PresEd19: Chapter 11 ( Guiding Children's Behavior: Helping Children Act their Best.)

PresEd19: Chapter 11 ( Guiding Children's Behavior: Helping Children Act their Best.)
Chapter 11
Guiding Children's
Behavior : Helping
Children Act Their Best
Prepared by:
Del Castillo, Reine Ros
How To Guide
Children’s
Behavior
Guiding children’s behavior is a process by
which all children learn to control and use positive
behaviors, it involves behavior guidance.
Behavior Guidance
is a process by which all children learn to
control and direct their behavior and become
independent and self-reliant.
is a process of helping children develop skills
useful over a lifetime. They learn to plan,
monitor, and guide their own thinking, feeling,
and behavior.
How can
professional
achieve these
goals?
12 Essential Steps In Guiding
Children’s Behavior
Step 1. Clarify Your Beliefs.
Step 2. Know developmentally appropriate
practice.
Step 3. Meet children’s needs in individually
and culturally appropriate ways.
Step 4. Help children build new behaviors
and skills of independence and
responsibility.
Step 5. Establish appropriate expectations.
Step 6. Arrange and modify the
environment so that appropriate,
expected behavior and self-control are
possible.
Step7. Model appropriate behavior.
Step 8. Avoid creating or encouraging
behavior problems.
Step 9. Develop a partnership with
parents, families, and other who are
responsible for children.
Step 10. Recognize, value, and support
teaches, parents, and children’s basic
rights.
Step 11. Teach cooperating living and
learning.
Step 12. Teach and use conflict
management.
12 Essential Steps
In Guiding
Children’s Behavior
Step 1. Clarify Your Beliefs
• The first rule in guiding children’s
behavior is to know your attitudes about
guiding children’s behavior. A good way
to do this is to develop a philosophy
about what you believe concerning child
rearing, guidance, and children.
Step 2. Know developmentally
appropriate practice
• The foundation for guiding all children is
to know what they like-how they grow
and develop. Knowing child development
is the cornerstone of developmentally
appropriate practice.
Step 3. Meet children’s needs in
individually and culturally appropriate
ways
A major reason for knowing children and child
development.
• Physical Needs – Children’s abilities to guide their
behaviors depends in part on how well their physical
needs are met.
• Safety and Security – Teacher can’t teach in fear.
Children should feel comfortable and secure at
home and at school.
Step 3. Meet children’s needs in
individually and culturally appropriate
ways
Belonging and Affection – Children need to
love and affection.
Self-Esteem - Children who views themselves
and learn better.
Self-Actualization - Children’s wants to do
things for themselves and be independent.
Step 4. Help children build new behaviors
and skills of independence and
responsibility.
• Helping children build new behaviors means that you
help them learn that they are primarily responsible for
their own behavior and that the pleasures and rewards
for appropriate behavior are internal, coming from
within them as opposed to always coming from
outside.
• This concept is known as locus of control, the source
or place control. The preferred and recommended
locus of control for young children is internal.
Lagyan ng  ang patlang kung larawan ng
tao at  kung hindi.
2. _____
3. _____
4. _____
1. _____
Step 5. Establish Appropriate
Expectations
• Expectations set the boundaries for
desired behavior. They are the
guideposts children use in learning to
direct their own behavior. Like
everyone, children need guideposts
along life’s way.
Lagyan ng  ang patlang kung larawan ng
tao at  kung hindi.
2. _____
3. _____
4. _____
1. _____
• Teachers and parents need to set high and
appropriate expectations for children. When
children know what to expect, they can better
achieve those expectations. Up to a pint, the
more we expect o children, the more and better
they achieve. Generally, we expect too little of
children and ourselves.
Step 5. Establish Appropriate
Expectations
Step 6. Arrange and Modify
the Environment
• Environment plays a key role in children’s ability
to guide their behavior. Arrange the environment
so that it supports the purposes of the program
and makes appropriate behavior possible.
Appropriate room arrangements signal to
children that they are expected to guide and be
responsible for their own behavior and enable
teachers to observe and provide for children’s
interests.
How To Arrange
The Classroom To
Support Positive
Behavior
Lagyan ng  ang patlang kung larawan ng
tao at  kung hindi.
2. _____
3. _____
4. _____
1. _____
 Have an open area
which you and your children can meet as
a whole group. This area is essential for story
time, general class meetings, and so on.
Starting and ending the day with a class
meeting provides an opportunity for children to
discuss their behaviours and suggest ways
they and other can do a better job.
Create center areas
that are well define and accessible
to children and have appropriate and
abundant materials. Make center
boundaries low enough so that you and
others can use them for proper
supervision and observation.
