There are many
ways to classify orientations to classroom management. In chapter 3 we examined
how cognitive style and world-view contribute to how we approach teaching. In
this chapter we will examine how classroom management practices differ based on
one’s orientation to discipline itself.
To help accomplish this, we will incorporate a 4-quadrant matrix for
characterizing management style orientation that has grown out a series of
research studies into teacher practices (Shindler, Jones, Taylor, Cadenas,
2003, 2004, 2005). This Management
Orientation Matrix, depicted in Figure 4.1 below, has proven useful in
helping distinguish one category or practice from another, and will provide one
of the fundamental frameworks for the ideas in the coming chapters of this
book. The vertical axis of the matrix represents the level of effectiveness of
the management practices, and the horizontal axis represents a continuum of
theoretical orientation, from more student-centered on the left, to more
teacher-centered on the right.
Figure 4.1: Four-quadrant
Matrix of Management Style Orientation and Practice:
teacherclassification_files/image002.gif)
The horizontal axis of the matrix represents the range of
practices related to the locus of power, ownership, and fundamental goals for
any class. This axis ranges from a very
teacher-centered to a very student-centered orientation. While this dichotomy
represents a bit of an oversimplification, it offers a very basic contrast in
teaching philosophy, as we will see when we examine each of the sub-factors –
ownership, goals and assumptions, in more depth.
In the teacher-centered class, the power rests primarily
with the teacher, as does the ownership for decision-making. In a
teacher-centered class, the students need only follow instructions. In a student-centered class, the teacher
takes on the role of guiding the students’ efforts. Ownership for decisions,
large and small, is given to the students, whenever possible. This leaves the
students with a higher burden for solving problems and making consequential
choices. The question that best defines the contrast in this continuum is, “who
has their hands on the steering wheel of the class?”
The underlying goal of a teacher-centered class is order.
The underlying goal of a student-centered class is student self-reliance. In the teacher-centered class, success is
defined by how well the students execute their responsibilities and the level
of efficiency that exists in the learning environment. The rationale behind
this thinking is that in an orderly and obedient classroom, there is less
wasted time, and more on-task behavior, which benefits everyone. So the view in
a teacher directed class is that the ends - students who are more productive
more of the time, justify the means – teacher direction. In the
student-centered class, success is defined by the amount of personal and
collective growth that the students experience over the course of the term. The
rationale behind this thinking is that when students are put in positions in
which they must take ownership for their own learning and are expected to be
self-responsible, they learn lessons that are as valuable as anything that they
can learn from the curriculum.
At the heart of a teacher-centered approach is the
assumption that students need to be managed or they will misbehave by nature.
Basic to a student-centered approach is that students have an inherent desire
to learn and improve. Therefore, in the teacher-centered thinking, it is
desirable to take a teacher-directed approach because the students need
it. Whereas, the student-centered
thinking would suppose that the reason that students might appear to need a
teacher-directed class is that they have become dependent on them, and are just
lacking the opportunities to develop their own self-responsible nature.
As a result of these basic assumptions a teacher-centered
approach is very comfortable with the use of extrinsic rewards. This approach
finds rewards and punishments a very effective way to change behavior. Since
the result is often more desirable behavior more of the time, the ends support
the use of the means. A student-centered classroom resists the use of extrinsic
rewards and punishments, and views them as vehicles that rob a student of their
intrinsic motivation. This approach sets out to create a learning environment
that is inherently motivating, and relies more heavily on tapping into student
interests and meeting students’ basic needs.
Chapter Reflection 4#: Where
would you place your management orientation along the horizontal continuum? Are
you more inclined toward a more student-centered or a more teacher-centered
approach to classroom management?
The vertical axis of the matrix is related to the
effectiveness of the management practice. At the top of the axis are the most
effective forms of practice defined by high function, sound relationships, high
levels of motivation, and high productivity. At the base of the axis are the
least effective forms of practice defined by low function, relationship
dysfunction, low motivation and a lack of productivity.
In our research into classroom practice (Shindler, Jones,
Taylor, Cadenas 2004) we have seen that the degree of effectiveness is related
most strongly to first, the intentionality of the system of management and
second, the degree to which the locus of control of the teacher is internal
rather than external. Therefore, the peak of this axis represents practices
that are less accidental and reactive and more systematic, deliberate and reflect
an increasing level of teacher ownership for student outcomes. Let us examine
both of these sub-factors in more depth.
