Classroom Discipline Plan
Classroom Discipline Plan
Classroom Discipline Plan
My underlying premise for effective discipline is that people rise or fall to the level of expectation. Members of any community (i.e. students and staff in school) strive to exhibit the values and standards that are held, expressed, and reinforced within their society, their family/friends, and them. Children must gain self-control and the ability to recognize social and environmental cues. Further, they must gain an appreciation of themselves and others as individual within a community where personal decisions affect their future. There are four types of management that I use in my classroom to help make children accountable and responsible for their choices: preventative, supportive, corrective and proactive. I have broken down the classroom management plan into seven rules that guide my discipline structure. From my experience teaching middle school, students know and understand the basic courtesy and respect needed to work cooperatively with the teacher and others. I let these seven rules guide me in how I deal with students in my class. The seven rules that I have identified are followed with the supporting theory or ideas of researchers in classroom discipline. This plan is written as a guide or philosophy from which my daily interactions with students are derived.
Preventive Discipline/Management
Rule #1: Assess, clarify, and communicate needs and expectations. Student and teacher needs, rights, and expectations will be openly discussed on the first day of class and reviewed periodically as a preventive measure. Expectations will be clearly articulated while acceptable behavior and consequences, along with the reasons behind them are agreed upon, taught and reinforced with examples, models, and reminders. This is done in my class by role-playing, class meetings and discussions. Organizing and planning the environment-- the physical, social, and cognitive arrangement is an important step in preventing unwanted behaviors. The classroom is set up with lab tables facing each other in groups of four students. Classrooms and other school spaces must be safe and comfortable where in students can focus on being productive. Fostering a sense of belonging helps ensure happy, content students who are secure in their identity-- knowing they are free to express themselves within the classrooms established limits. This is done in my class through informal discussions about current events and happenings in the students lives as well as mine. Academic challenge and active engagement will always be a focus of my instruction: all community members must be encouraged to try new experiences and accept opportunities to grow and develop as people and as students. Good classroom managers understand classroom dynamics and know their students well. A teacher must have a strong awareness of the activity within his/her busy classroom, and must be able to recognize individual student's needs. Knowing and using the goal, action, outcome model of social information processing can help with identifying students needs and goals. Student needs/rights/expectations: Students' basic needs include survival, belonging, power, fun, and freedom (Glasser). They have a right to learn without
being disrupted by others. They expect the teacher to facilitate that learning by setting limits on disruptive student behavior (Cantor and Cantor). Teacher needs/rights/expectations: A teacher needs the full attention of each student. He has the right to establish optimal learning environments. He may expect behavior that contributes to optimal student growth (Cantor and Cantor). Further expectations of the student: The student is expected to come prepared to class with appropriate class materials and a willingness to learn. The students are expected to behave respectfully to the teacher and to other students. Furthermore, the student is expected to accept the consequences of misbehavior. Further expectations of the teacher: The teacher is expected to consider interesting curricula which meet the students' needs (listed above), to provide stimulating and useful lessons, and to always ask the students to be the best that they can be (Ginott). Furthermore, the teacher is expected to use teaching practices that are likely to motivate students to engage in worthwhile learning activities.
Rule #2: Create a warm and nurturing classroom climate. The classroom will be a place where a student feels welcome and at home. Students need to feel safe and accepted, so ridicule and sarcasm are not allowed. Mutual respect and the Golden Rule is the key for maintaining this climate (Charles). Physical environment: The classroom should be clean and pleasantly decorated with student creations, yet free from distracting stimuli. The desks should be arranged to allow students to work cooperatively as well as allowing the teacher to circulate freely and efficiently (Jones). Treatment of students: Each student deserves to be treated with dignity and respect (Glasser and Curwin & Mendler). Students should be personally greeted at the door. They should be given as much personal attention as possible during and outside of class. Esprit de Corps: Although there are many causes of Esprit de Corps, a teacher's enthusiasm, level of concern for the students, and class involvement all can affect the level of class togetherness. This force can benefit cooperative learning exercises, and make the curricula seem much more enjoyable. Rule #3: Democratically develop a set of rules and consequences. Teachers and students will create discipline plans including rules with clear and effective consequences (Dreikurs, Cantor, and Glasser). The rules will be agreed upon and understood by everyone in the class. It should be understood that when rules are broken, consequences will be applied fairly and consistently. Jointly develop class rules based on expectations and needs: The teacher solicits help to develop a set of classroom rules and responsibilities (Cantor and Cantor). The ideal list would be short and reflect the concepts of mutual respect and personal responsibility. Discuss Logical Consequences: Logical consequences are results that consistently follow certain behavior. They are explained in advance and agreed to by the students. It is hoped that by understanding the consequences of disruptive behavior, that students will make better choices. Consequences should be related to the misbehavior so the students can see the connection. For example, if you
