Title: Teacher Personal Styles and Environments
1Teacher Personal Styles and Environments
2Student Perspectives
- 1. Elementary studentts like school more
- 2. Middle school like school less and perceive
less choice, interest, and enjoyment - 4. Girls like school more than boys
- 5. Rural reported less interest and challenge and
liked it less than urban - 6. Gifted kids in magnet schools more challenged
than GT and nonGT in regular school
3Teacher-Control Style
4Teacher Control Style
5Teacher STYLE leading to failure
- BRICKWALL
- 1. Punisher
- 2. Guilter
- DICTATOR
- Classroom procedures and rules are enforced
without student input
6- Teacher style leading to failure
- JELLYFISH-Disengaged
- No structure, rules, or guidelines
- Inconsistent responses that tend to be reactive
and more punishing
- Students have complete independence over
classroom management with only institutional
constraints
7- Teacher style leading to success
- Encourages students to devise their own
classroom policies
- BACKBONE
- 1. Buddy
- 2. Monitor
- 3. Manager
8Where do Teachers Need for Control come from?
- Collected Experiences
- Educational and Work Background
- Personality Traits
- Views and Ideas on What Education Should Be
- Views on Roles of the Teacher vs. the Student
9Reciprocal Control View
Family History of Control
CLASSROOM Opportunities for Control
10Teachers Perceived Feelings of Being in Control
11SELF- EFFICACY
I Can!
- An individuals
- perception of their
- ability to perform a task
- Kauffman and Wong, 1991
12HIGH SELF- EFFICACY
- Allows teachers to perceive students as worthy of
effort and attention!! - Kauffman and Wong, 1991
I Can!
13LOW SELF-EFFICACY
- Reduced efforts or giving up entirely
- Avoid challenges
- Kauffman and Wong, 1991
I Cant
14Teachers Who Lack Confidence
- Low ability to set up effective behavior
management plans - Lower adjusting lessons/materials
- Lowest ability to manage classroom stress
15Teacher Perspectives
- Result of past experience
- Modifiable with success
- Directly influences students behavior and
attitudes
16Effectiveness Questions?
17Does structure help learning or inhibit
independence?
Versus
- Attainment of higher level learning objectives
will not be achieved with relative ease through
discovery learning instead, it will require
considerable instruction by a skilled teacher - Brophy (1986) in Heward, W. L. (2003)-
- Students minds are allowed very little freedom
when specific psychological processes academic
skills, and cognitive strategies are structured
for them the more structured the curriculum, the
more passive become our students Poplin (1988)
18Self-directed learning
Drill Practice
Versus
- Development of basic knowledge and skills to
levels of automatic and errorless performance
Brophy (1986) in Heward, W. L. (2003)-
- Students take responsibility for their learning,
which reduces behavior problems - Works for all students, especially those with
BD(Merriam Caffarella, 1999)
19Are multiple methods the answer?
- A defining characteristic of a good special
educator is knowledge and skill in using a
variety of instructional methods - Fuchs Fuchs (2000) Lovitt (1996)
20Is Frequent Assessment Important?
Versus
- But 85 stated that they never or seldom
collected and charted students performance data
to make instructional decisions
- SPED teachers indicated it is important to
collect performance data - Greenwood Maheady (1997) in Heward, W. L.
(2003) - Direct, objective and frequent measurement of the
student performance is one of the hallmarks in
Special Education
21Does Praise increase or decrease Motivation?
Versus
- Praise increases pressure to live up to praise
w/ unrealistic expectations of future success, - establishes a power imbalance,
- insults people if rewarded for unchallenging
behaviors - undermines intrinsic motivation
- Kohn (1993) -in Heward, W. L. (2003)
- Factors that contribute to low rates of teacher
praise in classroom (Heward, 2003) - will students will come to expect it?
- students should learn for intrinsic reasons.
- praising takes too much time
- it is unnatural to praise
- Praise, approval and other forms of positive
reinforcement have positive effects on student
behavior and achievement Alber Heward (2003)
Maag (2001)
22Do we build self-esteem or achievement?
Versus
- Self-esteem is more likely a product of high
achievement and accomplishments - Heward (2003)
- Teachers who worked to build student self-
- confidence had students with better academic
performance emotional health (Stough
Palmer, 2003)
23Teaching Practices with Students w/ BD
- 1.Cooperative practices
- 2. Information explicitness
- 3. High rates of choice
- 4. Support (caringness)
- 1. increase of on-task behavior
- 2. benefits BD students in sm. group settings
- less activity better attention
- 4. valued by students
24Yes!! High Expectations
- The most successful EBD teachers have high
expectations for students academic performance
and conduct - They can also, readily bring a students
behavior into line with their standards and
tolerance. - Reflective teachers had higher expectations
- M.Daugherty et al. (2003)Wong, Kauffman, Lloyd,
1991
25Not Patience?
