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February is a good time to take stock of the strategies you use to address behavior issues in your classroom. The months you have already spent with your students have provided you with valuable knowledge about what behavior strategies will be most effective for them, while the months ahead give you the opportunity to effectively support your students engaging in thorny behaviors as they prepare for the next grade.
Below you will find descriptions and further resources regarding some of the most important Responsive Classroom practices for responding to challenging behaviors and misbehaviors from your students, along with articles and other resources to support . As you read through, take some time to consider which strategies might be best for your classroom.
It’s midway through the school year and you notice one of your students has fallen into a pattern of missing work and struggling on tests and quizzes. You know it’s time to reach out to the student’s parents. It’s natural to feel anxious when calling home, especially to discuss an issue such as a student struggling. However, in partnering with parents, if you keep the focus on the student, it’s possible to have a successful conversation and end with a reasonable plan.
Role-play is a strategy in which, under the guidance of a teacher, students take the role of characters facing critical decisions to practice making behavioral choices in complex situations. The teacher stops the narrative at a point at which a behavior decision needs to be made so that students can brainstorm and discuss different options. From there, students act out some of the choices, pausing between actions to discuss what they noticed. The goal is to proactively prepare children for complex situations and to build their capability to independently choose and carry out positive behaviors.
Read more about how role-play fits into the Responsive Classroom approach to discipline:
Get started with our Role-Play Planning Guide and Communication Role-Play script today!
A problem-solving conference is a strategy for addressing one persistent problem involving one student. It helps students understand why their behavior is a problem and helps them take more responsibility for monitoring and self-correcting their own behavior. During the conference, teacher and student collaborate on solving the problem by exploring possible causes, articulating a specific goal to work on, and generating plans to achieve that goal.
Learn more about how problem-solving conferences fit into the Responsive Classroom approach to discipline:
Get started today with our Problem-Solving Conference Planning Guide!
Individual written agreements provide highly structured intensive support to an individual student. They involve a private meeting with the student in which teacher and student set a goal, write it down, and sign a contract. This practice can provide support to students for whom all other strategies have not led to any change in behavior.
“Every time I lead a Responsive Classroom course, I deepen, strengthen, and refine my own practice of the approach.”
— Joe, Certified Responsive Classroom Consulting Teacher since 2011
A class meeting is held for the purpose of collectively solving a group problem. It allows students to use reasoned thinking to solve a group problem. It also gives them opportunities to add their observations and solution ideas. It is best to use this practice when agreed-upon rules aren’t working, a problem involves all group members, or when you are looking for student input.
Prepare your class meeting today with our Class Meeting Planning Guide!
For much more on all these strategies, check out Solving Thorny Behavior Problems.