Monday, February 22, 2010

Website displaying different theories of behaviour management:

http://www.ziplink.net/users/edboda/lisafinal/glasser.html


THEORY 1 : Dreikurs' Theory

According to Dreikurs all misbehaviour reflects children's decision about how they can most effectively belong to, or be recognised by the group. Students who are confident of their ability to find a place - to belong through constructive activity - will tend not to be a problem. Such individuals have developed feelings of equality and worth and are interested in co-operating with others and in participating usefully within a group. They face each school demand, be it intellectual, social, physical, or emotional, with confidence in their ability to cope with the demand. There is no need for them to misbehave because they know that they can function constructively and co-operatively in the class.

In contrast, there are discouraged children who feel that they cannot cope with the various school demands and decide to adopt unacceptable ways of behaving which they believe will gain them status and a sense of group recognition.

Teachers need constantly to remind themselves that they are the targets of disturbing classroom behaviour and that their reactions tend to sustain and strengthen undesirable behaviour. Before teachers can begin to assist individual children, they must stop giving undue attention, fighting, retaliating, or accepting students display of inability. That is the first and necessary step in any corrective program. Students who constantly disturb, disrupt, fail to learn, invite attention, rebel, or violate orders are discouraged individuals who feel that they cannot find a place in the class through constructive and co-operative behaviours and consequently turn to more destructive and inadequate behaviour in their attempt to find a sense of significance.

There are a number of processes designed to help pupils to develop more adequate ways of behaving but, before these approaches can be used, teachers must stop responding to unacceptable behaviours. As a first step teachers should train themselves to go against their first impulse and, consequently, break the detrimental cycle whereby a student acts and teachers react.

Rudolph Dreikurs describes four goals of students' misbehaviour: attention seeking, power seeking, revenge seeking, displaying inadequacy. These goals are based on the mistaken belief it will get the student the recognition/attention that they want. I like Dreikurs theory because in hightlighting teachers feelings in response to student misbehaviour,it gives another set of tools to analyse student behaviours. I often find that I get an emotional reaction to a behaviour first and then need to spend quite some time trying to work out why I am feeling that way. Dreikurs' work lets us use our feelings as a pointer to appropriate behaviour management. With Dreikurs theory he suggests that if a teacher is feeling annoyed by a student's behaviour then the student is most likely to be attention seeking; if the teacher feels threatened, then the student may have been power seeking; if hurt, then revenge seeking; if powerless with the student, then the student may have been displaying hopelessness/inadequacy.



THEORY 2: GLASSERs choice THEORY

William Glasser, M.D. (born May 11, 1925) is an American psychiatrist.

Born in Cleveland, Ohio, he is the developer of reality therapy and choice theory. His ideas, which focus on personal choice, personal responsibility and personal transformation, are considered controversial by mainstream psychiatrists, who focus instead on classifying psychiatric syndromes, and who often prescribe psychotropic medications to treat mental disorders. Glasser is also notable for applying his theories to broader social issues, such as education, management, and marriage, to name a few. Glasser notably deviates from conventional psychiatrists by warning the general public about the potential detriments caused by the profession of psychiatry in its traditional form because of the common goal to diagnose a patient with a mental illness and prescribe medications to treat the particular illness when, in fact, the patient may simply be acting out of unhappiness, not a brain disorder. Glasser advocated the consideration of mental health as a public health issue

The term choice theory is the work of William Glasser, MD, author of the book so named, and is the culmination of some 50 years of theory and practice in psychology and counseling. Choice Theory posits that behavior is central to our existence and is driven by five genetically driven needs, similar to those of Abraham Maslow:

Survival (food, clothing, shelter, breathing, personal safety and others)
and four fundamental psychological needs:

Belonging/connecting/love
Power/significance/competence
Freedom/responsibility, and
Fun/learning
Choice Theory posits the existence of a "Quality World" in which, starting at birth and continuing throughout our lives, we place the people who are important to us, things we prize, and systems of belief, i.e. religion, cultural values and icons, etc. Glasser also posits a "Comparing Place" in which we compare the world we experience with our Quality World. We behave to achieve as best we can a real world experience consistent with our Quality World.

Behavior ("Total Behavior" in Glasser's terms) is made up of these four components: acting, thinking, feeling and physiology. Glasser suggests that we have considerable control or choice over the first two of these, and little ability to directly choose the latter two. As these four components are closely intertwined, the choices we make in our thinking and acting greatly affect our feeling and physiology.

The source of much unhappiness are the failing or failed relationships with those who are important to us: spouses, parents, children, friends & colleagues. The symptoms of unhappiness are widely variable and are often seen as mental illness. Glasser believes that "pleasure" and "happiness" are related but are far from synonymous. Sex, for example, is a "pleasure" but may well be divorced from a "satisfactory relationship" which is a precondition for lasting "happiness" in life. Hence the intense focus on the improvement of relationships in counselling with Choice Theory—the "new Reality Therapy".

Choice Theory posits that most mental illness is, in fact, an expression of unhappiness and that we are able to learn how to choose alternate behaviors that will result in greater satisfaction. Reality Therapy is the Choice Theory-based counseling process focussed on helping clients to learn to make those choices.

http://www.my-ecoach.com/online/resources/3916/Article_Giving_Students_What_They_Need.pdf




http://0-proquest.umi.com.alpha2.latrobe.edu.au/pqdlink?Ver=1&Exp=02-22-2015&FMT=7&DID=41723531&RQT=309&clientId=20828

1 comment:

  1. Hey Dave. This is a great start.

    Reading Dreikurs' theory, it seems to be one of the ideas that it stems from the same place that Ray Lewis's theories come from.

    Reading Glasser's Choice Theory it seems to me that he's suggesting that that mental illness is mostly conscious choices on the part of the sufferer. Am I reading that right? If so, then I think that's just plain bull-hooey. But if that's not what he's saying, can someone explain what he actually means?

    And great found animation too! Perfectly mimicking the style and voices in the 60s. Love it :)

    ReplyDelete