Classroom Management - Classroom Discipline - Article
Classroom Management - Classroom Discipline - Article
com/methodology-tips-for-teachers/classroom-management-cl…
By Margot McCamley
9 min read
Introduction
How do we get students to behave in class? Usually not by telling them to behave, but by
using behaviour patterns that ensure they behave. This article contains tips and strategies
for you to try.
Before you begin, however, there are some important questions you need to ask yourself.
Things to consider
In order that they don’t break ‘the rules’, students first need to be clear what the rules are.
A behaviour code should be set with the students, where possible, so they know the
consequences of their behaviour. This is also a good activity for an early lesson. Get the
students, in groups, to think of examples of good and bad behaviour, then agree as a
class on what the final set for their class should be. Display this prominently on the wall or
the board. Five or six key points are sufficient. Sometimes, just pointing to this is enough
to bring disruptive students back in line.
Also, a code of behaviour for the teacher should be included. This should state what the
teacher will do for the students, e.g. be patient, never yell, work hard to help you learn the
language… etc.
Are the students really understanding you or are they missing most of what
you are saying?
There is one way to demotivate students and that is for them not to understand what is
really going on. Very often, bad behaviour patterns are because students do not
understand what is being taught to them and they find no purpose in the noise coming
from the teacher. Make sure your students are engaged and finding relevance in what
they are learning. This does not mean games where students are over-active: fast-moving
games are not necessarily the answer to discipline. In fact, they often exacerbate the
problem.
Attention seeker: do they show off to get the rest of the class laughing?
Power seeker: do they want to ‘put one over’ on you all the time?
STRATEGY: Don’t argue or fight with the student; remain fair and firm about the
behaviour. Catch them out doing something good, rather than bad.
Revenge seeker: act defiant, e.g. a student won’t move to another area of the classroom
when you think his or her behaviour is unacceptable.
STRATEGY: Most of all, don’t act hurt – students see that as a weakness because they
have had a reaction. Convince the student that he or she is liked – find the student doing
something good and smile at and commend that good behaviour.
STRATEGY: Ignore failures, but counsel regularly. When counselling, always give good
news first – e.g. I like what you did here – then counsel with the bad behaviour. Lastly,
finish positively – how the behaviour can be addressed and arrive at a solution.
Most of all, be FAIR and CONSISTENT and praise and highlight good behaviour over
bad.
Have ‘bad behavers’ sit at the front of the class. This way you can move towards them
more easily and maybe touch them lightly on the shoulder or pause near them if they are
getting out of hand. Make eye contact as you move away. Sometimes these small
gestures are enough to keep students in check.
Find time to praise the good work the student does. If the bad behaviour is minor, then
ignore it wherever possible. Don’t yell. Remain silent until the group settles down. If you
have some students on side – those who do know what is going on – they will settle the
rest of the group down. Let them be the ones to say ‘shush’. Sometimes, simply clapping
your hands a couple of times brings the group back in line. Then speak softly, not loudly.
This has a calming effect on the whole class and means the students have to quieten
down to hear what you are saying.
Encourage even your ‘worst’ student
When they are behaving well, catch them doing that. Say, ‘Well done’, ‘Good work’. It is
amazing how soon you get them on-side if they think you are finding them out doing good
work. Counsel when you can and don’t make it always about bad behaviour. Speak to a
student after the class, sometimes in front of their friends, and say how well you think they
are doing. This motivates the rest of the group, too.
Don’t allow yelling at the teacher in class when students know something
Shouting, ‘Miss!’ and ‘Sir!’ and standing up and coming to the teacher all the time is
another disruptive behaviour. It can be VERY noisy if all the students know the answer
and are yelling at you, and you don’t want a rush of students all trying to show you their
work.
They soon learn the discipline of putting their hand up when a response is needed or that
you will look at their work at an appropriate time. This makes for a more productive
classroom and students feel great when they are chosen to answer. You feel better too
because you don’t have a headache from all the noise!
Move around in the proximity of the misbehaving student when the bad
behaviour is persistent
Not in a disciplinary way, rather in the guise of helping them with the problem they have.
Maybe they don’t understand something? Move towards them, see if you can help, then
when you have calmed the student, walk away with a smile and a ‘Well done’.
Create some healthy competition and encourage peer pressure for good
behaviour
At the start of class/term, put your students into teams. Allow them to choose a team
name or assign team names yourself, as you feel appropriate. Throughout the
lesson/term, award points for good work/behaviour and deduct points for inappropriate
behaviour. Award a certificate/stickers/small prize to the highest-scoring team at the end
of the class/term. This encourages students to do their best work and you will find that the
‘threat’ of point deduction spurs students on to put pressure on their peers to behave well.
If your classroom has digital facilities, ClassDojo can do all of this digitally and is often
very effective and popular with young learners.
Your (more experienced) colleagues and manager/s can often give you new ideas and
approaches to try. Colleagues who have had similar issues with their classes (or even
taught your own students previously) can give a fresh perspective and say what
has/hasn’t worked for them.
It often works best to start off being firmer rather than friendlier with new classes –
especially with ones you think may be problematic. It’s easier to start firm and then soften
your approach with learners than to do it the other way round. At the end of the day,
students (even teens) feel more secure when they have clearly defined boundaries and
understand clearly what is/isn’t acceptable. Parents will also expect teachers to be able to
keep control of the class.
As trying as students may be, once you’ve lost your temper you’ve lost control of the class
and the balance of power then resides with the students.
When talking to them later, get down to their level (either by sitting or crouching) so that
you don’t appear intimidating. Find out the cause of their misbehaviour and explain that it
is not helping the student to behave in this way. Explain why their behaviour is wrong and
what consequences (other than punishments) this might have for them and others (for
example, how their inappropriate behaviour might make others feel). Try to elicit all of this
from the students themselves, if possible.
At the end of the conversation, try to mention something positive about the student (for
example something they are good at or some good work they have done) and agree on a
plan or agreement going forward for how their behaviour will improve. End on a positive
note, ensuring that the student understands that it’s their behaviour choices that you
dislike, not them. Making the student feel bad about themselves won’t motivate them to
change their behaviour.
Be friendly, but don’t try to be the students’ best friend (they more than likely already have
one!). You DO know more than them (that is why you are the teacher!) and keeping a
slight air of authority will enable the students to respect you.
If the class is getting rowdy, stand at the front with a finger on your lips or your hands on
your head. The students who are paying attention will copy you. Slowly, the rest of the
class will catch on and do this too. Don’t stop until the whole class is quiet and copying
your action. This may require a little patience on your part, but is a good way to refocus
the attention of a class, especially if you need to speak to them as a whole.
A final message
Be INSISTENT
Be CONSISTENT
Be PERSISTENT
But most of all, be FAIR