Главная страница «Первого сентября»Главная страница журнала «Английский язык»Содержание №8/2007

METHODS OF TEACHING

The Road to Discipline

Some Helpful Advice to Young Teachers

Every new teacher worries about discipline. What if my pupils won’t behave? How do I get them to listen to me?

Good discipline involves many factors but it depends first on your own attitudes and understandings. These determine the kinds of relationships that you can establish in the classroom.

To be a “good disciplinarian” – neither a martinet nor an intimate friend but an adult with whom pupils can work effectively – you must begin with:

A genuine regard and concern for children. Any child, whether 8 or 18, whether slow or bright, whether of one ethnic background or another, can tell instinctively that you like him and respect him and will react accordingly.

An understanding of the ways in which children are alike. Big or small, bold or shy, they seek security and recognition, they thrive on achievement and appreciation, and they want to cooperate and to belong if you give them the chance.

An understanding of the ways in which children are different. There are obvious differences such as size, sex, appearance and personality. There are less obvious differences such as abilities, talents, aspirations, social maturity and emotional reactions. You can never get to know your pupils completely, but the more you recognize their differences and learn about them as individuals, the more successful you will be in your relationships with them.

Of course, as important as attitudes and understandings are, they are not enough in themselves. They are a beginning. To proceed further along the road to discipline, you must grasp the answers to some key questions. Also you must be able to apply those answers in actual practice.

Here are the questions – and the answers:

I. How can I encourage pupils, by my manner in the classroom, to behave and to work with me?

A. Act as if you expect pupils to be orderly from the minute they walk into your room. Show that you take this type of conduct for granted.

B. Have everyone’s attention before you start talking. Stop when there is noise or inattention.

C. Speak quietly but audibly. Don’t shout, nag or repeat.

D. Don’t talk too much. Ask questions. Involve the pupils in discussion or activities.

E. Be businesslike but also be friendly. Smile on occasion. Show that you have a sense of humor but within reasonable limits.

F. Without fuss hold pupils accountable for lateness, for absence, for homework, for other obligations.

G. Maintain your dignity but don’t be pompous or perfect. Admit your own mistakes.

H. Treat minor misfortunes calmly but humorously, for example, books falling or liquid being spilled. Then pass over the situation quickly and continue with the lesson or activity.

II. How should I handle group infractions or misbehavior?

A. Don’t wait until a class is out of hand. When pupils become restless, change your activity, your approach or your tempo.

B. Focus on individual culprits rather than the class in general. Try to divert ringleaders by asking them questions or by assigning them to appropriate tasks or activities.

C. Keep your temper and your poise. Pupils may test you to find out how far they can go but they are not being personal.

D. Avoid making threats, but if you do make a threat, carry it out.

E. If you continue to have difficulty, analyse possible causes: your manner or attitude, your management of routines, your teaching procedures, your relationships with individual offenders, etc.

REFUSAL TO DO WORK OR OPEN DEFIANCE

Make notation; then speak to the pupil privately.

FOOLING AROUND OR HORSEPLAY

Keep class working so that the offender or offenders are isolated. Insist calmly but firmly that nonsense be stopped.

Check work and make notation in marking book. If misbehavior stops quickly, continue lesson as if nothing has happened.

If misbehavior continues or is repeated, see offender or offenders after class or after school. Follow up as needed.

IMPROPER LANGUAGE

Indicate calmly that language is improper and uncalled for. Don’t take obscenity as personal affront but as offense against the class and school.

If remark is just one outburst of temper, keep your own record but try to adjust matter by talking to the pupil in private.

Don’t insist on a public apology. If pupil is repentant, his attitude will be evident to the class.

If improper language is repeated or is part of a poor behavior pattern, send referral form in accordance with school regulations.

LEAVING ROOM WITHOUT PERMISSION

Don’t try to stop pupil by physical force. Send another pupil with the note to inform the suitable school official. Mark the pupil as “cutting” for the time he is out, and follow the school procedure for cutting. Continue your lesson. Follow up when the pupil returns, using resources at your disposal. Adjust your actions to the causes and the pupil’s attitude.

ARGUMENT BETWEEN PUPILS

Separate pupils quickly. Seat them in different parts of the room. If the argument stops, see each pupil separately.

