Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Learning How to Manage

I realize that saying "I haven't been blogging lately" would be exceedingly obvious at this point. I also realize that promising regular updates in the future would be foolish, but I'll do my best anyway.

I've decided that a fantastic use of this blog would be as my personal venting place for my first year of teaching. The fact that most of my readership has practically abandoned me makes it all the better. If some stragglers make their way back, they can be treated to the burgeoning display of my psychoses, but if no one reads this, I'll just consider this writing to be wildly cathartic. It helps me to imagine an actual readership.

So the cause of my woe today is simple: classroom management.

I'm not sure how else to say this: I'm not an effective disciplinarian. I'm not consistent. I'm not subtle. I'm not confident in my abilities as a classroom manager. How much of this is a result of being new and how much of it is an innate failure as an authority figure remains to be seen. However, having spent two years as a college instructor and another year as a student teacher, one would imagine that managing a classroom would be second nature to me by now.

Now, that's not to say that my class is a complete zoo. In fact, two of my ninth grade classes and one of my eleventh grade classes listen to me quite well. We get along swimmingly, and the general tone is one of mutual respect and understanding. I suspect this is because the group dynamic in these classrooms is such that the positive elements are the most forceful.

I have a BIG problem with students talking during class. And I'm not talking about little whispering comments while stuff is going on - I mean full fledged conversations while I'm saying stuff at the front of the room. I've addressed it in many different ways:
Sarcasm: "Well, looks like there are some folks in here who think they're WAY too interesting."
Politeness: "Please save your conversation for later."
Asking: "Could you stop talking, please?"
Anger (not proud of this): "IT'S TOO LOUD IN HERE. BE QUIET... NOW!"
Bartering: "We're almost to the discussion part of class. Keep it down while I'm talking."

So right there... lack of consistency.

But the problem is that nothing seems to work for very long, and I just don't understand the mentality. I would venture to say that 85-90% of my students will do as I ask; however, there's maybe 10% of them who disregard my authority whenever possible. This also sets a bad example for the rest of the class. It makes me look like a pushover. This leads to more kids being a disruption. This particular pattern is especially noticeable in my fourth period class.

I was always such a spineless little pussy in high school. I did whatever my teachers said, even if it was a piss poor teacher. In fact, this trend carried through all the way through grad school. The idea that kids will just flagrantly disregard authority is something that I totally understand on an intellectual level, but on a purely emotional level, I can't understand why someone would act that way.

I don't beat myself up over a bad handout or a questionable lesson because I know I have a lot to learn. But when I can't manage a classroom because I can't understand how the kids are thinking, I question my ability to be a teacher at all. I've never been able to understand social interaction in everyday society very well let alone with developing adolescents. I sometimes wonder if I even have the emotional faculties to really deal with the kinds of behaviors that I'll be confronted with in high school.

---------------------------------------
"I've been here eating eggs and ketchup all day waiting for this."

7 comments:

KP said...

So many things went through my head reading your post...

1. Welcome Back, it's about time.
2. What you are describing is virtually a perfect pre-req class for parenthood. Sharpen your skills now with other people's rugrats and when it's your turn you'll at least have a fighting chance.
3. When all else fails, channel George Kastanza. Do exactly the opposite of whatever your natural instinct is see how that works for you. It worked for George!

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Thalia in Jamaica said...

wow! I also have a huge problem with my older sets of students (the 16 to 18 year olds). Everything you said was right on. In my case, it has gotten to a point where the majority of the lesson is spent dealing with the distractors and while I would love to kick them out of the room, that would be irresponsible to the neighbouring classes.

My head of department, on the other hand is GREAT at setting the tone for discipline early on. She lays donwn the law in the first class complete with when she will call in parents, where detentions will be served and whether they would be welcome back in the class...

SIGH..

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Anonymous said...

Practice makes perfect. Do you want to teach? Then, do it. Go looking around the bldg for a mentor and see what he or she does. Try it on to see if it fits, and just do it. Firm, consistent and fair. Good luck!

Anonymous said...

Classroom management (CM) is never an easy task, Specially on older students from middle school and up. I have found that CM always needs constant revision in order to bring in those disruptive students to pay attention. Sometimes, going a different route like setting up your lesson plan to force those students to pay attention can help a great deal. I find that putting them in groups and making it a research/debate project get them really involved. More on CM, Implicate a seating chart placing your students carefully. For example, place hard to deal with students between well-behaved students. You can also change the seat arrangement quarterly to prevent future socializing.
There are so many things you can do. Use your tools and CM basics that you learned. Even if some CM tools/skills sound childish for their age.
Hope this was helpful in some way
^_^

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