Intentional and Conscious
Put simply, more effective teacher practices are
demonstrated by those who know what they are trying to accomplish and how then
intend to accomplish it. That is, they are “intentional” in their practice.
This approach is contrasted to those that are short-sighted, reactive and
unconscious, which could be described as “accidental.” Intentional practice is
characterized by efforts undertaken within a larger scheme within which each
specific teaching act fits. An
accidental set of practices has no such coherence, and therefore collectively
amount to little if anything beyond a series of disconnected strategies. This
lack of vision creates a lack of confidence and a feeling of discontinuity in
the students, in other words, a sense that they are part of a class that lacks
leadership.
If you talk to a teacher who does an effective job of
classroom management and helping their students succeed, you will hear in their
words the underlying convictions – “I believe it is about what I do”, and “I am
responsible for helping my students succeed.” The frame of mind that is
expressed in this attitude is both internal – “success will be dependent on the
investment I make in my variable in the equation” and responsible – “My job is
to help every student succeed.” Contrast this to the mindset of a teacher who,
after a sufficient amount of training and practice, still demonstrates
ineffectiveness and experiences a high level of student failure. In most cases,
the attitudes that these teachers express are both external – “there is nothing
that I can do with these kids,” and irresponsible – “it is not my fault.” While
there are hundreds of choices to be made in one’s career related to which
classroom management practices are most desirable and worthy to adopt, our
underlying attitude in this area will be the single most determining factor in
our success. Simply put, success is impossible apart from the mind-set that
one is responsible for their student’s learning and behavioral outcomes.
Chapter Reflection 4#: Recall a
teacher that you judge to be excellent. When they speak about their students
and their profession, how would you characterize their language? Does it
reflect a more internal or external locus of control?
The Resulting Matrix: 4 Differing Approaches
to Management
When we position one axis
across the other, we are left with 4 quadrants that characterize 4 very
different approaches to classroom management and teaching in general.
Throughout the book, each particular management approach/style will be referred
by its style number, 1-4, to represent each of the 4 quadrants of the matrix.
Those at the top have been assigned 1-style and 2-style, while those at the
bottom were assigned 3-style and 4-style. Numbers are only used to distinguish
quadrants, not to assign value. The
orientation that is most your style and best for you will be left to you to
decide – the 4-style or Dominator, 3-style of Enabler, 2-style of Conductor or
the 1-style or Facilitator. However, you will be persuaded very early in the
book (if you need persuading or have not been persuaded by now) that either a 1
or 2 orientation will produce profoundly greater degrees of success for both
the teacher and the students.
As far as which
orientation, 2-style or 1-style, is more effective, the reader is asked to
judge for him or herself the approach that best fits their own personal
teaching style and goals. A sound, healthy classroom with a fully functioning
social contract (see ch.9) can be achieved with either a 2-style or a 1-style
management approach. But as the reader will discover throughout the book there
are advantages and disadvantages of each orientation (see table 4.x).
A Brief Description of each of the 4 Classroom Management Approaches
4-Style or Dominator Management Approach
The essence of the 4-style
orientation is the teacher as “boss.” The 4-style teacher feels the need to
dominate by both overt and covert means. Students in the class see quickly that
they have only two choices, to be obedient or rebel. While there appears to be
a high degree of intentionality to the 4-style management practice due to the
authoritarian display of power, a closer examination reveals much less in
reality. Because the teacher acts so frequently out of a reactive mode,
students are seldom fully sure what to expect. The mood of the teacher has a
great deal to do with the climate of the class on any particular day. Moreover,
the 4-style manager is typically a fan of extrinsic rewards, “sit and get”
teaching methods, and the use of grading for the purpose of coercion.
As we will discuss in more
detail in chapter 20 (Moving up from 4-style to 2-style management), at the
heart of the 4-style management approach is a “pain-based logic.” To attain
their desired outcomes the teacher resorts to the delivery of pain to students
in the form of punishments, threats, anger, public humiliation, victimizing
humor, putting names on the board, and shaming. As a result, the 4-style
classroom takes on a combative and hostile climate. As the pain is exchanged
between the teacher and the student, over time an increasing number of negative
side effects occur, including a decrease in motivation, a lack of trust, an
emotionally unsafe climate, and various acts of displaced aggression.
