A Good Classroom Management Strategy
This is a term I first saw in video lessons of Cult of Pedagogy, a method I believe most teachers use to redirect the attention of one or two students who are off track, not listening while we are giving the lesson. So the way it works was, instead of calling the students’ names and yell at them, just asking a content-related question so that their attention can be redirected back to the content everyone else is working on. The class thus will still focus on the content and not the students who are off track. Sounds pretty familiar! But wait! The first few minutes of the video was the usual introduction as I expected it to be - Jennifer (I hope she doesn’t mind me calling her that) explains how this method works. When she finally talks about why the specific type of questions she chose to ask the distracted students. I was totally in awe!! This is what she said, ...the question needs to be easy enough so the students can answer, so that the dignity of the students and teacher-student relationship can be maintained and preserved. Well, if you are as shock as I am, we are probably coming from similar education system.... I guess teachers who are like me raised and educated by the traditional Asian system can share similar feelings. When practice this method, what we normally do is to directly put the kids on the spot with no mercy so that they know what they are doing is wrong and humiliation is something they deserve. Empathetic Mind Does yelling at the kids change anything? The answer is obvious if we look at what’s happening in the class and on the streets - the escalated tension that finally erupted in upper grades, and the vrooming motorcycles in crowded streets. If I had learned anything from this video, a teacher’s empathetic mind is probably the beginning of any educational revolution here in Taiwan. How we talk to the kids matters more than what we preach. You might say but it’s inevitable and the kids are ... but, seriously, if we WANT to see any changes, it has to to start with ourselves. Here is the link to the video if you are interested in the original video clip: Distract the Distractor by Jennifer Gonzales. Comments are closed.
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Winnie ChiuAn enthusiastic ELT/CLIL teacher, passionate educator, researcher, teacher trainer, Apple Teacher. Seesaw ambassador and curriculum developer. Archives
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