Categorias: Todos - skills - feedback - interventions - behaviour

por David Chiu 1 ano atrás

115

Managing Challenging Students

To effectively manage challenging students, it is essential to shift the perspective from viewing behavior problems as mere misbehavior to understanding them as skill deficits. This approach involves collaborative problem-solving with the child rather than punitive measures like time-outs, detentions, or suspensions, which do not address underlying issues or teach necessary skills.

Managing Challenging Students

Managing Challenging Students

Disruptive, oppositional, special needs/disability (physical, intellectual, learning)

Behavioural challenges:

#1 reason for time taken from teaching

#1 stressor for teachers

#1 cause of teacher dropout

#1 cause of referrals for mental health

ADHD
Where possible, modify environment and differentiate task
Anticipate: - environment of high energy - prompt student to recall rules of conduct
Reinforcement: "Positives before negatives" reinforcers that backup in-class tokens must change more often
consequences: more immediate, more frequent (feedback), higher magnitude
instructions: clear, brief, visualized

Interventions

Popular interventions that don't work: - don't solve problems - don't teach skills


5. Review model peers
4. Provide student choice


3. Adjust task difficulty
2. Preview (provide predictability)
1. Give choice
  1. Offer the student up to three options and ask them to choose only one.
  2. Let them know how much time they have to make a decision and wait for their response.
  3. Finally, reinforce the option they chose so that they’re fully aware of the pros and cons of their choice.


Goal
rewards desirable behaviour
Visualize proper behaviours

Proper behaviour poster

Behaviour Learning Ladder

Visualize positive behaviour expectations and feedback.

Start at the bottom each day.


Ladder steps

  1. I am being a great role model
  2. I am going above and beyond expectations
  3. I am making responsible choices
  4. I am ready to learn
  5. I can make better choices independently
  6. I can improve my behaviour
  7. I need to reflect on my attitude and behaviour


Constructive Feedback: "“William, I know you can get this work done, I want you to finish the first four questions before lunch, if you do this, I’ll move you back up the ladder.”


fosters self-esteem
supports growth

Functional Behavioural Assessment (underlying cause)

5. Monitor
4. Intervention plan
peers, para-professionals (counsellor)
plan behavioural contracts, token economy

fade out extrinsic rewards over time

teach problem solving skills
teach relaxation skills

counting down

deep breathing

animal posture

plan replacement behaviour

more appropriate ways to get attention

teach student to recognize signs, triggers

feelings cards

plan ways to avoid trigger, modify learning enviro
3. Hypothesis statement
manipulate environment, observe again to confirm
2. Identify causes (biological, social, affective, environmental)
Is there a performance deficit? (can but not always)
Is there a skill deficit?

frustration tolerance

flexibility

problem solving

What's the payoff? (escapes, avoids, gets)
need multiple sources (maybe contextual, specific teacher)

direct observation

ABC analysis (antecendent, behaviour, consequence)

indirect questioning

to student themselves


to stakeholders


1. Define the behaviour concretely

Change your lens

Challenging = Lacking skills to be successful (expectations exceed skills)
From "Bad behaviour modification" to "problem solving" cause of behaviour
problem solve together with child
behaviour = fever = symptom