choose not to work on your assignment, you will stay after school until it is finished. Display the rules and consequences prominently: Once the class has developed its list of rules, they should be displayed as a reminder to those who may wish to break them. This gives the teacher something to point at when requesting certain behavior to stop. Rule #4: Develop a daily routine, yet remain flexible. Students will often misbehave if they don't know exactly what they should do and when. I plan on avoiding this dilemma by installing class routines and procedures, which allow the student to begin and complete work expeditiously. Every minute counts: As part of an effective routine, it is best for students to begin work immediately after the bell rings. Fun problems or interesting reflection topics can be put on the overhead projector to meaningfully occupy the student until attendance is taken. The activity could lead directly into the day's lesson. Lesson Plans: Part of the class time should be spent covering the daily lesson. During this time it is understood that only one person speaks at a time. Students who have questions are encouraged to raise their hands to ask them. Once the lesson has been presented, and all questions have been answered, the students are allowed to work cooperatively on their assignment. Providing Assistance: Once the lesson has been presented, the teacher is free to answer individual student questions. During this time, the teacher must be aware of what is happening in all areas of the classroom. Therefore, it is important to give "efficient help" to the students. This type of help may also reduce the number of cases of the "dependency syndrome" - students asking questions without actually needing help (Jones). Managing assignment collection: Each class has its own basket for daily assignments. At the end of the hour, on the way out of class, students drop off their completed assignments for grading. Restructure or Reschedule: It is understood that lesson plans can be affected by conditions beyond the control of the teacher. (It's sunny, can't we go outside?) There may be cases where class activities must be restructured or rescheduled to accommodate the changed conditions. It is possible, with some ingenuity, to make the situation a learning experience, beneficial to all. Rule #5: Make learning more attractive and fun for the student. Schools exist for the students, and not for the teachers. It is important for me to expend every effort necessary to make the curriculum relevant, the lessons interesting, and the activities enjoyable. The result will be students engaged and active participants in the learning process. Genuine Incentives: Students respond well to the anticipation of preferred group activities, referred to as genuine incentives by Jones. It is possible to get an entire class on task if the incentive is available to all students, and attractive to the entire group so as to merit extra effort. The incentive should be both stimulating to the students, and educationally valuable (Jones). Active student involvement: The teacher can make learning more attractive by giving a coherent and smoothly paced lesson presentation (Kounin). Getting the lesson going, keeping it going with smooth transitions, avoiding abrupt changes
that interfere with student activity, and postponing satiation are important in maintaining positive student behavior associated with being on task. Seatwork Variety: Teachers should vary the way they present their lessons from day to day. They may demonstrate, lead a group activity or discussion, or have students work quietly on their own. Routines can become ruts if there is not some variety to "spice things up" (Kounin). Focus on student needs: Lesson topics should be relevant to the students if at all possible. Teaching strategies should be congruent with student learning styles. The teacher should help the students develop learning goals that are real, attainable, and a source of pride. Activities should be fun for the students (Curwin and Mendler).
behavior, and attempt to give the student attention when he is not demanding it. This method encourages students to seek motivation from within, instead of depending on attention from without (Dreikurs) Avoid Power Struggles: It is important that the authority figure in the classroom (the teacher) not engage in power struggles with students. It is best to redirect a power-seeking student's behavior by offering some position of responsibility or decision-making. Address the behavior, not the character of the student: The teacher has the power to build or destroy student self-concept and personal relationships. Good communication addresses the situation directly, letting the student decide whether their behavior is consistent with what they expect of themselves (Glasser). Invoking Consequences: To be effective, consequences must be applied consistently. They should never be harmful physically or psychologically to the student. When they are invoked, the student should understand that he has chosen them by misbehaving (Cantor and Cantor). Prevent Escalation: Sometimes students are unwilling to listen to the teacher. At this point, a teacher can help prevent misbehavior from escalating by talking (and listening) with the student privately, and rationally discuss the problem behavior. The privacy enhances the possibility for a constructive discussion. Confrontation with an unwilling student could make the teacher appear weak in front of the class (Curwin and Mendler). Rule #7: When all else fails, the student will respectfully be removed from the class. Continued disruptions will not be tolerated in my classroom. They are detrimental to the overall objective that all students will become active and effective learners. Therefore, such students will be respectfully removed from class. Insubordination Rule: This rule states: "If a student does not accept the consequence for breaking a class rule, then he or she will not be allowed to remain in the class until the consequence is accepted." This rule should be made clear to the students from the first day, and should be strictly enforced with the administrations approval, of course. (Curwin and Mendler). Conference: A teacher may request a one-on-one conference with the student to discuss a specific behavior problem. The goal of this conference is to gain insight so that helpful guidance may be provided (Cantor and Cantor). For more serious behavioral matters, the teacher may also request a conference with the student's parent or guardian with the same purpose. Behavioral Plan: This plan is for students who do not respond to conventional discipline. The plan can be written in contract form, and should include expected behaviors for the student, positive recognition for compliance, and consequences for failing. The plan should address one or two significant problems at a time, and should use consequences that differ from the previously failed ones used by the rest of the class.
Proactive Discipline
Reinforcement of appropriate and appreciated activity encourages proper behavior, responsible living, and individual autonomy. It is essential to acknowledge good decisions and positive actions-- this feed back not only reinforces the action, but
redefines expectations. A good teacher attempts to create an environment where in proper behavior is a given not an exception, and where all community members support and encourage positive problem solving and conflict resolution. Giving kids control is sometimes challenging, however it is a necessary and significant gift that will help them grow into mature and responsible adults. Instead of always forcing discipline teachers must be willing to give children the opportunity to make choices and be held accountable for their decisions. The only way to teach responsibility is to give responsibility. A teacher who demonstrates trust in and respect for student decisions empowers children to autonomously achieve expectations established by their community. When good behavior is rewarded, and wise choice making is supported by the community students are highly likely to act in socially appropriate ways. Although no classroom discipline plan can account for all the actions and behaviors of students, having a plan that guides a teachers decision making allows for the flexibility to deal with most situations. The most important part of my classroom discipline plan is based on a genuine respect and understanding of the needs of the students. I have always followed a plan similar to this one but I am now able to articulate why I conduct my classroom management the way that I do. Drawing from several models and taking what I see to be the best from each I am able construct a plan that works for my middle school students and myself.