Make certain the argument has been settled. If the argument threatens to continue after class or after school, notify the office.

If the argument continues in class, send one of the disputants out with another pupil, either to an adjoining teacher or an office, with a note. If a fight starts, send for assistance and try to break up the fight with the help of other pupils.

Don’t step in between the combatants unless they are younger or smaller children.

MISSING POSSESSIONS

Give the culprit a chance to the return article immediately without penalty, and possibly without detection.

If the article is not returned and you find the culprit, send a referral form at once. Theft, as distinct from mere mischief, is a serious offense. If the article is not returned or discovered, send promptly for a school official. Keep the class in room until the official arrives.

Note: It is not possible to cover every type of infraction or to give a precise formula for coping with each infraction. The situations and measures described are illustrative and are intended to serve as a guide. Much will depend on your own judgment, also on the regulations and procedures in the school where you are assigned.

III. How can I get pupils to work with me not because they have to but because they want to?

A. Show an individual interest in your pupils – their health, their problems, their achievements.

B. Establish class procedures and standards of behavior in cooperation with the pupils so that these standards and procedures are theirs as well as yours.

C. Trust pupils without being an “easy mark”. Take a pupil’s word unless you have good reason not to. Make the pupils feel that you believe in them so long as they do not take advantage of your confidence.

D. Give pupils a feeling of success through assignment of reasonable tasks and your personal encouragement.

E. Praise the class and individual pupils for good work, cooperation or improvement. Show that you appreciate their efforts and abilities.

F. Stress the positive what should be done rather than what should not be done.

G. Be fair and consistent. Don’t have favorites or “goats.” Don’t accept infractions at one time and condemn them at another time.

H. Show pupils the same respect and courtesy that you expect from them. Avoid sarcasm. Don’t be arrogant or condescending.

I. Show your pupils that you like them and are concerned about them. They will respond in kind.

Now that you have read the questions and the answers, have you completed your short course in discipline? Not quite. Even if you were to apply successfully the techniques and precepts suggested here, you would still need the following:

Careful advance preparation combined with systematic routines. Orderly procedures and efficient class management make it easy and even necessary for pupils to behave. What is more important, perhaps, is that such procedures provide an environment in which your pupils and you feel comfortable and secure. This kind of environment is a prime requisite for good discipline.

Functional lesson planning and effective teaching. The two go together like love and marriage. In a similar manner, teaching and discipline are closely related. To give instruction and promote learning, you must have orderly conditions. Where pupils are not learning because they are not well motivated or well taught, they will have little reason to be well behaved.

A concept of discipline as one aspect of guidance. Your approaches in the classroom must include varied techniques and resources that will maintain order. However, these are often short-term and relatively superficial measures. In the long run, in any school or classroom, discipline should be a natural by-product of the atmosphere established by good mental hygiene and perceptive counseling. Pupils should behave because they are well-adjusted, because they are achieving inner satisfactions, because they can get help with their problems, and because they have developed a self-image which gives them confidence and hope.

This does not mean that you can substitute permissiveness for order.

It does mean that:

  • Your main goal is guidance rather than discipline as such.

  • You must watch for the pupil who needs help rather than “discipline” – often the quiet child who tends to remain unnoticed.

  • You should consult with and profit from the guidance personnel in your school. They may have various designations – guidance counselor, educational and vocational counselor, teacher-counselor, grade advisor – but they will not be hard to find.

A constant self-inquiry into the variability of discipline. Why do some of my groups or pupils behave better than others? Why is my discipline better on some days than others? Why do some techniques work better for me than others? You will never arrive at final answers to questions like these, but trying to get the answers will make you a more effective disciplinarian – and a more effective teacher. One additional word of advice: every once in a while you are going to have a “bad day” when nothing seems to go right. Just remember that this happens to every teacher. Don’t brood. Tomorrow will be better.

As you gain in experience and skill, you will come to realize that discipline, as large as it may loom at first, is not an end but a means – a tool by which you can expedite the learning, the progress, the growth of your pupils. When this concept of discipline becomes an actuality in your teaching, you will know that you are well along the road to a successful career.

By A.T. Tuarsheva,
Lyceum, Chabez, Karachaevo-Cherkessiya