1 appropriate child guidance: Intervention strategies for dealing with challenging behavior that facilitate social competence Dr. Will Mosier Professor of Early Childhood Education Wright State University
Dec 24, 2015
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Developmentally appropriate child guidance: Intervention strategies for
dealing with challenging behavior that facilitate social competence
Dr. Will Mosier
Professor of Early Childhood Education
Wright State University
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What are the objectives ofchild guidance?
Help children learn the same basic rules for responsible living that are applicable to adults living in a democratic society
Help children learn self-control Help young children learn the difference
between “right” & “wrong”
Help children understand: Behavior must not infringe on the rights of
others nor present a risk of harm to the environment
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The ultimate goal of discipline
The goal of discipline is not to control or manipulate children externally
The goal of discipline is to stimulate inner control
(Accepting responsibility for one’s own behavior & respecting the rights of others
is the ultimate demonstration of what constitutes a fully-functioning adult)
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3 Questions to ask before initiating interaction with a child
Will my interaction with this child have any negative impact on the child’s:
Cognitive Development? Emotional Development? Social Development?
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Two approaches to adult-child interaction for problem-solving
When the child has a problem and is requesting help
Required skill: Communicating empathic understanding
When the child’s behavior is unacceptable (causing me or someone else a problem)
Required skill: Non-blaming confrontation
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Roadblocks to problem-solving when the child comes to you with a problem
1. Ordering 2. Threatening3. Blaming 4. Labeling5. Moralizing 6. Lecturing
----------------------------------------------------------------------7. Advising8. Analyzing9. Praising10.Reassuring11.Probing (questioning)12.Diverting (distracting)
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How can children be helped to understand their feelings?
When responding to a child’s request for help it is vital to address the child’s underlying feelings
When children consistently hear adults modeling empathic understanding, they will eventually imitate the same expressions
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How to communicate to children that you are listening to them
Maintain eye contact Smile attentively Use appropriate touch Use verbal responses that encourage the child to talk Focus your attention on the feelings behind the words Reflect back to the child what you are understanding
without judgment Don’t rush the child’s explanation, wait patiently for the
child to complete his or her thought Impatience can discourage a child from sharing their feelings &
stifle language development
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Common Listening Errors
Analyzing the child’s meaning Parroting what the child said Rushing the child’s feelings Adding more meaning than the child
intended (overshooting the intent) Leaving important concerns or feelings out Lagging behind if the child has moved on to
another feeling
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Goals of Non-blaming Confrontation
To nurture change in behavior To preserve self-esteem To facilitates self-control To strengthen your relationship with
the child
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The 3 Components of Non-blaming Confrontation
Identify the behavior that is unacceptable
Share your feelings in response to the behavior
Tell the child what you are going to do because the unacceptable behavior occurred (Identify the consequence of the action in terms of your behavior, not the child’s behavior.)
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Confront unacceptable behavior with a three-part “I” message (example)
Identify the behavior in a non-judgmental manner (When I see someone running in the room…)
Identify how you feel about the behavior (…I feel scared…)
Identify what it makes you want to do (…and it makes me want to help you practice walking.)
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What is Behavior?
What you see and/or hear is behavior, not your subjective interpretation of the child’s “attitude”
Attitude can not be seen or heard (Attitude is an internal process.)
Is it really possible to “misbehave”? How is it possible to miss having a way of
being? Answer: It’s not!
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Defining Problem Behavior
• Adult-centered definitions of “misbehavior”– focus on effect child’s behavior has on the adult
• Child-centered definitions of “unacceptable behavior”
– focus on appropriateness or inappropriateness of action
(Identifying behavior as Inappropriate in a specific situation does not suggest fault or blame)
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The Danger in Anger
Anger is not a feeling Anger is only the tip of an emotional iceberg Anger is a reaction to suppressed feeling Anger management is a question of
identifying the uncomfortable feeling beneath the anger that is being covered up by denial
Anger is the manifestation of suppressed fear, hurt, embarrassment…
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Persistence
• Persistence is more effective than anger– When you feel angry, identify your underlying feelings– Were you feeling startled, disappointed, worried, frightened, frustrated?
