnit.com, etc.
32Google Searches
First, select a sentence or phrase such as the
topic sentence, or one with several unique words
in it. Next, enter this phrase into one of the
search engines (Google, AltaVista, etc.) Make
sure to enclose the suspect phrase in quotation
marks. Try entering the phrase into several
different search engines for the best results.
33Anti-Plagiarism Tools
Some universities subscribe to anti-plagiarism
tools such as turnitin.com or MyDropBox.com.
These services maintain a database of papers
collected from sources such as term paper mills
and academic works available online. In order to
use this service, the instructor uploads the
electronic file of the students paper. The paper
is then checked against billions of pages from
papers submitted to term paper mills, the
Internet, commercial databases of journal
articles and periodicals, and papers previously
submitted.
34References
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