|
Five Good and Not So Good Things to
Say to Your Students
By Chick Moorman
The fact is that 80% of all talk done in classrooms
is done by teachers. Sometimes that talk is lecture. Other times
it involves giving directions, reprimanding, reminding, questioning,
suggesting, motivating, or explaining. Regardless of its form,
from kindergarten through twelfth grade, teacher talk makes up
80% of classroom talk.
Is some of that talk better than others? Does some help motivate
and encourage? Does other teacher language shame and belittle?
Are teachers always aware of the effect of their words? You might
be surprised. Let’s take a closer look at five good and
not so good things to say to your students.
Five Not So Good Things to Say to Your Students
1. “What did I just tell you?”
“Where were you when I explained this?”
“Didn’t I just explain that?”
“Haven’t you started yet?”
“Do you know where your seat is?”
Refrain from asking questions to which you already know the answer.
These questions are thinly veiled accusations that require no
answer. If students did reply to one of these questions, they’d
be accused of disrespect.
“Do you know where your seat is?”
“Yes, it’s in the fourth row, third one back.”
“OK, that’s a detention for you, Jason.”
If you really want to know if Janelle has her assignment done,
if Kristen has begun her work, or where Matthew was when you gave
the assignment, ask. But if your intention is to remind students
to get in their seats, begin their work, or pay more careful attention
during explanations, tell them directly without asking a question.
If you already know the answer, then deliver your real message
in clear, direct, respectful language. “Kristen, I need
you to begin now.” “Matthew, you were unfocused when
I made the assignment. If you are ready to focus now I will go
over the directions one more time.”
2. “I like the way Linda is sitting.”
Teachers have been taught to ignore the behaviors they do not
want and give attention to those they desire. You know the philosophy,
“Catch em being good.” Teachers have been trained
to say:
“I like the way Armond is standing.”
“Look how Carlos walks down the hall. I am enjoying his
behavior”
“I appreciate the how Sabrina is working.’
Although this style of Teacher Talk works if you want to manipulate
behavior, it does not model honest, open communication. “I
like the way Linda is sitting,” is not even intended for
Linda. It is intended for everyone else. In this case, Linda is
being used to manipulate other students into behaving in a similar
way. When you do this you model indirect communication and manipulation.
Neither is justified by the result of having students sitting
appropriately.
3. “Tell him you’re sorry.”
When you force a student to say she’s sorry when she is
not, you teach her to hold back her anger, choke off her frustration,
numb out her real feelings; pretend they do not exist, and lie
to the other child. In these cases, we do students a disservice
by teaching them to deny their feelings.
Telling someone you are sorry can be an easy way out resulting
in cheap forgiveness. It is a simple penance which excuses the
student from considering a change in behavior. She does not have
to create a plan for more appropriate action or think about how
to behave differently in the future. She does not have to think
at all. She only has to say, “I’m sorry.”
As an alternative, have students think about the situation and
articulate what they learned and what they intend to do differently
next time. Being sorry has more to do with behaving differently
next time than it does with saying the words, “I’m
sorry.”
4. “That’s not a good excuse.”
By giving students feed back on their excuses, we believe we
are teaching them to behave more responsibly. Actually, this style
of Teacher Talk has the opposite effect.
When we determine the acceptability of students’ excuses
we set ourselves up as the excuse judge. We communicate to students
that our role is one of excuse examiner whose job it is to pass
judgment on excuses. That leaves the role of excuse givers to
students and encourages them to generate more excuses for us to
rate.
When we say, “That’s not a good excuse,” we
communicate, “If you had a good excuse, I might accept it.”
Every time this happens we undermine the student’s responsibility
and invite more excuses.
5. “Always do your best.”
“Always do your best,” at first glance seems to fit
our goals of creating high expectations and of encouraging students
to strive for excellence. However, always doing one’s best
is impossible. No one can always do his best and to ask for that
impossibility communicates our incongruence with reality.
In addition, striving to always do one’s best is often
undesirable. Do we really want students working to do their best
on the first draft of a three-draft piece of writing? The goal
of a first draft is to generate ideas and let the writing flow
freely. Students who worry about doing their best in this circumstance,
get caught up in minor details and block the flow if ideas that
could later be refined and turned into their best.
Is it helpful to ask a student who has never attempted cursive
writing to do her best on a practice sheet or is it more important
that she feel comfortable enough to experiment with the new skill?
Perhaps doing one’s best is better saved for more appropriate
times.
It is important to eliminate platitudes like, “Always do
your best.” from your Teacher Talk vocabulary. Save “Do
you best” for those times when you really mean it, for those
instances when it is crucial that students summon their energy
and motivation to create their own unique brand of excellence.
|
| 2006
Predictions in Education |
|
(continued)
[Classroom Management Articles]
Five Good Things to Say to Your Students
1. “Check yourself….”
“I’m having trouble hearing. Please
check yourself to see if you are using your inside voice.”