• Express feelings other than anger
– surprise, disbelief, sadness, concern, worry, apprehension, fear, distress
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Reactions to Power
FIGHT FLIGHT SUBMIT
Encourage cooperation not submission
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Abandon the Authoritarianism vs. Permissiveness Model
Embrace an alternative to the see-saw of dictatorship vs. anarchy
Utilize the democracy model as an alternative
With the democratic alternative you are encouraging win-win problem-solving
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Understanding the theory behind using positive guidance to effect behavior change
All learning takes place within the context of a learner’s previous knowledge and values
To increase the chance of compliance without damage to self-esteem, any expected change should be presented in such a way that the child does not feel threatened
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Handling Resistance to Change
Shift gears back and forth between confronting the child in a non-blaming manner and communicating empathic understanding when the child shows resistance
Confront------demonstrate empathy-----re-confront----demonstrate empathy---re-confront--demonstrate empathy-re-confront…until all resistance is gone
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Be Aware of Your Behavior
Using power to control behavior brings a “high risk” of experiencing resistance
Threatening to use power is worse Shifting gears between non-blaming
confrontation and communicating empathic understanding of the resistance has win-win potential
Being a role-model for socially competent behavior is always the best approach to behavior management
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Modifying the Environment is often all it takes
Add to the environment(Provide more stimulation/enrichment)
Simplify the environment(Make positive choices clearer)
Rearrange the environment(Simplify the room arrangement to facilitate cooperation)
Anticipate problems
(Remove things that might cause problems)
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Rules for Responsible Human Behavior
Guide children to:
•Treat others the way you want to be treated
Be Kind (cooperative)
• Take only reasonable risks
Be Safe (confident)
• Take care of the environmentBe Neat (competent)
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What are the behaviors that exemplify positive adult role models?
Treat everyone with dignity & respect at all times. Rely on patience, persistence, & constructive
interactions, rather than force, to modify behavior Respond assertively to unacceptable behavior
with gentle firmness Use constructive problem-solving strategies to
redirect unacceptable behavior Plan & prepare developmentally appropriate
activities for young children
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Discipline Guidelines
• Redirect• replace inappropriate behavior with more appropriate behavior
• Be objective• respond with impartiality, neutrality, and open-mindedness• avoid a judgmental or negatively emotional response
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Unconditional Caring and Affection
• Give warmth and friendliness without qualification
• Never withhold attention as a way of punishing inappropriate behavior
• Assure child she is valued even if behavior must be stopped
• Affirm the child – positive assertion of the child’s existence, significance and value as a person
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Effective Guidance Strategies
• Do not attempt to change too much at once
• Focus attention elsewhere to resolve mildly annoying behaviors
• Use consistency and fairness to help children trust authority figures
• Interrupt immediately behavior that is harmful or unfair
• Intervene firmly but gently
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Positive Guidance
• Let child know you value her even if her behavior must be stopped
• Help child understand why positive behavior is better
• Help child identify possible consequences of actions
• Allow child to deal with reasonable consequences
• Create developmentally appropriate environment
• Remove child from situations that cause misbehavior
• Firmly redirect inappropriate behavior
•Remember young children imitate our words and action
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Assertive Guidance
• Make sure expectations are reasonable for children’s age and ability
• Let children know exactly what you expect of them
• Provide simple, consistently enforced guidelines
• Help children consistently abide by rules
• Children need consistency tempered by a reasonable level of flexibility
• Enforcement of discipline must not hinge on your mood!
