Title: LOVE
1 LOVE LOGIC9 Essential Skills for Love
Logic Classrooms(Low Stress Strategies for
Highly Successful Educators) Clara Cáceres
ContrerasSchool Health/SDFSCRegion One
ESC956-984-6125clara.contreras_at_esconett.orgwww.
esc1.net
2Love and Logics Wish for You
- That your students will look at you and think
- Thats the strictest teacher Ive ever knownand
I want to be in their class!
3The Most Powerful Teacher
- Has high expectations
- Sets firm limits
- Holds students accountable for their behavior
- Is very caring and kind
- Loves kids and loves teaching them
4Love Logic Teaches How To
- Put an end to student arguing and back-talk
- Buy yourself time by delaying consequences
- Teach responsibility by applying consequences
with empathy - Preserve the learning environmentand your
sanityif students become disruptive and refuse
to comply
5Love Logic Teaches How To
- Build positive relationships with challenging
kids - Set limits without having to remind, lecture, or
threaten - Avoid Power struggles by giving choices within
limits - Teaches students how to solve their own problems
6Module 1Neutralizing Student Arguing
- That arguing is one way that challenging students
exert unhealthy control over classrooms and
schools - How adult-child arguments often contribute to the
development of more serious acting behavior - Why reasoning with arguing students is
ineffective - A practical skill for disengaging from arguments
by repeating one statement like a broken record - How to apply this skill with empathy instead of
anger or sarcasm
7Module 1Neutralizing the Arguing
- Go brain dead!
- Choose one that fits you and memorize itPRACTICE
with your partner. - Samples
- I like (love), (respect) you too much to argue
- I know
- Thanks for sharing
- Probably so
- Nice try
- Thats an option
- I dont know. What do you think?
- I bet it feels that way
- Ill listen when your voice is calm
- Repeat the one-liner, like a broken record
8Module TwoDelayed Consequence
- About research that shows why consequences do not
always need to be immediate - How to delay consequences in a way that yields
the benefits of delayed consequences and
immediate consequences at the same time - That delayed consequences allow one to calm down,
develop an effective plan and avoid Knee jerk
reaction - Why repeated warnings are damaging to students
and schools - How to develop an enforceable classroom
discipline plan
9Module 2The Delayed or Anticipatory Consequence
with Empathy
- Oh no. This is sad Im going to have to do
something about this But not nowlatertry not
to worry about it. - Im going to do something become a consequence
tooan Anticipatory Consequence. - More important than how long it takes us to
deliver a consequence is whether or not we always
do so when we say we will.FOLLOW THROUGH!
10Module 2Problems with Warnings
- Students cant resist the challenge
- They will find creative ways of breaking the
rules so the consequences no longer fit - They play brain drain arguing with us about the
consequence - Use our rules and consequences to orchestrate
conflict between us their parents
11Module 2Mrs. Barlows Plan
- Please dont make a problem for others
- If you make a problem, I will do something
12Module 2How I Run My Love Logic Classroom
- I will treat you with respect, so you know how to
treat others. - Feel free to do anything that doesnt cause a
problem for anyone else. - If you cause a problem, I will ask you to solve
it. - If you cant solve it or choose not to, I will do
something. - What I do will depend on the special person the
special situation. - If you feel something is unfair, whisper to me,
Im not sure thats fair and we will talk.
13Module 2Delayed ConsequencesRules having to
do with public safety should be spelled out in
advance and students should know what the
consequences of breaking these rules will be.
14Module 3Empathy
- How the human brain responds to threat by
narrowing thinking and shifting into Flight or
flight - That empathy is a powerful tool for helping
students remain in thinking mode. - That providing empathy before delivering
consequences allows students to learn from the
consequenceinstead of developing resentment
toward the adult - Why empathy without accountability leads to
irresponsibility and low self-esteem - Practical tips for using sincere empathy even
when anger feels more natural
15The most successful teachers and parents deliver
a strong dose of empathy, or sadness for the
child, before they described the consequence.
Empathic phrases How sad..This is so
sad This has got to be so hard Oh
no This stinks What a bummer What a
drag Oh, this is never good Oh
man DangWhich one fits you your students
the best? Write it in the blank below. Try it out
with your partnerpractice!
Module 3-Empathy
16Module 3 That Create Fight or Flight
- What was said
- Whats wrong with you
- Get to work
- (Nothing)
- Your sisters were such good students
- How sad
- How come you always do that
- How it was said
- With plenty of frustration
- With anger
- Rolls eyes at student
- Condescending tone
- With sarcasm
- With irritation
17The most successful parents and teachers
delivered their empathy with sincerity. Their
words and actions said the same thing. I care
about you!
