EXTRAS Challenging Behaviour Workshop

CHALLENGING BEHAVIOUR WORKSHOP
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Slide 1: Slide
Challenging behaviourSpecial Education

This lesson contains 44 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 2 videos.

time-iconLesson duration is: 90 min

Items in this lesson

CHALLENGING BEHAVIOUR WORKSHOP

Slide 1 - Slide

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  1. Review what we discussed last year
  2. Take a closer look at teacher-focused actions
  3. Practice some scenarios

Slide 2 - Slide

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Review
Last year we discussed some common classroom issues:
  • Lower-level students disengaging & misbehaving.
  • Students talking amongst themselves and interrupting classes
  • Persistent Spanish speakers
  • What do you remember?
  • What have you been using?

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Let's review the list we came up with last year.
When using these techniques, what did you find most useful when dealing with students disengaging and misbehaving?
Helper role – have a difficult student involved in helping the teacher, handing things out, writing on board etc.
Keep Ss busy with variety of activities and formats. Keep it moving, less opportunity to get bored and misbehave.
Change the seating plan, mixing up student abilities
Engage with Ss on their interests, real life and strengths
Find the kind of activities they enjoy and include more of them. Adapt activities for tricky groups.
Establish dialogue with parents early on
Use the 3 stage warning system and follow up on it
Establish rules early on, remind them, and stick to them. (rules can be made together with the class)
Reward or board points system, +/- points for speaking Spanish or other bad behaviour.

Slide 7 - Poll

They can only choose one option as the programme doesn´t allow for more!
What did you find most effective when dealing with persistent Spanish speakers?
Helper role – have a difficult student involved in helping the teacher, handing things out, writing on board etc.
Keep Ss busy with variety of activities and formats. Keep it moving, less opportunity to get bored and misbehave
Change the seating plan, mixing up student abilities
Engage with Ss on their interests, real life and strengths
Find the kind of activities they enjoy and include more of them. Adapt activities for tricky groups.
Establish dialogue with parents early on
Use the 3 stage warning system and follow up on it
Establish rules early on, remind them, and stick to them. (rules can be made together with the class)
Reward or board points system, +/- points for speaking Spanish or other bad behaviour.

Slide 8 - Poll

They can only choose one option as the programme doesn´t allow for more!
What about students talking amongst themselves and interrupting the class?
Helper role – have a difficult student involved in helping the teacher, handing things out, writing on board etc.
Keep Ss busy with variety of activities and formats. Keep it moving, less opportunity to get bored and misbehave
Change the seating plan, mixing up student abilities
Engage with Ss on their interests, real life and strengths
Find the kind of activities they enjoy and include more of them. Adapt activities for tricky groups.
Establish dialogue with parents early on
Use the 3 stage warning system and follow up on it
Establish rules early on, remind them, and stick to them. (rules can be made together with the class)
Reward or board points system, +/- points for speaking Spanish or other bad behaviour.

Slide 9 - Poll

They can only choose one option as the programme doesn´t allow for more!
Are there any other/new techniques you tried this year and found effective?
timer
2:00

Slide 10 - Open question

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There are some teacher-focused actions that might be worth reviewing (refreshing in some cases) that may also help manage challenging behaviour:

  • Teacher talk
  • Meaning conveyance 
  • Teacher-student rapport 

Slide 11 - Slide

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We're going to divide up into 2 groups for the second and third parts of this workshop to enable a bit more discussion. 
Group 1
Group 2
Hywel
Sandra
Jared
Olivia
Michael
Wojtek
Tarquin
Sarah
Gary
Lucas
Stacey

Slide 12 - Slide

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Teacher talk

Slide 13 - Mind map

On this slide you make a mindmap together with the participants. (I think they can give multiple answers + funny feature: you can drag someones reply to the trashcan in the corner to throw it away)
 Teacher Talk
So teacher talk refers to the time during which the teacher is talking to the whole group - informing, instructing, or correcting. 