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Teach Positive Behavior
• Teach ground rules through role play and discussion• Provide repetition learning through appropriate books and songs
• Identify inappropriate behaviors and engage children in problem solving
• Developmentally appropriate problem-solving activities help children understand and remember
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Positive Guidance Guidelines
1. You can prevent many behavior problems before they begin with careful planning
2. Your posture, movements, & gestures communicate (so - communicate wisely)
3. Children rely on non-verbal communication to interpret adult mood & expectations
4. You need to be aware of your nonverbal expressions when you are attempting to communicate with children
5. Match your nonverbal expressions to your verbal message
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Positive Guidance Guidelines (continued)
6. If your nonverbal cues are too threatening, children will tend to resist your directives
7. If your requests are assertive, confident, respectful, & sound caring, children are more likely to comply quickly & willingly
8. The primary goal must be to facilitate the acceptance of personal responsibility for ones own actions
9. Your secondary goal should be to channel the expression of emotions through words
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Positive Guidance Guidelines (continued)
10. See the child separate from his/her behavior11. Not being assertive and firm is just as damaging
as as being punitive12. Children need freedom within clearly identified
limits13. Freedom without limits is anarchy (It teaches
insensitivity to others)14. Positive guidance is a process of guiding
children to become self-controlled, self-correcting, cooperative, & socially conscious persons
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Positive Guidance Guidelines(continued)
15. Sometimes you will need to rearrange the classroom to break “bad” habits
16. Behavior modification is the most humane & effective strategy for guiding children who have limited ability to reflect on their behavior & how it impacts on others
17. Don’t try to change too much at one time18. Pick one behavior that is the most disruptive and
focus on it – ignoring the rest until you have extinguished the 1st target behavior
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Positive Guidance Guidelines (continued)
19. Mildly annoying behavior should be ignored – redirect the child without drawing attention to the negative behavior
20. Be as consistently firm as necessary and at the same time as gentle as possible
21. Remember: Anger, threats, instilling guilt, & acting disgusted damages self-esteem and the process of children learning self-control
22. You should acknowledge & accept each child’s expression of negative feelings, but not dwell on them
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Positive Guidance Guidelines (continued)
23. Children need to know exactly what is expected of them
24. Enforcing guidelines consistently helps children learn to respect rules
25. Children are helped to remember & internalize rules through role playing, repetition, & discussion of rules at neutral times
26. Enforcing rules should NEVER hinge on your mood or coincidental circumstances
27. Consequences should be logical28. Never punish – rather firmly redirect behavior in
a positive direction
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Positive Guidance Guidelines (Continued)
29. All attention focused on a child should emphasize self-control & self-esteem building
30. To reinforce your directives give:• direct eye contact• position your body at the child’s level• use gentle, appropriate touch
31. Consistent, persistent “nudges” toward appropriate behavior is more effective than punishment & threats stated in anger
32. Express your honest feeling of disbelief, disappointment, frustration, or hurt rather than overpowering children with your anger when confronting them about unacceptable behavior
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Model pro-social behavior to “teach” social competence
Young children do not come into this world equipped with the logical, cause & effect thinking skills to understand how to behave in a socially competent manner
Children adopt pro-social behavior only after experiencing it from nurturing adults
They learn to practice pro-social behavior from seeing it demonstrated by the adults around them
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The key to avoiding behavior problems is: Prevention
We let children know about how we expect them to “behave” by the signals we send them not only verbally but also non-verbally
We can prevent the majority of behavior problems by providing children with an environment that is tailored to their level of developmental readiness and plan activities that challenge their curiosity within specific, clearly identified behavior guidelines
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Things to Remember about Setting Limits
Involve children in developing limits of classroom behavior (class rules)
Help children focus on tasks by using positive affirmations as verbal cues
Set clear limits / Be very specific (Example: “It’s time to put the ... Away!”)
Use concrete words & short sentences Identify limits with a positive tone of voice Limit the choices you offer at any one time
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What not to do when setting limits
Avoid offering choices when children “really” don’t have a choice (When a child must comply, don’t ask: “Don’t you want to go to the library, now?”
Avoid giving more than one limit at a time Avoid only talking about what kids shouldn’t do Don’t be vague Don’t set arbitrary or trivial limits Avoid arguing about the limits Avoid trying to “reason” with a child about limits
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Key Issues for a pro-social environment
Consistent & predictable routines help facilitate the development of self-control
First step toward shaping children’s behavior is setting a “good example”
Children imitating adult modeled behavior is an important & obvious tool for “teaching” pro-social behavior
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How can I be patient, nurturing, & consistent?
