I took 30 hours of PFK this past semester to bundle for this Winter Mini course. In all of those classes I learned many wonderful strategies and skills to utilize in my classroom. However, the one that I seemed to enjoy and seemed to help me the most was the Try and Make Me: Simple Strategies That Turn Off The Tantrums and Create Cooperation book study by Dr. Ray Levy and Bill O'Hanlon. Kelly Smith led the class through a 8 hour course that covered the book.
What I Learned from the Class
Dr. Levy's book discussed the difference between two types of animals and referenced them to human characteristics. Horses are the type of people that are positively motivated. They aim to please people and are willing to work in exchange for praises and recognition. Camels are the type of people that are negatively motivated. They do not aim to please people and could care less about positive recognition. Dr. Levy explains that defiant children mostly resemble camels. They prefer negative reactions and find behavior charts more satisfying than actually doing the tasks requested. Dr. Levy says to mix negative consequences to complement the positive enticements. Instead of praising the "camel" style student when he does well simply use a "I've noticed" statement.
Another strategy I learned from the book study were Practice Academies. I have heard about Practice Academies, but I had never learned how to conduct the Academy. One of our application pieces was to implement a Practice Academy. I chose one of my students who constantly walked around the room and constantly blurted out comments or questions. I stopped him one day during his normal disruptive behavior and said, "Uh oh! Your behavior is telling me that you need a how do I stay in my seat and raise my hand quietly while waiting for Mrs. Lemons to call on me practice academy." Kelly says to name the practice academy however long you want it to be, but it needs to be as specific as you can make it. He didn't know what a practice academy so he thought I was just playing with him. To make a long story short, a student explained it to him and I had him practice the desired behavior for about 30 minutes. I set my timer for 5-10 minute increments. I gave him a question to ask when I called on him. When the timer went off I looked up at his raised hand and had him respond with his question. After that activity I never had trouble with him getting out of his seat without permission or blurting out without my knowledge. I was amazed at how quickly it worked for him and how successful it was just from the first day.
Try and Make Me! is an easy read. Dr. Levy puts the strategies and the book contents in plain English. At the end of each chapter he included summaries so if you need to just go back and look up information quickly you could do so without having to scan the text.
Why Should You Take It?
I benefited greatly from this book study. I didn't find the book to be at all boring and with Kelly Smith teaching the class you can't go wrong. I have all the resources I need to prevent defiant children from controlling my classroom and to keep me from engaging in a power struggle with them. The book study really made me more aware of what types of characteristics resemble a defiant child so I could identify him and "shut him down" before he became out of control.
- Women of Refuge
- The Women of Refuge is a ministry that aims to bring women of all ages together in fellowship with one another and bring them to a closer relationship with Christ so they can become the women God has planned for them in all relationships.
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
SED 597.410 Conceptions of Schooling
Posted by Women of Refuge at 3:53 PM
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2 comments:
This is interesting! I heard about the book study. I'm glad you benefit from this workshop.
I really like this book study too! I have been using th "I noticed" statements - they work! Great job with the reflection.
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