Managing Inappropriate Behavior in the Classroom
By The
Council for Exceptional Children, Reston , VA
PRIVATE The atmosphere of
the classroom has much to do with student behavior. The setting
should be appealing, with attention given to varying the
physical features and the schedule to prevent boredom in both
the teacher and the student.
Teachers should let
students know specific do’s and don’ts: which behaviors are
expected or desired and which will not be tolerated. Then
teachers must consistently reinforce the desired behaviors while
ignoring or in some other way extinguishing the undesirable
ones.
What About Establishing
Rules?
Some teachers make too
many rules, and the children, confused or frustrated, ignore
them. Teachers should establish only a few rules and should
specify the consequences for not following them.
How Can Teachers
Increase Student Motivation for Academic Tasks?
One approach could be to
make one activity contingent on another: students can earn time
in one favored activity by performing well in another.
Students having difficulty
in one subject area could serve as tutors to younger students in
that same skill, dependent upon the older child’s satisfactory
performance.
Classroom privileges such
as helping to distribute papers can also be made contingent on
performance.
What About Token
Economies?
This approach, in which
students are given a mark for rewards redeemable at a later
time, can help students learn. However, token economies are
usually costly.
In addition, results of
research investigating whether or not performance is maintained
after the system is removed have been discouraging.
How Can Teachers
Decrease Unwanted Behavior?
Teachers can reward a
student when a specified behavior does not occur, or when it
occurs below a designated frequency or duration level. Over
correction is another possibility. Teachers instruct students to
correct the inappropriate behavior and execute the act within a
natural sequence of events.
For example, in one case a
child who mouthed objects was told “no” and required to brush
his teeth and wipe his lips with a washcloth each time he put a
potentially harmful or unhygienic object in his mouth.
What Role Does
Punishment Play in Classroom Management?
Punishment can be defined
as a technique that decelerates the frequency of a behavior when
it is given contingent on that behavior. Reprimands, frowns,
reminders and other subtle expressions can serve as punishment,
and can be very effective when used appropriately.
A possible disadvantage of
punishment is that its effects may over generalize, eliminating
more behaviors that originally intended. Another difficulty is
that the student might associate the technique with the person
who administered it, causing ill feeling toward the teacher.
What About Taking
Something Away to Decrease Unwanted Behaviors?
Teachers can take away the
opportunity to obtain reinforcement, attention, or a portion of
some event contingent on target behavior. These three procedures
are also known as timeout, extinction, and response cost.
Timeout can involve
physically removing a student for short periods from the
reinforcing event or area.
Ignoring tantrums is a
withdrawal of attention that may lead to extinction of the
problem behavior.
Taking away tokens or
points for disobeying rules is an example of response cost.
If a Teacher Can’t
Concentrate on Individual Problems, are there Group Methods that
will work?
i.
Independent group contingencies. Each student receives the same
consequence for stated behavior, as in staying after class for
out-of-seat behavior. Although easy to administer, this approach
does not take into account individual student differences.
ii.
Dependent
group contingency. The same consequence is given to all members
of a group. In order to receive the consequence, a selected
member must perform at or better than a specified level. One
student’s behavior can influence the group’s consequence. This
approach can improve peer group behavior at the same time.
A program in which a
student accumulates free time for the entire class by on-task
behavior may encourage fellow students to support his
appropriate activity and not engage him in off-task interaction.
i.
Group
consequence, contingent on group. The entire class is considered
as one group. An example is making free time dependent on
appropriate behavior: an individual’s inappropriate activity
reduces the entire class’s reward.
This approach might be
effective when several individuals are behaving
inappropriately. However, repercussions might occur if group
members feel unduly punished due to the behavior of an
individual student.
What Are Some General
Guidelines For Managing Inappropriate Behavior?
Examine the events that
maintain students’ behavior.
Keep data to determine
whether or not an approach is working. Compare behavior during
baseline and treatment phases.
Consider a variety of
techniques.
Combine approaches to be
more effective. For example, a teacher might praise appropriate
behavior while ignoring inappropriate behavior.
Concentrate on teaching
new behaviors and deal with inappropriate ones only to the
extent that they interfere with the individual’s or group’s
learning.
The information in this
digest is taken from “Managing Inappropriate Behaviors in the
Classroom” by Thomas C. Lovitt, Reston , VA : The Council for
Exceptional Children, 1978, 44 pp. (ED 157 255)
What follows in this
booklet is a comprehensive outline of what the young Muslims are
expected to learn during their time in the Al-Husayni Madressah.
Teachers are expected to follow and maintain this course outline
to the best of their ability – keeping in mind the level of
their students and their capabilities.
Please note that since all
teachers will be following this outline and each subsequent unit
requires that the students have learnt the previous module, it
is imperative that all of the information contained in this
document is conveyed to the students so that they may succeed in
their process of learning. If it is not possible to cover all of
the information in the school year, then this must be noted in
the teacher’s final report and notes so that when the students
enter into their new academic year of Madressah, they can
continue from where they left off.