3-Style or Enabler Management Approach
The defining
characteristic of the 3-style manager is passivity. They experience perpetual
disappointment that the students are letting them down. The 3-style teacher
operates under the faulty assumption that if they make enough reasonable verbal
appeals to students (rather than taking deliberate action and/or delivering
meaningful consequences), at some point, the students will respond with
functional behavior. In most cases, the 3-style teacher is acting out of the
rejection of what they see as the unhealthy, authoritarian, 4-style manager.
Yet, what they produce is often just as accidental and chaotic as what they are
trying to avoid. And commonly, when the 3-style manager become too frustrated
with the students’ dysfunction and lack of respect, they react with episodes of
hostility, which brings them even more inner conflict.
The fundamental problem is
that the 3-style teacher preaches self-direction and internal motivation, yet
do little to promote them. They confuse the need for a structure with being
controlling, which they see as objectionable. The 3-style is typically well
intentioned, but inherent in this approach is a lack of courage to lead. Their
commitment to promoting student interests is noble, but over time students
learn that they are able to act as they please. As a result, a high degree of
“Social Darwinism” becomes the defining quality for the peer relations. Without
intending to, the 3-style teacher has helped promote a rather unsafe emotional
climate, thus their label the “enabler.” Cooperative learning and engaging
hands on activities that are the preference of the 3-style teacher increasingly
descend into playtime and a chance for students to “mess around,” as a result
of a lack of clear direction and purpose.
Chapter
Reflection 4#: Recall teachers A and B from exercise 2.1. How would
you classify their management styles on the matrix in Figure 4.1 above?
2-Style or Conductor Management Approach
The most popular classroom
management training in the past few years has been defined by the 2-style
orientation. Those such as the Canters, Wong, Jones, and others would best be
described as teacher-centered approach proponents. The Canters provide the
useful term “assertive discipline” which provides a contrast to the passive
(3-style) or hostile (4-style) approaches that they recognized as so
ineffective. The 2-style “Conductor”
builds their approach on logical consequences, rather than personal attacks and
negativity.
The Conductor takes a very
intentional approach to management. A successful 2-style begins early in the
year with a period of training and education in rules, procedures, and
consequences. As if under the command of an orchestra conductor, the class is
trained to respond to directions in a very efficient manner. The structure in
the 2-classroom is evident. It is built on consistency and clarity. Out of this
structure, the goals of a productive learning environment, respect,
accountability and positive relationships are constructed. The 2-classroom includes a heavy reliance on
encouragement and rewards. The pedagogy in the 2-style approach tends to lean
toward direct instruction, but includes multiple methods that have been
demonstrated to obtain results.
1-Style or Facilitator Management Approach
Relatively few teachers
choose to take the path of the “facilitator” or 1-style manager. The ultimate
goal of the 1-style manager is to create a class that is self-directed and
manages itself. These teachers understand that to do this it will take time,
but are willing to live with what might feel like a little less predictability
so as to achieve their long-term goals. One-style management goals are defined
by an intentional promotion of the students’ intrinsic motivation and sense of
personal responsibility. Students in the 1-classroom grow in their ability to
answer both the “what are we doing?” as well as the “why are we doing it?”
kinds of questions. An implicit understanding of the community expectations is
cultivated. To achieve this end, the 1-style teacher makes a devoted attempt to
help student recognize the value of functional and responsible behavior.
The 1-style approach
places the emphasis on the process of learning over end products, and personal
growth rather than the attainment of rewards or the students’ relative success
in comparison to other students. The
1-style orientation values long-term student empowerment over what might be
considered methods that appear to be “working” in the short-term. The goal is not to merely have the student
appear on task, but to know that the learning is building toward a positive
orientation toward learning itself. The
pedagogical approaches that define the 1-style orientation are typically
constructivist, collaborative and problem-based.
Chapter
Reflection: Recall the last teacher that you have observed. Which style would best characterize his/her
management approach?
