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BLOG #3 – DYING FOR ATTENTION

18 Thursday Feb 2016

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BEHAVIOR MANAGEMENT IN THE CLASSROOM

 

I showed up for class early; it was a 5th and 6th grade, combo class. Students lined up outside the door before coming in. Sam was one of the last students to get into line and certainly, the last one to stop talking to friends. Sam, age 12, is the tallest, biggest and the best looking of his class. If he keeps growing, he will outsize me in just a couple of years. Given the dyed hair, the big size and the obvious attitude, I knew I would have my hands full with this one.

I started my class as I usually do; going over the rules of raising your hand, staying in your seat and reading a book when done. Then, I incorporated my new favorite, which is the Happy/Sad board. Students get one Happy point for correct answers, being helpful, passing out papers, asking to use the restroom, etc. They get one Sad point for talking when they should be listening or when they are supposed to be doing their work.

I explained these rules to a very silent class who were trying to decide if I planned to eat them or not. As I began to give points to students for doing lunch count, taking attendance to the office, handing out papers and the like, they started to get the idea and then began ‘working’ for points.

Some time ago I was introduced to the concept of self-fulfilling prophecies (Merton, 1948) meaning that what we believe about either ourselves or another person, frequently begin to manifest into actual patterns of behavior. Sam and a couple of other students had desks placed oddly on the edge of other students. This was an apparent effort on the part of the teacher to control ‘outré’ behavior. Sam began to almost immediate chitter-chat with the students at his table. I handed out morning work in math and it appeared that he knew how to do the equations. I called him and another student to the front to show us how the problem was done and to explain their method. After doing that, both students got to write their names on the board and to then get a point.

I deliberately called on Sam on other occasions so that he would have a chance to earn points on the board. Then, when his behavior started to deteriorate into silliness and goofing with other students, I had him march up to the front and erase points off the board. His co-conspirators also got to do the same thing. The important part of this punishment is that it is immediate and clear. There are no parents, counselors, principals involved. The student gets to give himself the reward or punishment right then and there. It is important when using methods such as this that the teacher has ‘with-it-ness,’ meaning that you are alert to what is going on in class; the good and the bad. Students need to be ‘caught’ doing things right as well as when they do things wrong.

At recess, I pulled Sam over to talk to me when the other students had left the room. I told him he could recapture those lost points but he had to stop goofing with the other students. End of lecture; very clear-cut, not very long and demanding no promises. It was going to be in his hands how this thing went.

After recess, I consulted my Happy Board and one by one called the students up to the front and gave them each a sticker from a page of popular Disney characters. Sam had re-earned one point so he got one too. A couple of times Sam attempted to engage me in discussions about ‘why do we have to do this anyway,’ kind of thing and I would not engage with him.

By the end of the day, Sam was working on his packet the way he was supposed to do and actually turned it in before any of the other 6th graders. One student was attempting to goof with him again and he told the kid to leave him alone because ‘he needed to finish his work.’ Unbelievable! Toward the end of the day, I handed out stickers one more time and Sam got a second sticker. It is important to realize that although the students do like the stickers, it is more the honor of getting called up to the front for good behavior and getting to show off a little in front of their classmates that is really ‘the thing.’

In the Calvete article the author points out that deep schemas of the adolescent individual predict surface-level anxious thoughts and these perpetuate more negative schemas. Maladaptive schemas maintain social anxiety. Negative self-imagery contributes to social phobias. Also, socially anxious individuals seek out negative information to reinforce preconceived notions about themselves because that is what they are comfortable with. The underlying negative self-schemas affect behavior and maintain social anxiety.

Sam is a twelve-year old boy who is dying his hair. This indicates a need to be ‘different’. He chatters incessantly which indicates an ‘other-directedness’ as indicates by Calvete and a constant need for approval from others. He has a hard time making eye contact and is argumentative. He is not autistic and this would suggest a trust problem with significant adults in his life. As teachers, our job is not to psychoanalyze Sam’s behavior constantly, but to figure out simple measures that will get him and keep him on track long enough so that he can utilize the brain he has to achieve, get some good grades and find new ways to feel better about himself. This is not just about learning the material, it is a process in class of getting the students re-organized, on task and moving along so they feel they can accomplish and handle the material and master what is in front of them.

Some may argue against the use of ‘rewards’ to encourage behavior. Research has shown that incentives can be moderately successful when they are well specified and well targeted. (Gneezy, Meier and Rey-Biel, 2011). These students are eleven and twelve years old. Eventually, we hope that they will become more ‘inner directed’ and less ‘reward or outer directed’ but that can still take some time. Regardless, all people enjoy positive recognition for doing well.