- Frequent opportunities to respond, high
expectations, and fast-paced instruction are
especially important for students with learning
and behavioral problems, because to catch up they
must be taught more in less time, otherwise the
gap between a normal and a disabled student
becomes even greater. - Kameenui Simmons (1990)
- Patience is a positive and valued trait in the
classroom, but special education teachers often
translate it into - Slowed-down instruction
- Lowered expectations for performance
- Fewer opportunities to respond
- Fewer in class assignments
- Fewer homework assignments
- Heward (2003)
26But also Not DEMANDING!
- Low tolerance for misbehavior
- High standards of appropriate behavior
- These teachers were also the most resistant to
having a disabled student in their class - Walker Rankin (cited in Kauffman Wong, 1991)
27Is Emotional Climate Important?
- Negative fewer student gains
- Positive improved student self- concept and
attitude toward school - Morsink, Soar, Soar, Thomas, 1986
28Transactional AnalysisTA
29Theory
- Goal of TA to understand clearly what took
place during the transaction and how to sustain
mature transactions.
30Components of Transactions
- Three ego states ( more readily understood and
applied than Freudian id, superego and ego. - The Child
- The Parent
- The Adult
31The Child (before the age of 5)
- Impulsive, demanding, whining.
- Im not OK and you are (child, anxious
dependency of the immature, withdrawn,
depressed). - Conflict with desire to win parent approval and
desire to explore, touch, and test the world. - Non-verbal - tears, quivering lip, pouting,
temper tantrums, high pitched, whining voice,
rolling eyes, shrugging shoulders, downcast eyes,
teasing, delight, laughter, hand-raising for
permission to speak, nail-biting, nose-thumbing,
squirming and giggling. - Verbal - I wish, I want, I dunno, I gonna, I
dont care, I guess, when I grow up bigger,
biggest, better, best, (and many similar
superlatives).
32The Parent
- Shaped by external events, represents lifesaving,
talks with imperatives, directives, judgmental,
extremes, rules, truths recorded from
childhood, controls and nurtures - Non-verbal - furrowed brow, pursed lips, pointing
index finger, head-wagging, horrified look,
foot-tapping, hands on hips, arms folded across
chest, wringing hands, tongue-clicking, sighing,
patting another on the head. - Verbal - I am going to put a stop to this once
and for all, Now, always remember, Evaluative
words such as stupid, naughty, ridiculous,
disgusting, shocking, asinine, lazy, nonsense,
absurd, poor thing, poor dear, no! no!, sonny,
honey, How dare you?, cute, there, Now what?, Not
again!
33The Adult
- Controls himself and the environment, can predict
future incidents thinks rationally generalizes. - Ability to categorize and generalize. Adult tests
or checks out the rules and information of the
parent to see if they are right. The adult
determines when the feelings of the child can be
expressed and knows when to obey parent rules or
childs spontaneity - Non-verbal - Listening attentively.
- Verbal - How much, in what way, comparative,
true, false, probable, possible, unknown,
objective, I think, I see, it is my opinion, why,
what, when, who, and how. - Im OK - youre OK (mature adult at peace with
him/herself and others)
34Roles in Transactions
- Four life positions
- 1. Child rules Im not O.K., you are O.K.
- 2. Parent rules Im OK and youre not OK
(parent, criminal, psychopath, external locus of
control, battered kids). - 3. Desirable Im O.K., youre O.K.
35Application
- Communication Disruption is the result of tension
among the three inner forces. - Parent and Child rule Im not O.K., and others
are not O.K Everything is hopeless (suicidal,
homicidal).
36Personal Style Translated to Teaching
37Some things to ask ourselves Which role do we
play MOST of the time?
Weitzman, E (1992)
38Some things to ask ourselves
- The rescuer teacher role?
Weitzman, E (1992)
39Some things to ask ourselves
Weitzman, E (1992)
40Some things to ask ourselves
- The responsive teacher role?
Weitzman, E (1992)
41Some things to ask ourselves
- The passive teacher role?
Weitzman, E (1992)
42Some things to ask ourselves
Weitzman, E (1992)
43Some things to ask ourselves
Are entertaining or direction a child with his
own agenda?
Weitzman, E (1992)
44Some things to ask ourselves
Are we using a director role with a passive child?
Weitzman, E (1992)
45Some things to ask ourselves
The rescuer role with a reluctant child?
Weitzman, E (1992)
46References
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(2002). The relationship between teacher
practices and the task-appropriate and social
behavior of students with behavioral
difficulties. Behavior disorders, 27, 236-255. - Bussing, R., Gary, F.A., Leon, C.E., Garvan,
C.W., Reid, R. (2002). General classroom
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