The first step toward shaping children’s behavior in a positive direction is to set a good example
Modeling socially competent behavior is the key
Most of the worst behavior we observe in young children is merely instant-replay of what they have observed adults do
Example: “If you don’t stop hitting people, I’m going to spank you”.
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What to do when a child’s behavior is annoying
If a young child is overly loud & boisterous - focus on being soft-spoken & calm
If a young child is angry - model patience If a young child is aggressive - model
gentleness & kindness If a young child is destructive - model respect
for property
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What is a developmentally appropriate way to respond to aggression?
Don’t overuse the word “NO” Be positive & assertive rather than negative &
adversarial If you model appropriate language use for
expressing feelings, over time, young children will learn how to express their feeling of anger & frustration with words
• Rely on persistence and patience rather than force
• Proceed gently, but firmly to redirect behavior
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Learning pro-social behavior through imitation
Early childhood is a particularly sensitive period for learning through imitation
Modeling entire sequences of behavior is important at this stage of development
Modeling is a powerful tool for teaching pro-social behavior
Adults miss a great many opportunities to have a profoundly positive influence on young children because they do not understand the impact that their actions can have on the developing mind
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Understanding the power of imitation
Children learn considerable negative behavior from watching television
Rather than focusing attention on correcting unacceptable behavior, we need to look in the mirror & correct the behavior that is a poor role model for social competence
If our goal is to help children develop self-discipline & self-control, it would be best to demonstrate how to muster these admirable characteristics in ourselves -rather than tell kids how they should behave
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How can I provide positive reinforcement to encourage behavior?
Praise can cause children to feel pressured to live up to unrealistic standards
Praise focuses a child’s attention on gaining external rewards
Recognition & encouragement are a healthy alternative to praise
Recognition & encouragement focus a child’s attention on intrinsic rewards, such as feelings of accomplishment, self-pride, enhanced sense of self-worth
Intrinsic motivation builds a child’s sense of empowerment & self-determination
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Example of the different between praise & encouragement
Praise implies an objective value judgment Example: “Your painting is beautiful.” If this kind
of praise does not continue, a child may perceive that his value as a person is diminishing. A young child could easily assume that his/her value is directly tied to an ability to produce “beautiful” art work
Encouragement is very specific & focuses on behavior not product
Example: “I like the effort you put into your picture”. Neither the child nor the product is labeled good or bad
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Am I willing to enforce rules, even if it would be easier to look the other way?
Children want & need clear & firm guidelines for what is expected from them
They need help developing self-control Permissiveness cultivates antisocial &
selfish behavior You must be consistent with enforcing
rules
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Most effective tools for facilitating self-control
Modeling Practicing Children learn effective problem-solving skills
by watching adults who are consistent at being a “good” example
The key: 1. Accurately interpret a problem
2. Clearly express your expectation3. “Teach” effective problem-solving skills through
modeling social competence
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Say what you mean. Mean what you say.
• Ask a question only if the child really has a choice
– “Would you like something to drink?”
• State choices if child will be allowed to choose
– “Would you rather have apple juice or milk.”
• If something must happen, don’t discuss it
– “You must take your medicine so your cough will get better."
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How do children learn to be“good” listeners?
Children learn to listen attentively by experiencing being listened to as a regular part of their daily interactions with adults
Simply telling children to listen is not enough!
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What are appropriate responses to requests for help?
Many requests for help may appear, on the surface, to be requests for action or information. However, they are really requests for attention
Instead of rushing to solve a child’s problem for them, it is best to initially respond to requests with non-judgmental reflective statements:
“It sounds like you feel…”
“In other words, you are saying…”
“What I think you are asking is…”
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Use positive instructions instead of negative commands
Negative Commands
“Don’t run”
“Don’t push”
“Quit yelling”“Shut up”“Be quiet”
“Stop that”
Positive Instructions
“Running is an outside activity. I walk inside.”