In this and in all classroom settings and also in parenting; it is the job of the teacher/parent, to teach the student/children to gradually think for themselves and to become independent in their thoughts and actions and to become capable of taking care of themselves and making proper choices. It is a long process involved in ‘letting go of the reins’ and gradually allowing the students to more and more to take control of their own learning and eventually, their own lives.

 

References:

Calvete, E, Orie I. and Hankin, B. L. (2013). Early Maladaptive Schemas and Social Anxiety in Adolescents, Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 27, pgs 278-288.

Gneezy, Uri, Meier, Stephen and Rey-Biel, Pedro (2011). When and Why Incentives Don’t Work to Modify Behavior, Journal of Economic Perpectives, Vol. 25, #4, pgs 191-210.

Merton, Robert K. (1948). Self-fulfilling Prophecy, The Antioch Review, Vol.  8, (#2-Summer) : pgs 193-210, retrieved Internet 5/4/2014.

Lions and tigers and bears, Oh my! Blog #2- Schema Learning

07 Sunday Feb 2016

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BLOG #2 – ACTIVATING SCHEMA IN THE CLASSROOM/CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT – Courtney Webb

I got the call early, had to cover for a 1st grade class, the teacher was sick. I pulled myself together and got to the school and into the classroom. The teacher had, (thankfully) come in early and created an entire lesson plan and gotten copies of all student activities made and sorted into piles (love him.) What stopped me short was the white board.

A large section of the board was divided into two rows; Happy Face and Unhappy Face. The Happy board had a number of names and apparently there was going to be a pizza party of some sort to celebrate. The Unhappy board had three names, all boys. Ominously there were points next to each name. 5 for the first, 10 for the second and 15 for the third! This was not looking good. How to get this ship turned around?

I stared at the board and then remembered my B.F.Skinner (1948) behaviorist training. When the students got into class we did role and I called the three Musketeers up to the front and pointed out the board.  I advised the students that if they did what I asked them to do, each time, they could come up to the board and erase one mark. Any marks left at recess meant they owed me one minute per mark. They nodded their heads.

I had them each erase one mark for coming up when I asked them to. I was using Skinner’s methods of reinforcement to control classroom behavior so that learning could occur. Skinner is regarded as the father of Operant Conditioning, but his work was based on Thorndike’s law of effect. Skinner introduced a new term into the Law of Effect – Reinforcement. Behavior which is reinforced tends to be repeated (i.e. strengthened); behavior which is not reinforced tends to die out-or be extinguished (i.e. weakened). (McLeod, 2007.)

Later we did ‘morning work’ and there were three pages of Math Facts. I gave students points for everything; correct answers, asking to use the bathroom, asking for a tissue, helping another student, and passing out papers. Anything and everything. Of course, the entire class got to participate and put “Happy Points” up on the Happy side of the board. By recess, all of the ‘bad’ points were gone and students were engaged in learning. Whew! Plus, they just loved earning points.

After recess, we read a book about a boy and the circus. From the circus we were able to leapfrog into talking about lions, and tigers and bears and where they come from. We talked about the park preserves in Africa and the shooting of Cecil the Lion and how the rangers found the body via the use of a GPS tracking device they had put in his ear. One 1st grader knew it was an American dentist who shot the lion. Then we talked about Yosemite Park and how many students had been there. Quite a few.

We talked about the US Forest Rangers in the park and how they put GPS trackers in the bear’s ears to track them and why. We discussed whether or not bears eat people (no) but that they come to the camps searching for food and that, yes, they are dangerous when frightened or threatened. We talked about endangered species and what the rangers are doing to protect them. In the end, I had to tell them about a master hunter at the local gun shop who was commissioned by the park to shoot bears that chronically come back to camp and threaten people. Unfortunately, this man had to shoot four bears last year; too bad.

Activating the student’s own schema we were able to talk about National Parks, wild animals, endangered species, GPS trackers, hunting practices and keeping safe while visiting the mountain parks. Students were actively engaged in the discussion and hopefully learned about something more than circuses (which are fun.)

Piaget first developed the concept of schema theory in 1926.  Later, R.C.Anderson further developed the idea that schemas are the storage system that we use to store experiences and knowledge that we have. (Little, Box, 2001.)

By activating prior knowledge and experiences (Who has been to Yosemite Park?) we are bringing students into the discussion. We are ‘scaffolding’ new learning onto older learning. Students who lack prior schematic knowledge can have more problems understanding and making sense of the text they are currently reading. This is especially true in cross-cultural settings and for many at-risk students. (Little, Box, 2001.)