Generally, if a teacher is unable to control the amount and quality of their spoken output it will lead to
  1.  Confusing instructions
  2. Fuzzy staging
  3. Unclear meanings
  4.  Slow class pace
  5. Discipline problems (students can see it as downtime)

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3

Slide 15 - Video

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04:49
What's the problem and what would be better?

Slide 16 - Open question

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05:37
What's the issue here? And what would be better?

Slide 17 - Open question

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07:31
What's wrong here? How could we improve it?

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Types of Ineffective Teacher Talk
1. Narrating (the teacher describing what they are going to ask students to do).

Teacher: So in a minute I am going to ask you to get into pairs.
or:
Teacher: First I will ask you to do exercise 1.

Slide 19 - Slide

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Types of Ineffective Teacher Talk
2. Using Embedded Language (the teacher being unnecessarily polite and therefore creating complexity).
Teacher: If you wouldn't mind, could you open your books at page 6?
or:
Teacher: It would be really great if you could finish exercise 8.

- Again, using imperative forms and starting instructions with a verb avoids this.

Slide 20 - Slide

Again, using imperative forms
Types of Ineffective Teacher Talk
3. Topping Up (the teacher adds unnecessary information or extra information to responses).
Student: At the weekend I like to go swimming.
Teacher: Great! Swimming is my favourite sport; I think it's great exercise for everyone.
or:
Teacher: Which word in the sentence refers to time?
Student: 'back in the day' 
Teacher: Yes, so that is the time phrase that expresses the time of the sentence.

Slide 21 - Slide

Topping up can be demoralising for learners, as it can make them feel that their responses are never sufficient.
Types of Ineffective Teacher Talk
4. Using ungraded language 

Teacher: The task is to establish and confirm the identity of your partner's destination by exchanging key information within a limited timeframe.

Slide 22 - Slide

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Types of Ineffective Teacher Talk
5. Echoing (when the teacher repeats students)

Student: Yesterday I went to the zoo.
Teacher: You went to the zoo.
Student: Yes, it was interesting.
Teacher: It was very interesting.

Careful! This can be used as a correction tool to highlight mistakes or corrections, but for many teachers this quickly becomes a habit and can have the effect of closing down extended communication.

Slide 23 - Slide

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Types of Ineffective Teacher Talk
6. Reformulation (saying the same thing in multiple ways)
Teacher: In pairs, complete the ten sentences with the correct grammar, so, in twos, write the sentence. Use the correct grammar. Work together. Two people per group. Do all the sentences.

7. Oral tics (over-use of an unnecessary word or phrase)
Teacher: Yep, the answer is yep, ten. Yep, that was good, yep, very good. Yep, well done.
(other common ones are OK, right, and like.)

8. Unnecessary Repetition
Teacher: Please do exercise 7, working with your partner. Yes, do exercise 7, working with your partner. Ok, exercise 7, working with your partner.

Student: Yesterday I went to the zoo.
Teacher: You went to the zoo.
Student: Yes, it was interesting.
Teacher: It was very interesting.

Careful! This can be used as a correction tool to highlight mistakes or corrections, but for many teachers this quickly becomes a habit and can have the effect of closing down extended communication.

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Let's discuss this...
  • Discuss with your group which of these are most relevant for you
  • Which do you think are most likely to result in Ss disengaging / behaving badly?
  • Discuss your most challenging groups and how you could apply these techniques to try to encourage limit TT and reduce disengagement

Slide 25 - Slide

Group discussion
General tips:
Plan how you will deliver instructions​

  • Few words as possible, visual cues, mimes​
  • Include visual cues, drawings, body language, mimes etc​
  • Have Ss read instructions to exercises​
  • Ask for volunteers to help model, or strong Ss to explain​

