Posts Tagged ‘behaviour management’
I suppose I don't mean 'marking' children's behaviour literally - I'm visualising children wandering around with ticks and crosses all over them - and that isn't quite what I mean. There's probably something written somewhere about not being allowed to write all over the kids and I suppose they've got a point! ...
A controversial question is whether effective child discipline and behaviour management is about control? ...
Am I kidding - kids that are out of control, violent, aggressive, confrontational, verbally abusive aren't a problem? That's right. I deal with them every working day. And they aren't the problem! ...
My job is to deal with extreme, challenging behaviour and children at risk of permanent exclusion from school. These kids are extremely challenging and their behaviour appalling. They're physical and verbal - violent in other words. Their language and the way they treat everyone is totally unacceptable. Screaming, kicking and biting is the norm. ...
The children I successfully teach every day are so violent, aggressive and out of conrol in their mainstream schools that they are all under threat of permanent exclusion. Their physical and verbal violence puts adults and other children in danger of injury. These children use the most disgusting and foul language. At the slightest excuse ...
Do the children behave better for others than for you? Do you having problems managing the children's behaviour? Would you like a magic wand and everything to be better? ...
So you're a teacher and insane, eh? Insulting or what? .... Well yes, actually you are..... mad as mad can be - insane, deranged. So what am I talking about? ...
I don't often have much time for the opinions of Ofsted. When you've seen as much bad behaviour in schools as I have and little being done about it - and then I'm told that Ofsted have been in and said everything's fine!! ...
Am I saying that kids and cars are the same - or what? ...
Is it a generally held view that tension and anxiety cause stammering in some children?n No. People (including researchers) are misled because there is no strong evidence that those who stammer are more tense or anxious than those who don't. Other children can be just as tense as those who stammer, but instead of releasing ...