By developing general knowledge (Who knows about lions and bears?) we are helping students to build schemata and make connections between ideas, using subject material they are interested in. The Schemata development in young children forms the basis for later learning. (Savage, 1998.)

Abstract concepts (endangered species, GPS tracking systems,) are best understood on a foundation of concrete relevant information (Who has seen a bear?) (Schallert, 1984.)

Schema development is an aid to reading, vocabulary development and comprehension. (Pearson and Anderson, 1979.)  Theorists are telling us that comprehension in reading is closely linked to prior knowledge and experiences. Concept mapping was a term used by Cassidy, 2011 to discuss the linking of sets of ideas and explaining their connections as a way to develop reading, thinking and brainstorming.

References:

Little, D. C. and Box, J. A. Spring 2011, Reading Improvement, Vol. 48, Issue 1, p. 24-31. 8p.

McLeod, Saul, 2007, updated 2015.  Skinner – Operant Conditioning, Simply Psychology, http://www.simplypsychology.org/operant-conditioning.html, Retrieved Internet 2016.

EPISTEMOLOGY BLOG POST

02 Tuesday Feb 2016

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Definition of epistemology

  1. : the study or a theory of the nature and grounds of knowledge especially with reference to its limits and validity

Origin of epistemology

Greek epistēmē knowledge, fromepistanai to understand, know, from epi- + histanai to cause to stand — more at stand (Websters.)
First Known Use: circa 1856

Yesterday, as a sub-teacher, I taught a lesson to first-graders on a book about masks. The book had masks from Korea, Japan, Africa, the American Northwest and Mexico. From the pictures we were able to pick out the blue tile roofs common to Korea, the face of Buddha from Japan, the carved wooden mask of Africa and the eagle from the Native Americans, probably from Washington State. We were able to explore (briefly) geography, culture and nationalities. We talked about totem poles of the NA people and that eagles, bears, fish and mountain lions were all made into images. We discussed Dia De Los Muertos and what that was (Day of the Dead) and what masks students had worn on Halloween.

Touching briefly on the subjects brings the study of geography and culture into the classroom and adds an element of inclusion for students who come from those cultures. Although none  knew where totem poles came from, many of them knew all about costumes for Dia De Los Muertos. Students like to feel included in classroom activities and that their personal backgrounds count and matter. Also, that these cultures have value and merit and therefore, they have value and merit.

Relective practice is “A moving beyond the acquisition of new knowledge and understanding, into questioning [of] existing assumptions, values, and perspectives (Cranton 1996, p. 76). Four elements are central to critical reflection: assumption analysis, contextual awareness, imaginative speculation, and reflective skepticism (Brookfield 1988, p. 325). (Imel, 1998.) Reflective practice is central to my style of teaching. 

Diversity training that I have received over the years has given me a greater understanding and perspective on the vast array of cultures and nationalities that come together in this state in particular and this nation. It is not just enough to teach students that we live in California, and Oregon is north of us and Washington State is north of that. What does that mean and why is it significant? It is important to teach students more than just a bunch of facts. In order to develop a comprehensive schema and understanding of the world, students need to learn connectivity between the things that surround them.

Reflective practice in all classes should consider whether students are engaged in the material, interested in what they are learning and whether or not they are demonstrating increasing and developing command of facts and skills.

Educators have become familiar with the concept of reflective practice through Donald Schon’s (1983, 1988) writings about reflective practitioners. Schon’s work has an historical foundation in a tradition of learning supported by Dewey, Lewin, and Piaget, each of whom advocated that learning is dependent upon the integration of experience with reflection and of theory with practice.  (Osterman 1990). (Imel,1992.)

However, Osterman (1990) maintains that an important part of reflective practice is developing the ability to articulate that tacit knowledge. The competent practitioner must be able to 1) describe the event 2) analyze the event) theorize about it and 4) take action. And, again and again, the practitioner (teacher) has to ask himself or herself the question “Is this working with this class?”

I was once a long-term sub for Job Corps in Sacramento. They had an expensive and complicated Reading 180 program. The class had an abundance of computers and tons of level reading books that should have been interesting to the students. The teacher had been extensively trained for the program. However; some smart psychologist decided the students lost interest easily, so a timer would ring every 15 minutes. Then, students had to get up and move to another work station. Great in theory and horrible in practice. Students hated the program, probably because they hated being herded around like cattle. The teacher nearly lost control of that class because of the negative emotional reaction from her students.