“It’s not like me to push Joe. I touch Joe gently.”
“I can’t hear Mary when you are yelling. I talk in a quiet & calm tone of voice”
“When you… I have difficulty…I need to have you…”
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Using positive instructions instead of negative commands
The goal of expressing expectations in the form of positive instructions is to redirect behavior in a positive direction
They will only “work” if you are consistent with applying them
The key factors are to keep the instructions: Simple, direct, concrete, respectful, honest, assertive, and expressed with optimism
The more consistent you are with being assertive, direct, & specific with your expectations, the more successful you will be in keeping children focused on changing their behavior
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Should children be forced to apologize?
It is more appropriate to simply point out how the other child feels.
The topic of apologizing should be saved for a neutral time
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Punishment(Arbitrary consequence)
• To cause a child to undergo pain or loss as retribution or penalty for wrongdoing is called = punishment
•Punishment is developmentally inappropriate during early childhood
• The result of punishment: hurt and humiliation which leads to lowered self-esteem
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Forms of Punishment
• Physically hurting, humiliating, or embarrassing a child
• Withholding attention (ignoring, avoiding eye contact, or not speaking)
• Lecturing, nagging, yelling or name-calling
• Arbitrarily taking away privileges unrelated to the unacceptable act
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The risks of using punishment
•Known to increase children’s aggression
• Slows children’s moral development
• May risk overall mental health of children
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Logical & Natural Consequences
Natural Consequence: I forget to water the plantthe plant dies
Logical Consequence: I am regularly late to workI lose my job
If I want to achieve desired goals and avoid undesired results, I will be responsive to avoiding negative consequences
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Logical consequence
Assumptions Inappropriate behavior is motivated by the
need to gain attention, experience power, exact revenge, or display helplessness
Inappropriate behavior is the result of poor choices regarding how to satisfy needs
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Logical consequence (continued)
Applications Help students identify motives behind their
behavior Help students learn to satisfy their motives
legitimately Let students suffer the logical
consequences of their behavior When student behavior is unacceptable,
two alternatives are offered to choose from to correct the problem
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Logical consequence (continued)
Strengths It promotes autonomy and self-
regulation It eliminates discipline problems It helps students become more self-
directed
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The Difference between Punishment & Positive Guidance
Lowers self-esteem Humiliates Degrades Hurts Angers Frustrates Stifles efforts Embarrasses Discourages Belittles Denies affection
Punishment
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The Difference between Punishment & Positive Guidance (Continued)
Builds self-esteem Respects Gives hope Models social competence Gives confidence Encourages Facilitates trust Gives emotional support
Positive Guidance
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Rehearsing transitions
Before a transition it is best to review with children what will happen
Explain the sequence of activities or events Clearly state what will happen next Giving kids cues about what is coming helps them
to feel more secure when adapting to the change Use focus points to help kids keep on track:
pictures, signs, or props that remind kids what to do
Novelty engages children’s interest & encourages them to stay focused on moving through transitions (use musical or rhythm activities, hand lotion, bubbles, props for them to hold)
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Be Consistent!
Most teachers plan their classroom schedule, but may not have considered how important it is to relay the plan clearly to the children
Children need predictability! Predictability helps children adjust to change
and move more easily through transitions Create transition plans that facilitate children
learning how to function more independently
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Key to Successful Discipline
The basic elements of successful child guidance are:
Have a limited number of clear, simple, yet firm rules for classroom behavior
Adults must model the appropriate behaviors
Children are shown what to expect and what behavior is expected from them
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• Develop a basis for trust and respect with simple, consistently enforced guidelines
• Remember that adult anger triggers acting-out behavior and models aggression and hostility
• Prevent many behavior problems through planning ahead
•What counts most is not what you do, but how you do it!
What you need to know asan adult role-model
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Meeting Adult Needs
Adults who recognize their own needs and imperfections are more effective in guiding children than adults with limited introspection