I have been having some trouble
keeping my students under control. The change of the season tends to bring with
it the chaos of the classroom. My students talk while I’m talking, are
rambunctious, loud, walk around the room without permission, and throw things across
the room.
Everything
in me is screaming to stop writing this—no one needs to know about the disorder
in my room! Don’t let others know that sometimes you have next to zero control
over your students!
I knew that this couldn’t last, and
that I needed to do something about it. I thought about motivation and decided
to see if handing out candy to those who were “on-task” would help encourage
those who were not. I talked with my mentor teacher and we tried it. The
students who were given candy seemed appreciative, but the other students didn’t
seem to notice.
My mentor teacher and I talked about
how the experiment hadn’t curbed the off task and rowdy behavior. We discussed
the difference between extrinsic and intrinsic motivation. This is when I decided
to try a more intrinsic approach.
The next day, as students filed into
the classroom, I took a mental note of who had gotten their bell work out. When
the bell rang, I walked around the room, thanking the students that had their
bell work out and were ready to work. Almost immediately, a student at that
table pulled out his work and exclaimed, “I have my bell work out!” This
happened again and again until everyone was on task. I decided in that moment
to thank a few other students, and then come back and thank him.
This occurrence astounded me.
Students would rather have my appreciation than candy? What? Who are these
kids? But the more I thought about it, the more sense it made. Middle school is
a tough age, where kids are constantly searching for approval: from their
parents, their friends, and their teachers. How easily I forget that! I am so glad this experience reminded me of
that.
With this in mind I decided to write
my students thank you cards after a particularly successful class period. (They
wrote for the entire class—and they were quiet!) As my students tore open the
envelopes to the cards inside, I watched. I watched as my students read the
cards rapidly, with excitement. Multiple students thanked me, and over the
course of the next few days I noticed the cards tucked into the covers of their
binders, the pockets of their folders, and the pages of their agenda books.
I now tell my students “thank you”
as often as I can. It has made such a difference in my classroom and in the
environment in the room. My students are more open to discussion, to my direction,
and to working with each other. It’s amazing what a simple “thank you” can do.
Ms. Bryan,
ReplyDeleteI can't believe you wrote all of your students thank you notes. How awesome!! I think that through their reactions, you can see that they truly appreciate your efforts to reach out to them. I admire your dedication. Hopefully I can take a page from your book and learn from your classroom research.
Sincerely,
Ms. Dawson
I echo Holli's sentiment. Bravo to you, Ms. Bryan! You should see what the research says about responding to students' positive behaviors (Sprick had something to say about this in Core I). You've definitely taken it to the next level with hand-written thank-you notes though. Try out some positive calls home when you can. Those are always fun!
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