My personal epistemology would be that developing the whole mind schema is important for students in terms of how well they ultimately do on college entrance exams and also, for them to develop a well-rounded interest and curiosity in their world. Time and time again, I find students have more tucked up their sleeves than I would have thought. But, that information does not come out if I do all the talking. I once had a nine year old boy tell the class that the dinosaurs died because an asteroid hit the planet. He stole my line! Students need to become gradually more responsible in class for constructing their own learning and developing their own instruments for teaching others. Whether that be papers, Power Points or drama skits; students need to demonstrate their acquisition and command of knowledge their own way.

“Learning is the change in performance that results from experience and interaction with the world.” Students need to demonstrate what they learn. Standardized tests are one way to demonstrate learning, but they are not the only way and teachers need to develop tools in the classroom to assist their students in their ability to demonstrate their own learning. (Driscoll, 2005.)

Dweck talks about the mindset where students interpret their performance as a ‘setback’ or a ‘failure.’ Student who learn to evaluate their efforts as setbacks rather than abject failures are more likely to exercise persistence in the face of challenge. Students who ‘catastrophize’ every small thing into being a ‘big thing’ are more likely to give up and throw in the towel at the least little bump in the road. (Dweck, 2006.)

No large successes in school or any other endeavor will ever be accomplished without setbacks and it is our jobs as teachers to give students the permission to ‘reframe’ their reference points for self-evaluation and give themselves permission to ‘fail’ so that they will eventually succeed.

References

Driscoll, M. P. (2005). Introduction to theories of learning and instruction. In Psychology of     learning for instruction (3rd ed., pp. 1-15). Boston, MA: Pearson.

Dweck, C. S. (2006). Mindset: The new psychology of success (pp. 3-11). New York, NY: Ballantine Books.

Imel, S. (1992).  Reflective Practice in Adult Education.(Eric Digest No. 122. ED346319). Columbus, OH: ERIC. Retrieved from http://www.eric.ed.gov.hmlproxy.lib.

Imel, S. (1998). Transformative learning in adulthood. (ERIC Digest No. 200 ED423426). Columbus, OH: ERIC. Retrieved from http://www.eric.ed.gov.hmlproxy.lib.

Merriam-Webster: Dictionary and Thesaurus. Retrieved Internet: www.merriam-webster.com.

 

Korean Folk Drama – Andong

30 Saturday Jan 2016

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Hi: I have posted two new videos on You Tube. They are Korean Folk Drama – South Korea and Korean Folk Drama -Andong. These are old, old scripts that have been performed for hundreds of years. The actors, as in the old days, are all men , some dressed as women with the traditional masks and costumes. Even if you don’t understand Korean, I’ll bet you can figure out some of these themes!

 

 

Courtney Webb teaches ESL

26 Tuesday Jan 2016

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You can see my videos on teaching ESL on You Tube videos by following my name as listed above.

Hello – classmates

23 Saturday Jan 2016

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Well, something about me. As indicated, I am in the Master’s program for LEE which is Literacy and Early Education. I am currently working as a sub-teacher and was in South Korea for nearly six years teaching English there. As you might tell from my site, I am also a storyteller and write short stories and poems. I have been a member of two writing groups since I have gotten back and they have helped me a great deal in improving my writing. All comments are helpful to include ones on grammar, punctuation and content!

One of my first school memories was that of going to a small, country school in Texas. Because my father had been transferred in the military so many times during that time, I had not really learned to read very well. I was put in the bottom of the class. My teacher, Mrs. Beringer, took me to an outdoor kiosk and sat me down at recess and made me go over lists of spelling words. Within three months I had moved up to the top group. What a great teacher!

Thanks for checking in! CW

Odd Friends

22 Sunday Nov 2015

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Tags

FRIENDSHIP

I woke up with cave man hair today,

matted, too much hairspray,

too much Friday.

We sat in the restaurant eating

Mexican food, drinking coke until

late.

Talking and talking.

Mostly me jabbering on about the

details of my incredibly interesting life,

he and she eating and listening.

He described her as five feet nothing,

one hundred pounds.

He is tall and skinny, all angles and bones, big nose.

Brown eyes, but wary.

Her eyes are dark and bright, often,

feverously intense.

A mop of curly dark brown hair circles

her pale, pixie face, young but old.

Old beyond her years and sad with a sadness

so deep no therapy can reach.

Orphaned early in life she has found him,

with his losses, more physic than real.

They cling to each other furiously and offer

me hope.

Hope as I watch my old friendships

like multi-colored, candy castles,

dissolve under the hot water that is

age and life.

Watch those people sicken and die or

get crazier with time.

They sit and listen and tell me of their

future and I feel the promise

of untried tomorrows.

They are a gift to me in this café,

babbling away about art and writing and

people.

We talk about tomorrow until the wee hours.

We are friends and I give them something they

have lost or never had.