“We’re getting ready to go to the
assembly. Please check yourself to see if you are lined up next
to someone that that you’ll be able to sit with quietly
once you get to the auditorium.”
“I’ll be taking your papers home tonight.
I’ll be looking for facts that support your statements.
We have a few minutes left. Please check yourself to see if you
have enough facts to back up your statements.”
“Your science notebook will be given points
for these seven items. Check yourself to see if your notebook
contains them.”
The words spoken here are, “Check yourself.”
Yet the real message, the silent message is, “I see you
as capable, responsible, and as someone who can check on yourself.
Checking is your job. I believe you can handle it.” Using
“Check yourself” with students is Teacher Talk that
encourages self-responsibility and creates autonomous learners.
2. “Please make a BE choice.”
Students can’t always control what they
“do” in your classroom. You decide if they are to
work cooperatively or independently. You decide whether they are
to do a one or two-page report. You decide if they work on fractions
or long division. You decide when time is up.
Although you often decide what they will do, students
always decide how they will “be” when they do what
they do. A “be’ choice is always under their control.
They choose how they will “be” during the assembly,
while working on math, or doing a science project with a partner.
“Please make a ‘be’ choice,”
is Teacher Talk that helps students stay conscious of the fact
that they are choosing how to "be." A third grade teacher
announced, “We’re getting ready to see an art demonstration
from Jenny’s father, Mr. Hanson. Please make a “be’
choice for how you want to be during his talk. Pick from the list
on the board. We’ll talk about the results of your “be”
choice” after he leaves. The list included, friendly, interested,
helpful, respectful, polite, and alert.
Being gives birth to doing. If a student learns
to be friendly, friendly acts follow. If a child chooses to be
helpful, helpful acts flow from that decision. Add, “Please
make a ‘be’ choice,” to your Teacher Talk repertoire
and help your students access a piece of their personal power.
3. “Next time…..”
“Next time please let me finish my sentence
before you start talking.”
“Next time please respect the ¾ inch guidelines and
show all your work.”
“Next time I’d like you to use words to communicate
your feelings.”
Next time is a valuable piece of Teacher Talk
that will help you plant positive pictures in students’
heads of what you want to happen in the future. It helps them
build a mental model of the expected behavior.
Saying, “Next time” does not guarantee
that the student will choose the desired behavior at the next
opportunity. But it increases your odds that the behavior will
occur. And it helps you add positive phrasing to your Teacher
Talk.
Using, “next time’ is a positive alternative
to “don’t.” “Don’t walk through
Lionel’s blocks,” is critical and draws attention
to the negative. “Next time, walk around Lionel’s
blocks,” is instructive and communicates the desired behavior.
If you hear yourself telling students, “Don’t
run,” next time alter your Teacher Talk. Tell the student,
“Next time, walk.”
4. “You decide.”
Many times throughout the day students ask questions
that place the teacher in a permission-giving role.
“May I sharpen my pencil now?”
“Will this book qualify for extra credit?”
“Is it OK if I ask Beth to help me?”
To step out of the permission-giving role and
empower your students, consider the phrase, “You decide.”
This phrase, along with similar language, “You choose,”
“It’s up to you,” and “You can pick,”
can effectively place decision –making responsibilities
on the shoulders of your students.
One caution: only use this phrase if your answer
to their question was going to be, “Yes.”
If it’s not OK to ask Beth for help, say, “No.”
If it is OK with you for the student to ask Beth for help, do
not give permission. Reply instead, “You decide.”
5. “Check it out inside.”
We teach students where to turn for answers. We
show them how to find answers in the dictionary, on the internet,
in their text books and in an encyclopedia. We help them learn
the skills of using a reference librarian effectively. We teach
them to look to a variety of sources for answers. But rarely do
we teach them to look within.
“Check it out inside,” is a Teacher
Talk phrase that helps us help students look within for answers.
Each of us has a wise part within, an intuitive part that knows
what is best for us. Learning how to contact, listen to, and trust
that inner authority are important skills. They are invaluable
when life presents us with problems whose answers aren’t
in the back of the book.
“Not sure what part to audition for the
play? Check it out inside.”
“Unclear who to interview for your paper?
Check in.”
“Wondering who to ask to your party? Give
it the tummy test.”
“Check it out inside,” is a piece
of Teacher Talk that teachers the student to trust his own judgment.
It helps him develop as an independent, autonomous individual
capable of making personal decisions. Having faith in his own
inner authority serves a student well by enabling him to resist
the temptation to please others at his own expense or to compromise
himself by conforming to peer pressure.
Chick Moorman is the author of “Spirit Whisperers:
Teachers Who Nourish A Child’s Spirit,” and “Parent
Talk: How To Talk To Your Child In Language That Builds Self-Esteem
and Encourages Responsibility.” He is one of the world's
foremost authorities on raising responsible, caring, confident
children. He publishes a free monthly e-zine for educators and
another for parents. To sign up for one, order a book, or obtain
more information about how he can help you or your group meet
your staff development or parenting needs, visit his website today:
www.chickmoorman.com
|