On: The "Curriculum" of Conduct



On:  The “Curriculum" of Conduct
Colleen Rogers

Today I got to sit in on three inaugural webinars that featured the latest strands in “educational trending”.  Every teacher has witnessed many cycles of these buzz-word initiatives. Each initiative is hard to recall individually, but none of them generally seems to last too long. 

My colleagues and I have been trained “soldiers” in everything from “No Child Left Behind” to “Race to the Top” to “Common Core”.  It is part of our accountability to assure that the tenants of these “trending initiatives” are met at the classroom level.  We dutifully attempt to execute each, even if we don’t know how to do so, or we aren’t sure why the directives remain in place.

The framework for each of these “movements” is, in an obtuse way, a reflective mirror of the veiled concerns society has for the  “shortcomings” of our children.  Today’s webinars featured three themes--student apathy, students learning from failure, and teachers modeling humanity.  My takeaway from the webinars...

1.    Students don’t care
2.   Students give up
3.   Students don’t know how to treat others 

Notice that none of the three webinars dealt with the actual instruction of content.  Essentially, teachers are not truly teaching much subject matter anymore...they are teaching students the rudimentary social skills that customarily would have once been parental responsibilities.

Our first presenter addressed student apathy indicators with these pointed questions:

What happens when a teacher assigns a project and only 3/20 students submit completed work?  At what point do students have a “wearing off” of their own motivation for doing things in a class?  What gets in a student's way before they complete tasks? When do students start to “not care” in the classroom?

Our speaker presented the Self-Determination Theory, and the ways a teacher might re-focus students to value intrinsic vs. extrinsic reasons for learning.  The key to doing this is threefold:

1.    Give the student autonomy--example:  let students make independent choices for formatting their class projects
2.   Recognize varied levels of competencies--example:  let students complete projects at their own level of “understandability”
3.   Promote relatedness or “connectedness”--example:  strive for human interactions and a sense of community in the classroom

The goal in the classroom should be to encourage students to thrive without their teacher, and to have their motivation stem from within.  Our presenter cited studies that concluded that by providing students with an overabundance of extrinsic rewards (certificates, trophies, etc.), we are actually decreasing their desire to get internal satisfaction from learning.

The presenter suggested that instead of having students complete the traditional written “getting-to-know-you-at-the-beginning-of-the-year” questionnaires, verbally ask students these questions instead:

1.    What is the most important thing you can learn in school?
2.   What do you think makes other students lose their motivation?

The answers students provide to these questions should give you some essential lesson planning guidelines.

The presenter on student failure suggested working toward and emphasizing skill development. Lesson planning should be directed toward your response to this question:

What do I want the students to be able to do? 

This goal-direction shifts activities toward student mastery as opposed to the achievement of “test success”.

Additionally, by posting a “menu” of choices for student assignments, and by doing project-based assessments, the fear of failure is minimized for many students.  Students should be able to “discuss” their assignment grades as well, having opportunities to re-vamp their work to earn higher scores.  The teacher should rest on the motto “if you try, you don’t fail”.

Our third presenter suggested that teachers achieve more “global competency” by understanding that many students may be in survival mode before even coming to school.  Teachers need to question how students are feeling, and focus on what students DO bring to school, instead of berating their students’ deficits.

For example, a student may be chronically late to school because they are taking their siblings to school while their Mom completes her night shift.  Rather than focus on this student’s tardiness, tell the student that you’re “glad they are here”.

Our presenter also suggested pairing students with peers to help them build mutual empathy.  Align the “social butterfly” students with those who struggle to interact with others.  There is importance, also, in consciously displaying students’ work to help them build self-esteem.  Planning events that are community-based, with students receiving a broader range of accolades for their school work, goes a long way in helping students form connections with the community-at-large.

It is now imperative, according to these presenters, that teachers spend a greater block of time at the beginning of the school year creating a “climate” for learning.  The front-end emphasis on generating teacher-student rapport, instructing coping techniques for perceived failures, and modeling interactive social behaviors for students suddenly “outweighs” the need for outlining content. 

Teachers now spend a greater percentage of their day teaching students “how to become decent human beings”.  What this indicates is the sense that there is generalized parental abdication.  A teacher’s role is increasingly guided toward the stabilization of students’ psyches in the classroom.  Teachers need to make an effort to understand why students “no longer care”, why they are more prone to quit in the classroom, and why they lack the anticipated social behaviors teachers used to expect as standard conduct.
The following article has some quick, easy ways to generate teacher-student rapport with your students--these suggested techniques can be used daily to continue to build classroom connections: 

“Four Quick Ways to Build Rapport With Students
(Even the Ones that Are Hardest to Reach)”

Instead of providing coping techniques for failure, this article includes some helpful ways to assist students in completing their class assignments:

“Seventeen Ways to Get Your Students to Actually Do Their Work”

To demonstrate classroom routines, appropriate behavior and social skills in the classroom, teachers may opt to use the interactive modeling techniques outlined in the following resource:

“What is Interactive Modeling?/Responsive Classroom”
https://www.responsiveclassroom.org/what-interactive-modeling/

Teachers might consider these additional standards to enhance their profile in their school and community:

“25 Ways Teachers Can Be Role Models”
https://www.educationdegree.com/articles/25-ways-teachers-can-b

And finally, if you don’t have a running tab with Teachers Pay Teachers, or are not a devotee of Pinterest--here are some freebie behavioral charts that may be adaptable for use in your own classroom:

https://www.freeprintablebehaviorcharts.com/

Continue to have a great school year!

Image From:
https://www.teacher.org/daily/managing-student-behavior/


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