Table 4.x Key Characteristics of Each of the
4 Management Orientations
|
|
Student-Centered
|
Teacher-Centered
|
Effective/Intentional
|
1-Style Teacher
|
2-Style Teacher
|
Ineffective/Accidental
|
3-Style Teacher
|
4-Style Teacher
|
As you reflect on your own personal values and what you envision wanting to accomplish in your classroom, you may find yourself being drawn more to either the 2-style or 1-style approaches to management. Each approach is developed over the next several chapters, often side by side. Table 4.x outlines a brief list of advantages of each orientation.
|
Advantages of the 2-style approach |
Advantages of the 1-style approach |
|
Can get functioning system in place relatively quickly |
Working toward a self-regulating system eventually |
|
Clearly understood teacher and student roles likely |
Increasingly empowered students over time |
|
Relatively simple to repeat each year and export to other
teacher’s classrooms |
Promotes a lot of learning and insight into the skills
necessary to participate in a democratic system. |
|
The overt structure of the system is readily appearant to
administrators, parents and other teachers |
The implicit structure becomes evident (and impressive) to
others who are able to spend time in the class and appreciate the intention. |
|
Low stress on the part of teacher and students related to
low ambiguity and chaos |
Leads to high levels of teacher and student (needs)
satisfaction |
Chapter Reflection 4#: What
would you anticipate to be the forms of resistance to using a 1-style approach
in a school characterized by a 4-style environment? The experience of Erin
Gruwell depicted in the movie “Freedom Writers” may be useful to consider as
you reflect.
Technically, one can use practices that would fit into any
number of orientations, however, there is a cost. First, incorporating
practices from the 3 or 4 orientation will have a destructive effect on your
2-style or 1-style based classroom plan.
Often without knowing it, a very sound 2-style or 1-style teacher will
use 4-style orientation practices such as punishments, unhealthy praise, or
public shaming (especially in the form of putting names on the board), and
without knowing it they are handicapping their ability to be more fully
successful with their students.
Students cannot articulate, in most cases, that the use of
particular practices feel contradictory and operate to send mixed messages, but
they certainly experience it. And very often when a teacher is relatively
likable and successful with their intentional forms of practice, it is
difficult to measure the damage 3-style and 4-style practices inflict on their
classes. As you continue reading you may notice that much of the content of the
book is devoted to illumination why 3-style and 4-style practices are
destructive, and often deceptively so.
“I cannot decide between a 2-style or 1-style approach, can
I use some of each?” This is a common question. Incorporating a little from one
and a little from the other is certainly workable. And, we should remember that
the main consideration in the process is to move our practice upward on the
vertical axis. Yet, if you mix approaches, you may be sending mixed messages. A
common example of a mixed-orientation message would be when we in some cases
allow students to be self-directed, and in other similar situations we simply
give orders. This can send the message that, “sometimes I trust you and
sometimes I don’t.” On first glance, this is probably how we genuinely feel
towards our students. So what is the
problem? Take a moment to reflect from the perspective of the student. What do
you hear in that message? Is it trust? Who has their hands on the steering
wheel of the class? The students need to be clear as to your answer, or they
will show their frustration. As you
progress through the book, it is likely that you will encounter ideas that will
facilitate your decision to move one direction or the other.
If you have a strong commitment to a student-centered approach, but realize that your efforts have led you to what you would characterize as a 3-style, there is hope. And of all those that choose to pick up this book, you may be the one with the most to gain. It is likely that you have felt a temptation to adopt 2-style approach, yet the encouragement of others who are finding success with a more teacher-centered approach does not leave you entirely convinced, or comfortable abandoning your student-centered principles. You have likely had to endure a great deal of disparagement. No one gets criticized like the 3-teacher. Because of what appears to be a very active (albeit hostile) approach by 4-style teachers, people usually leave them alone. But for you they somehow feel free to give advice.
Improvement of your situation begins with an examination of
the essence of the vertical axis – Intentionality and internality. Don’t
confuse taking action for being controlling. As you explore the coming
chapters, you will discover how much planning and deliberate effort must go
into helping students become self-directed. The methodological pathway is
spelled out in detail. Chapters 8, related to promoting a success psychology,
and then 9, outlining how to create a social contract should provide a solid
framework and practical steps for one’s efforts toward succeeding at creating a
1-style classroom.
Look for references to the management style orientation
matrix in the coming chapters. When you see this symbol, it will identify a reference
being made to the matrix.
teacherclassification_files/image003.gif)
Chapter 20 offers an examination of the 4-teacher, and a set
of steps to move from a 4-style to a 2-style approach. It includes an in-depth analysis of why
4-style management is so prevalent despite its apparent drawbacks. Many
chapters incorporate the lens of the contrasting approaches of the 2-style and
1-style orientation to their topic areas.
Chapter 17 is devoted entirely to how to move from a 2-style to a 1-style
approach for those readers who feel that they would ultimately like to attempt
to develop a 1-style classroom
Journal Reflections:
1.
2.
Class Activities:
1.
2.