- Its amazing that we have the power to change
another persons brain functioning with just the
tone of our voice, the look on our face, or a few
short words?
18Empathy Prevents Fight or Flight!Our words
and actions bring students into either thinking
modeor survival mode.Empathy opens the mind
and heart to learning.
19Providing empathy alone can emotionally cripple
a child.What else needs to be in place?
20Empathy without holding kids accountable erodes
responsibility and self-concept.Empathy
followed by logical consequences builds
responsibility.
21Empathy versus Sympathy
- Erodes self-esteem
- Prevents responsibility
- Easy in the short runbut backfires in the long
run - You are not capable..let me rescue you
- EnablingPobrecito
- Builds self-esteem
- Fosters responsibility
- Difficult in the short runbut rewards in the
long run - You are capable..it is your problem..you can
figure it out - Empowering
22Empathy is a powerful tool when we
- Deliver it with sincerity, NOT sarcasm
- Always send it BEFORE describing the consequence
- Keep it SIMPLE
23Module 4The Recovery Process
- How to use the recovery area approach to
preserve the learning environment - The basic goals of this approach
- The importance of adapting this approach to their
unique school - What to do if a student refuses to go to Recovery
when asked - Related legal issues and tips for explaining this
approach to parents
24A good minute is when a students actions do
not create a problem for others.Every bad
minute should be spent in Recovery.All good
minutes should be spent back in the classroom.
25Module 4Questions for Plugging the Holes in
Your Recovery Plan
- Where can students go for Recovery in our school?
- How will we know they made it to where they were
supposed to go? - How will they be supervised in these settings?
- Under what conditions should students be sent to
Recovery? - How should they be sent?
26When we use Recovery correctly we send the
following messageI care far too much for you
to allow you to misbehave in my class. I care
enough about you to set some limits.
27Build Positive Relationships Before Problems
AriseListen, Listen, Listenwith EmpathyHelp
Parents Understand What You Are Really Doing.
28Module 5Teaches Developing Positive
Teacher/Student Relationships
29Model 5Developing Positive Teacher/Student
Relationships
- How coercive strategies and tangible rewards
backfire with disruptive, resistant students - That positive teacher-student relationships are
the key to success with such students - The difference between general praise and
specific encouraging feedback - The importance of greeting students each day with
the 3 elements of bondingfriendly eye contact, a
smile and a handshake - The One-Sentence Intervention technique for
building successful relationships with the most
challenging students
30Tough students will do things for teachers they
really like and respect.The quality of my
relationship with a student is far more powerful
than the sum total of all discipline techniques
known to humankind.
31They have to know that I care about them and
their lives beyond the classroomDo you know
their STORY Bill Gates
32Model 5Master Teachers are Strict Caring at
Same Time
- Positive relationship
- Build trust rapport
- High expectations
- Friendly, but firm
- Respect them
- Know the childs interest, strengths concerns
- Value the child unconditionally
- Consistent fair
- Encourage
- NEVER, NEVER, NEVER, NEVER GIVE UP!
33Wise teachers know that challenging kids
- Need encouragement instead of praise
- Need us to give this encouragement in private
- Need to test our sincerity by acting a bit worse
in the short term - Need us to keep reaching out even when it looks
like it isnt working
34Praise vs Encouragement
- Vague or very general
- Describe OUR feeling
- Certain to backfire with difficult students
- Example
- This is great!
- You did that very well
- I just love that
- Very specific
- Describes the STUDENTS effort
- Effective with all students
- Example
- You finished that!
- You stayed in your seat the whole time.
- You got 7 out of 10 correct. How does that feel?
35Module 5Positive Teacher/Student Relationships
Three Elements of Human Bonding
- Friendly Eye Contact
- Smile
- Friendly Touching
- (hand shake, high five, etc.)
- What do you do to connect with kids?
36Schools that post stern guards have kids who
become too sneaky to catch.Schools that
provide friendly supervision have kids who are
too busy bonding to misbehave.
37Module 5 0ne Sentence Interventions
- Start and end with I NOTICED THAT
- Example
- I noticed that you like to draw. After student
responds, finish with I noticed that. - I noticed that you like football.
- I noticed that you dont let anybody give
you a hard time. - Create a list of traits, patterns, and likes that
would be age-appropriate for the child or person
you wrote down as argumentative and try it. - Think of your Challenging Person and create a
list .
