7 Comments

  • Cat

    () 22 Mar 2011 04:03 am

    I teach ESL at a bilingual preschool, and find that with YLs, having a routine is the best. I start every day with the same set of activities before moving on to the new material, then have a certain way to clean up books and the classroom. Good luck!!

    Reply
  • Matt Gibson

    () 22 Mar 2011 08:03 am

    Yes, routine is definitely key for kids. If they know what they have to do, they will do it. But if they don’t, they won’t try to figure out what their job is. They’ll totally just start to talk and play.

    Reply
  • John

    () 22 Mar 2011 10:03 am

    I’d like to offer an alternative to your step #1, which I wholeheartedly disagree with, except for the part where you say it’s good for insecure teachers. If you need a power trip to make yourself feel good, being strict is a good place to start.

    I realize this is a matter of opinion, but I personally think that reward, rather than punishment, or “strictness” will help build your relationship with the students. For example (I assume there is some kind of reward system at your school) when I start a class, I say “hello” to my students, and give points to the team or individual who responds the most enthusiastically. I immediately have control because the students realize there is something at stake, and at the same time I have not punished or taken away points from anybody.

    I think as a life lesson, we all know how first impressions stick. If you start out strict, and slowly let your guard down, you have chosen “fear” when choosing to rule between “fear or love.” You may think your students are your friends, but they know that the “1st day of school strict teacher” exists inside of you.

    I don’t ever get angry or yell at my students. What does it solve?

    Reply
  • Matt Gibson

    () 22 Mar 2011 11:03 am

    Although, I have to disagree with you about discipline being a power trip for insecure people (I meant that new teachers who have not been trained and feel unsure about their teaching, will seek the approval of students in the absence of anyone else to give it), I totally agree that using a reward system is far better than using a punishment system. The carrot is always better than the stick.

    I must point out, though, that fear is also involved in the reward method. You are making students ‘afraid’ not to be rewarded. They are trying not to get left behind. Although this is better than being afraid of being punished, it is not altogether different and it is not love. You are putting students in competition with each other for the reward and for validation. They want to win because they are afraid to lose. Discipline is not an unconditional love situation.

    On a different not, your “fear or love” statement sounds incredibly similar to Bill Hicks’s “eyes of fear and eyes of love” monologue. Are you a fan? If so, check this out! http://www.americanthemovie.com/

    Reply
  • John

    () 24 Mar 2011 08:03 am

    The following is an excerpt from Rafe Esquith’s book “Teach like Your Hair’s on Fire,” which I don’t think any teacher (that actually likes kids and teaching, as opposed to just doing it to make money and pass the time inTaiwan) should attend another day at work without reading:

    “I know this because I’ve been there. I’ve fallen into the same trap. The simple truth is that most classrooms today are managed by one thing and one thing only: fear.

    The teacher is afraid: afraid of looking bad, of not being liked, of not being listened to, of losing control. The students are even more afraid: afraid of being scolded and humiliated, of looking foolish in front of peers, of getting bad grades, of facing their parents’ wrath.”

    The rest, and more, can be found here:
    http://www.teachervision.fen.com/classroom-management/teaching-methods/50765.html?page=1&detoured=1

    Reply
  • Allison

    () 25 Mar 2011 12:03 am

    This is a good blog with tips on classroom management. With good classroom management you should have fewer discipline problems, and when they arise you and the students should know what to expect.
    Also, it can be much more powerful to use positive reinforcement than simply catching kids when they are bad.
    http://www.smartclassroommanagement.com/

    Reply
  • Matt

    () 25 Mar 2011 02:03 am

    Those both sound like excellent resources. I’ll definitely take a look at them.

    Reply

Leave a Comment

Posting your comment...

Subscribe to these comments via email

http://www.matt-gibson.org/wp-content/themes/gloss