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Tattle Tales
by Chick Moorman and Thomas Haller
Children tattle. They do it at daycare. They do it at home. It
happens in the primary grades and continues on into high school.
Regardless of the grade you teach, tattling will occur in your
classroom.
Many teachers don’t like tattling and have devised plans
to reduce its occurrence and eliminate it from their classrooms.
Some techniques we have witnesses or heard about follow.
“I use a tattleman, which is a stuffed teddy bear that
I keep in the back of the room,” says a veteran kindergarten
teacher. “I tell the students if they are tattling because
they are upset, to go tell it to the tattleman. Many kids whisper
in tattleman’s ear throughout the year and it has significantly
cut down the amount of tattling in my classroom.”
“I keep a plastic tree in the back of my second grade classroom.
If the tattling is not about the 3 B’s, blood, barf, or
being hurt, I tell my students to tell it to the tree.”
“I teach my children to only come to me for medical emergencies,”
a middle school teacher announced. “When they come to tattle
I ask them if it’s a medical emergency. When they say “no”
I simple send them on their way. It takes about a month or two,
but tattling ends quickly in my classroom. I just don’t
tolerate it”
“I made a Tattle Tail,” one early childhood educator
announced. “When kids tattle, they carry the stuffed tail
with them for a portion of the day. It works.”
While the ideas expressed above may be well intentioned, the
results do not serve to create self-responsible, thinking, caring,
children. Let’s take a closer look.
Understand tattling is pro-social aggression. It is a natural
stage in the development of the conscience. It is a necessary
and desirable part of the developmental sequence. Knowing that
it is normal and inevitable will help you be less resentful of
it and more likely to deal with it effectively.
Rename tattling. Tattling is a negative word with negative connotations.
Because we call it tattling and define that as bad, we work to
eliminate it in classrooms. Why not just give tattling a new name.
We suggest you call it reporting. Reporting doesn’t have
a negative association attached to it. In fact, we even pay people
in our society to do reporting. Don’t you wish some child
had reported the recent school shootings before they occurred?
When to report. Some teachers help children determine when is
and when is not an appropriate time to report a situation, behavior
or circumstance. The 3 B’s of reporting a Barf, Blood, or
Being hurt is one example. Another is the teacher who asks children
who report, “Is it going to get them in or out of trouble.”
If it is going to get them out of trouble, she wants to hear the
report. If the reporting is designed to get the other child into
trouble she instructs the reporter to keep it to himself.
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Chick Moorman & Thomas Haller |
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(Continued)
Our position is that there is no inappropriate time to report.
Instruction on when to and when not to report is misguided and
unhelpful to the student’s development as a self-responsible
human being. It is always valuable to report.
The right person The important issue to help children appreciate
about reporting is not when to report. Nor is it the consideration
of what to report about. The critical decision about reporting
involves WHO to report to. We must help children learn to report
to the right person.
When a child reports to you that a classmate was passing rubbing
alcohol around on the bus and asking students to sniff it, he
is reporting to the right person. If a child tells you his friend
got sick in the bathroom, he is reporting to the person who most
needs to hear the report.
The wrong person. If a student reports to you that another student
won’t give him a turn on the swing, he has reported the
wrong person. Your job here is to help him find the correct person
to report to and teach him how to do it effectively .Say, “Sounds
like you are wanting a turn. That’s something you need to
report to Cherrie. Would you like me to help you create some words
to use when you tell her?” Then accompany the child to the
scene and coach him through the dialog making sure he is heard.
Later, after a few attempts with your presence, you can send the
child off alone to report his feelings and desires to the person
who most needs to hear them.
High school students can be taught to report to the person next
to them that they don’t like it when answers are copied
from their paper. The correct person to report to in this case
is the person doing the copying. If several instances of reporting
to this correct person are unsuccessful, a new correct person
emerges to report to, the teacher.
Young children can be taught to report to the person who steps
on their toe, not to the teacher. Middle school students can be
taught to report bullying when they notice the victim is unable
or unwilling to stand up for herself. At first they can report
their feelings to the bully. Later they can report to an adult
if necessary.
Self-reporting. On occasion, children need to report to themselves.
If the behavior is not bothering anyone and is not potentially
harmful, the child may need to say something to himself. “This
isn’t my issue,” is helpful. So is, “This is
not a major concern.”
Children will tattle. Why not relax into it and accept it as
normal and inevitable? Why not see it as an opportunity to help
your students learn about the importance of reporting to the right
person?
Chick Moorman
and Thomas Haller
are the authors of The 10 Commitments: Parenting with Purpose.
Chick is also the author of Spirit Whisperers: Teachers Who Nourish
a Child’s Spirit. They publish a FREE e-zines for educators
and another for parents. Subscribe to them when you visit, www.chickmoorman.com
or www.thomashaller.com. Chick Moorman and Thomas Haller are two
of the world’s foremost authorities on raising responsible,
caring, confident children. For more information about how they
can help you or your group meet your teaching needs, visit their
websites today. |