38Module 5 When Multiple Students Misbehave at
Once
- Identify the leader
- Find acceptable ways for these leaders to look
good in from of the group - Spend extra time building relationships with
these leaders - When leaders begin to misbehave, intervene
quickly (whisper, smile, walk away) - If the leader does not comply, and other students
begin to join in, fall back on your Recovery plan - Have brief one-on-one follow-up meetings with the
leaders
39Module 6Setting Limits with Enforceable
Statements
- Why its important for educators to set fair and
consistent limits with students - How to set such limits in ways that decrease
resistance and power struggles - How to set limits that are easily enforceable
- Specific examples of enforceable limits, or
enforceable statements - How to enforce limits through the use of questions
40The happiest students are those with teachers
who set reasonable limits.The happiest
teachers are those who know how to set AND
enforce these limits without having to raise
their voice.
41The key to setting enforceable limits is to
describe what WE are willing to do instead of
telling students what THEY should do.
42Module 6Enforceable Statements
- I assign full credit to papers handed in on time
- Ill listen when your voice is calm
- I take quiet classes to recess
- Ill listen to students who raise their hands
- Write your favorite Enforceable Statement
- ___________________________________
- Share it with your neighbor
43Module 6Enforceable Statements
- Turn the following unenforceable statements into
enforceable ones - 1. Unenforceable Quit arguing
- Enforceable ____________________
- 2. Unenforceable Hand your paper in on time.
- Enforceable ____________________
- 3. Unenforceable Treat each other with respect.
- Enforceable ____________________
- 4. Unenforceable Behave in the hall.
- Enforceable _____________________
- 5. Unenforceable Dont park your cars in the
teachers lot. - Enforceable__________________
- 6. Unenforceable Keep your hands to yourself.
- Enforceable _________________
- 7. Unenforceable Quiet Down.
- Enforceable ________________
44Module 6Enforce Limits with Questions
- Which papers receive full credit?
- Who do I listen to?
- Who do I take to recess?
- Who gets to stay with the class?
45Module 7Using Choices to Prevent Power
Struggles
- That a general sense of personal control is a
basic human emotional control - That most people will do almost anything to
regain control - How to share control to gain more of it
- Guidelines for sharing control through choices
within limits - Specific examples of appropriate versus
inappropriate choices
46There exists no limit to what people will do for
control.We can either give people control on
OUR termsor wait for them to take it on
THEIRS.Humans Are Willing to Harm
Themselves in Order to Regain a Sense of Control.
47Make lots and lots of little choices about issues
that dont cause a problem for youor anyone else.
- The more small choices you give, the easier your
job will be. - Example of Appropriate Choices
- Should this assignment be due next Monday or next
Tuesday - Feel free to do this in print or in cursive
- You may hang your backpacks on the hook or set
them on the floor just below it
48Teachers who give appropriate choices find
themselves involved in far fewer power struggles
than those who do not.
49Module 7Appropriate vs Inappropriate Choices
- Choices should not be threats in disguise
- Only give choices that wont make a problem for
you - Give options that will make you happy, regardless
of what your students decide - Give your students the small choices. Save the
big ones for yourself. - If your students dont make a choice within ten
seconds, choose for them. - Offer choices BEFORE your students become
resistantnot after.
50We dont have to give choices all of the
timethe key is to build a saving account by
giving choices when you feel the most energetic
and creative.
51Threats in choice form are still threats in
disguise.Threats backfire because they hoard
control instead of sharing it.Disguised
threatDo you want to behave or do you want to
get sent to the principal?
52Module 7Using Choices to Prevent Power
Struggles Experiment
- Make a list of choices you feel comfortable
giving. - Pick one or two of your favorites.
- Write these favorites on a slip of paper and tape
it to your desk. - See how your students react when they hear these
choices. - What kind of deposits are you willing to make?
53Module 8Quick Easy Preventive Interventions
- About research showing that effective teachers
spend most of their time and energy preventing
behavior problems instead of reacting to them - Specific interventions designed to prevent
disruptive behavior - Guidelines for using preventive interventions
versus using logical consequences - The importance of addressing discipline on two
levels prevention of misbehavior and
accountability for poor behavior - That positive teacher-student relationships are
the foundation of preventative discipline
54Quick Easy Preventive Interventions
- Give the evil eye (or a smile and wink from
across the room. - Walk toward the student while teaching.
- Stand close to the student and continue to teach.
