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There is
one true key to
successful
behavior
management. It
doesn’t matter
how many
effective
teaching skills
and useful
behavior
strategies you
have in your
arsenal; without
this, your
efforts will
eventually come
unstuck.
The secret
ingredient is…
the
teacher-pupil
relationship.
You see, when
you really get
to know a pupil
you become aware
of their
triggers – the
things that
upset them and
cause all sorts
of problems in
class. And when
you’re dealing
with children
who carry all
kinds of
emotional
baggage and
flare up for no
apparent reason,
this is valuable
knowledge.
After all…
stopping
behavior
problems from
occurring is
much easier when
you know in
advance what
causes them!
When you take
the time to get
to know a pupil,
you find out
what they enjoy,
what they like
doing and what
their interests
are. With this
information you
have the power
to make all your
lessons
instantly
appealing and
your
conversations
with them
stimulating.
When you reach
out and get to
know any child
in school you
show them
they’re valued
as people. Once
they learn this,
their ability to
take an active
role in other
positive
relationship is
improved; they
fit in better
and so are less
likely to get
into serious
trouble and less
likely to spoil
your lessons.
Also, when you
show you're
actually
interested in
them as
individuals they
will respect and
trust you.
Pupils will
behave much
better for the
teacher they
trust and
respect.
Once you get to
know them
anything really
is possible;
doors are opened
to a whole new
world of
communication,
cooperation, fun
and mutual
respect.
The best
technique I’ve
found for
helping you
discover their
likes, dislikes,
hobbies,
passions and
interests is…
…an age-old
salesman’s tool
called the ‘Record
Card’.
Record cards are
used by salesmen
to record a
client’s
personal
information and
so enable him to
be more
‘familiar’ on
his next visit.
Each time he
returns to the
same client and
has a
conversation,
more information
is recorded on
the card. It
might be a chat
about the
football last
night –
revealing his
favorite team
for example or a
few words about
his family.
These tidbits
gradually build
up and form
library of
useful
information
which can be
drawn on to
deepen the
relationship
during the next
meeting. It’s a
well known fact
that people
would rather
have a
conversation
about their own
lives and
interests than
anything else,
so the salesman
that does this
will always make
the sale.
The huge benefit
of the
information on
the record card
is that it
enables the
salesman to
tailor the
conversation,
and even new
product lines,
to the client’s
interests, needs
and desires.
When this is
done, the client
is far more
receptive and
likely to buy.
We can discover
the passions and
interests of our
students very
quickly through
our own simple
version of the
Record Card – a
fun
questionnaire to
give to the
worst pupils in
class as a
fill-in
activity.
The information
you glean from
these completed
questionnaires
is priceless and
these are just
some of the ways
you can use it…
-
Tailor
rewards to a
pupil’s
interests
making them
have more
effect. (if
you have a
pupil who’s
nuts about a
certain
breed of dog
there’s no
point in
giving him a
sticker with
a car on
it!)
-
Provide
reading
material –
magazines,
journals and
books – that
relate to
their
specific
areas of
interest –
for break
times, quiet
reading
sessions,
registration
etc.
-
Plan really,
really
interesting
lessons! I’m
talking
about
lessons that
grab them
from the
word go and
hold their
attention
all the way
through.
This is only
possible
when they’re
actually
interested
in what
you’re
talking
about. You
might choose
to plan a
series of
lessons for
the whole
class around
a topic that
several
pupils are
interested
in, or cover
a skill such
as narrative
writing and
encourage
them to
write a
story about
their
subject of
interest.
-
Use them as
a
relationship-building
tool. They
enable you
to strike up
conversation
on a topic
you know
they’re
interested
in and this
is crucial
with ‘hard
to reach’
kids – it
shows you
care about
them and are
interested
in them as
people.
Being able
to chat with
a pupil on
their level
is magical
and is the
short-cut to
having far
fewer
discipline
problems.
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