They give me tomorrow.

 

 

 

 

Benefits of Stationary Cycling

27 Sunday Sep 2015

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knees

This article is from The Arthritis Foundation:

There’s no question that indoor cycling is an excellent way to get a cardiovascular workout without stressing weight-bearing joints, says Matthew Goodemote, head physical therapist at Community Physical Therapy & Wellness in Gloversville, N.Y. It’s also a good option for people with balance problems, he adds, because there is no need to lean the bike to turn. “People with osteoarthritis (OA) or rheumatoid arthritis (RA) who become inactive because of pain often develop balance problems, so they are less likely to injure themselves on a stationary bike,” he says.

Want to start a routine? Go for it, but start slowly, perhaps with a five-minute session at a comfortable pace three times per day, says Goodemote. “Once people can ride with no pain for five minutes three times a day, I bump them up to seven minutes, then to 10, 15 or 20 three times per day – getting them to 30, 45 or 60 minutes of exercise per day. Initially, adding five minutes seems like a big jump, but once tolerance builds, larger gains are made in shorter time frames. Down the road, people can more easily add 15-minute increments to their rides.

Right now I am back in Physical Therapy for my knee (again!) That auto accident  two years ago didn’t do anything to help the knee. I had already had a number of sports injuries over the years. Right now I am experiencing pain on the outside of the knee at the site of the ligaments. I never tore anything, just pulled everything pretty badly. The therapist gave me a thing like a big rubber band. It is a rubber ‘ring’ and I step into it and can sit in front of the TV and pull my knees apart in repetitions. She has me going up and down on my toes and then standing on one foot for a minute at a time. These are all exercises to build up the muscles on the outside of the leg and work to stabilize the knee. I am still riding my bike everyday at least 2 miles and usually 5 miles. The doctor had me increase the Ibuprofen to 3 in the morning and 3 at night. Also, I am supposed to ice the knee after every work out to reduce the swelling.

What I have is a little swollen patch on the bottom of the knee where fluid collects and then this off and on pain on the outside of the knee. The swelling does seem to have gone down. The icing seems like it is time consuming but, whatever! More and more articles on the Internet are stressing bicycling as great low impact exercise and a way to save the joints from osteoarthritis and then joint replacement. Whee! My mother had both knees replaces and it was zero fun. So, helmets on!

Staying in Shape, crotch zits and frozen fruits

10 Monday Aug 2015

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shape, zits

Crotch zits! Who knew it was possible? Well, ’tis. Riding around in my area, we frequently get heat into the 100’s and the bicycle seat actually gets hot! Then, also because of the heat (and use) my bike seat was starting to come apart adding to the aggravation. I ended up with four huge (!) zits in the crotch and butt area. They hurt and were uncomfortable and made riding almost impossible.

I had to make an emergency run to Macy’s to stock up on the essentials: Clinque Acne Solutions Clearing Gel and Kiehl’s Over-Night Biological Peel. The Kiehl lotion will bring the pimple to the surface and the Clinique will dry it. They were so deep in the skin it was almost like having a boil. Application of these two times a day and changing my undies twice each day and the pimples were gone in about five days. I use these on my face too for deep, under-the-surface bumps and they work the treat.

When I got my bike seat replaced, the woman recommended the ‘Airflow’ bike seat. The seat actually has a grove or depression the length of the seat and a hole in the middle. This is to improve air circulation and reduce the ‘hot seat’ situation I had that was contributing to the problem.

So, now that my butt is back in good working order on to the next subject – food. I was at the grocers getting my frozen fruit (strawberries, blueberries and cherries,) when something new caught me eye – frozen kale. My cousin made me a smoothie with all these ingredients and although it was green, you really couldn’t taste the kale. It is supposed to have a ton of good things in it; sort of like spinach. So, next shop, I may go ahead and buy this frozen concoction and give it a go.

Pre-diabetes: Smoothies

03 Monday Aug 2015

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pre-diabetes, smoothies

Since being diagnosed with pre-diabetes three years ago, I have been on the hunt for foods I can eat and an exercise schedule I can keep up with. My father had type-two diabetes and my brother has it and both of my sister-in-laws have it. No fun for sure. My latest is whey protein shakes in the morning. I hate breakfast and it is difficult for me to choke enough food down in the am to keep me going and prevent hunger attacks. My latest:

Almond milk or skim milk, one scoop whey protein powder, frozen fruit, yogurt, banana, sometimes ice cubes (if I want it really cold). Put it all in the blender and mix it up. I put in a dash of seasoned salt and a dash of vanilla for taste and it is pretty darn good. Keeps me even all the way through Zumba! class. CW

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