Group work wherever possible​
  • For vocab, have Ss brainstorm in pairs / groups before (see what they know)​
  • For unfinished exercises, have Ss cross-question to check answers for missing questions (“Pablo, do you have the answer for Q3?”)​
  • Do questions one at a time, with Ss cross-checking answers (beware of passengers)​
  • Post questions on whiteboard and give time for answers to be prepared








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General tips:
Don’t echo answers​
  • Echoing Ss answers means Ss don’t need to listen to each other​
  • Write a question on the board ‘Furniture in the bedroom’. Ss offer their answers, if the others didn’t hear, they must ask the S to repeat or speak up. Encourage the class to discuss with each other if they are unsure. S1 – “how do you say ‘Espejo’?”. Hopefully someone will give them the answer without T needing to intervene​

Wait, give space to answer, use body language to prompt, don’t fear the silence!​
  • S1: Why is that? / T: Ah, yes, you see here we have the auxiliary, so blah blah blah…​
  • S1: Why is that? / T: Mmmm. (pauses, looks around the room, waits…) / S2: I think because, is question… / T: (pointedly shuts up, open body language, waiting…) / S3: Yes, “Do” because it is question, same like in yesterday lesson…​

Avoid commentating​
  • I’m going to rub this off the board, where’s the board rubber, here it is. Now, I’ll give out these papers, sorry about the copy, the photocopier is running out of ink…​
  • It can overload the Ss with language they don’t understand 








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Part 3: Giving clear instructions / Meaning Conveyance
  • It seems obvious and straightforward but
  • It's importance is often overlooked
  • It's harder than you think and there are many traps you can easily fall into
Giving Clear Instructions 
&
Meaning Conveyance 

Slide 28 - Slide

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Part 3: Giving clear instructions / Meaning Conveyance
  • It seems obvious and straightforward but,
  • It's importance is often overlooked
  • It's harder than you think and there are many traps you can easily fall into

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Slide 30 - Video

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What did you learn & what can we add?

Slide 31 - Mind map

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Tips on giving clear instructions / meaning conveyance
Plan how you will deliver instructions​

  • Few words as possible​
  • Include visual cues, drawings, body language, mimes etc​
  • Have Ss read instructions to exercises​
  • Ask for volunteers to help model, or strong Ss to explain​

Think about your language level
  • Avoid idioms, phrasal verbs, colloquialisms​
  • Go as basic as possible, let Ss fill the gaps of instructions







Slide 32 - Slide

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Tips on giving clear instructions / meaning conveyance
Avoiding overuse of phrases like ‘Do you understand?’ or ‘OK?’​
  • Ss will say ‘yes’ to save face​

Use open-ended questions to check understanding ​
  • ‘What do you need to do?’, ‘What did you understand from my instructions?’ and use other Ss to fill the gaps​

Make instructions imperatives​
  • Work by yourself, go to page 12, raise your hand, you have 5 minutes to finish






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Student Rapport

Slide 34 - Mind map

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Balance of friendliness and authority

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Establish clearly defined rules and boundaries.

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Get the students involved in creating a set of rules and corresponding penalties as this helps ensure more buy in and compliance. It is also important to enforce class rules with consistency and fairness.

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Take time to listen and get to know your students.

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When students feel heard and respected, they are more inclined to act in a reciprocal manner as they will not want to disappoint someone who they respect.

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 You have a class that is of mixed-ability. One of you students seems to not pay attention, and they often speak to the teacher in Spanish first. They like to make the class laugh while you are teaching or explaining something. You notice that they don't participate very much and their writings reflect their low-level. What are some possible techniques you could use?
Student Scenario:

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What are some possible techniques you could use?

Slide 41 - Open question

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You looked at the lesson plan this week and it's a difficult grammar concept and you might need to explain a lot of things. After, you have an activity where they need to get into pairs and practice what they have learned. What techniques could you use to make the lesson flow better and help avoid possible student misbehavior?
Teacher Scenario:

Slide 42 - Slide

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What are some possible techniques you could use?

Slide 43 - Open question

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