Behaviour management

At best, all teachers have some form of behaviour management system in place which will enable them to not only control their class, but will also allow for a healthy and productive learning environment. At worst, teachers and learners adopt strategies simply to get them through the day.

I have been obliged to revisit and analise my own approach to behaviour management and in order to do so, I have unearthed some of my own notes which I am sharing with you now.

A teacher’s personality will have a direct bearing on the strategy adopted and its effectiveness. What may work for one person, may not work for another. It is possible that a school’s ethos or policy statement may not allow for a teacher’s particular behaviour management style…

In this series of posts, there are listed three possible approaches to behaviour management:

  • a humanist approach
  • Glasser’s Control Theory (William Glasser: Control theory (1986)) and,
  • assertive discipline approach

There are many more and in a post modernist world (if you live in that kind of society) it is often the case that they are not exclusive to one another and there is some degree of overlap.

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