- Establish eye contact and slightly shake your
head, indicting No. - Which teaching, gently place your hand on the
students shoulder. - Stop briefly and whisper something like, Can you
save that for later? - Change the students location within the
classroom. - Whisper something like, That behavior is fine
for after school. - Use an I-message (I find it hard to teach when
you do that. Thanks for stopping.) - Use an enforceable le statement (I allow
students to stay with the group when they are not
causing a problem.) - Provide choices (Are you going to be able to
stop that and stay? Or will you need to leave for
a while?) - Ask the student to leave for a brief Recovery
period. - Require the student to complete a problem-solving
form during recovery, before he can return to the
group. - Excuse the student to the office for a short
cooling off period. No counseling or discussion
takes place with the student during this period. - Give the student an appointment to talk with you
about the problem. - Restrict the student from the area of his
infraction until a new plan of action is
identified and written by the student. - Restrict the student from the area of the
infraction until you feel that another try is in
order. The student is allowed to be in this area
only when they are not causing a problem.
55Module 8Identify three adjectives that best
describe your most favorite teachers!
- Most Favorite Teacher 1
- ________________
- ________________
- ________________
- Most Favorite Teacher 2
- ________________
- ________________
- ________________
- Will you make the list?
- Whose list are you on?
56Sometime in the future you may be listed as
someones most favorite teacher.What
adjectives will they be using to describe you?
57Module 8Use Preventative Interventions When
- You can tell that a student is just about to
misbehave but hasnt yet - The misbehavior is relatively small yet
distracting - The misbehavior hasnt become a chronic problem
and the student is basically responsible - You need to put a quick stop to the behavior so
you can continue teaching
58Module 8 Apply Logical Consequences When
- A students behavior has created a major problem
for others - The misbehavior is small yet has become chronic
- The student needs to learn a real world lesson
about responsibility, respect, etc. - When you have the time to put together a plan
with the support of others
59Module 8Apply Logical Consequences When
- A Students Behavior has Created a Major Problem
for Others - The Misbehavior is Small Yet has Become Chronic
- The Student Needs to Learn a Real World Lesson
About Responsibility, Respect, et. - When You Have the Time to Put Together a Plan
with the Support of Others
60The more SMALL problems we ignore, the more BIG
one well have.Great teachers know that SMALL
fires are easier to extinguish than LARGE
ones.Ineffective teachers wait until they get
BURNED.
61Powerful and lasting solutions address both
UNDERLYING NEEDS and SYMPTOM MISBEHAVIORS.
- Focus heavily on prevention and meeting basic
needs. (affection, control, self-competence, peer
group status, increase of adult eyes smiles,
etc.) - When students misbehave, apply strong doses of
empathy and hold them accountable.
62Module 9Guiding Students to Own Solve Their
Problems
- Five steps for helping students learn to own
solve their problems - Why its important that educators avoid rescuing
students by solving their problems for them - How to avoid resistance while helping students
learn to problem-solve - Guidelines for determining when to allow students
to solve problems versus when to step in - The importance of keeping our disciplinary
discussions with students very brief
63Giving the Gift of Problem Solving
- When they PROBLEM SOLVEmessage is
- I am strong.
- I can think for yourself.
- I can solve the problems I encounter!
- I feel PROUD EMPOWERED!
- When you RESCUE themmessage is
- I am weak.
- I cant make it without me
- I cant think for yourself.
- I need other people to tell you what to do
- I feel helpless and useless.
64Module 9Five Steps for Helping Students to Own
Solve Their Problems
- Provide a strong dose of Empathy (statement).
- Hand the problem back in a caring way.
- (Ask,What are You Going to Do)
- Ask permission to share some solutions and
provide choices. (Offer a Menu of Suggestions.) - Help the student evaluate the potential
consequences of each choice. (Ask, How Will That
Work For You?) - Allow the student to either solve or not solve
the problemlet me know what you decide - Follow upwhat did you dohow did it work for
you?
65Great teachers resist the urge to rescue
students or to rub salt in the wound by
lecturing.Their students are allowed to solve
problems in ways that do not create additional
problems for anyone on the planet.Love
Logic teachers step in only when a students
problemor solutionis likely to cause lasting
harm to the student or others.
66Reflective Questions-Resources
- New idea to research implement
- Who am I going to share information
- By when will I try new idea or implement
- www.loveandlogic.com
- www.search-institute.com
- www.americaspromise.org
- www.at-risk.com
- www.nydic.org
- www.resiliency.com
- www.esc1.net