Provide for all kinds of activities,
both quiet and loud. Try to locate quiet
areas together (reading area and puzzle area)
and loud centers together (woodworking and
blocks).
Lagyan ng  ang patlang kung larawan ng
tao at  kung hindi.
2. _____
3. _____
4. _____
1. _____
 Locate materials
so that children can easily retrieve them.
When children have to ask for materials, this
promotes dependency and can lead to
behavior problem.
 Establish a system
so that materials are easily stored, and
so that children can easily put them away. A
rule of thumb is that there should be a place for
everything and everything should be in its
place.
Provide children with guidelines
for how to use centers and materials.
Make the classroom a rewarding place
to be. It should be comfortable, safe,
and attractive.
Provide opportunities
for children to display their work.
Basic Features of
Classrooms that
Support Guidance and
Self-regulation
 Community and a culture of caring
 Clear expectation and high expectations
 Consistent behavior from teaches and staff. They
model appropriate behavior and expect it of children
 Open communication between:
Children-children
Teacher-children
Children-teacher
Teacher-parent; and
Parent-teacher
 Sufficient materials to support learning
activities.
 A belief shared by all staff that children can
and will learn. The teachers also believe they
are good teachers
 Routines establish and maintained.
 A balance between cooperation and
independent learning
 An atmosphere of respect and caring
 A partnership between teachers and
children.
Step 7. Model Appropriate
Behavior
Telling is not teaching. Action
speaks louder than words. Children
see and remember how other
people act. Modeling plays a major
role in helping children guide their
behavior.
You can use the following techniques to help
children learn through modeling:
Show - For example, show children where the
block corner is and how and where the blocks
are stored.
Demonstrate – Perform a task while students
watch.
Model – Modeling occurs when you practice
the behavior you expect of the children.
Supervise – Supervision is a process of
reviewing, insisting, maintaining standards, and
following up.
Step 8. Avoid creating or
encouraging behavior problems.
• It’s easy to encourage children’s misbehavior. Often
teachers expect perfection and adult behavior form
children. If you focus on building responsible
behavior, there will be less need to solve behavior
problems.
• Ignoring inappropriate behavior is probably one of
the most overlooked strategies for guiding children’s
behavior
• A combination of positive reinforcement and ignoring
can lead to desired behavior.
Children’s
Rights
Children’s Rights
Children have their rights in classrooms designed
to promote self-regulation:
To be respected and to be treated courteously.
To be treated fairly in culturally independent
and gender-appropriate ways
To learn behaviors necessary for self-guidance
To have teachers who have high expectations
for them
To learn and exercise independence
To achieve to their highest levels
To be praised and affirmed for
appropriate behaviors and achievements
To learn and to practice effective social
skills
To learn and apply basic academic
skills
Children’s Rights
Teacher’s Rights
and
Parent’s Rights
Teacher’s Rights
• To be supported by administration and
parents in appropriate efforts to help
children guide their behavior
• To have a partnership with parents so
that they and their children can be
successful in developing appropriate
behavior
Parent’s Rights
• To share ideas and values of child rearing
and discipline with teachers
• To be involved in and informed about
classroom and school discipline policies
• To receive periodic reports and information
about their children’s behavior
• To be educated and informed about how to
guide their children’s behavior
Step 12. Teach and use conflict
management.
Teaching conflict resolution strategies
is important for several reasons.
First, it make sense to give children
the skills they need to handle and
resolve their own conflicts.
Second, teaching conflict resolutions
skills to children's enables them to use
these same skills as adults.
Third, the peaceful resolution of
interpersonal conflicts contributes, in the
long run, to peaceful homes and
communities.
Step 12. Teach and use conflict
management.
ACTIVITIES FOR
PROFESSIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
1.Observe a primary classroom and
identify aspects of the physical
setting and atmosphere that
influence classroom behavior. Can
you suggest improvements?
2. In this chapter you learned twelve
steps for guiding children’s behavior.
3. List five behaviors you think are
desirable in toddlers, five in five in
kindergartners. For each behavior, give
two examples of how would you
encourage and promote development of
that behavior.
4. Interview five parents of young children
to determine what they mean when they
use the world discipline. What implications
might these definitions have for you were
their children’s teacher?
PresEd19: Chapter 11 ( Guiding Children's Behavior: Helping Children Act their Best.)
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PresEd19: Chapter 11 ( Guiding Children's Behavior: Helping Children Act their Best.)

  • 2. Chapter 11 Guiding Children's Behavior : Helping Children Act Their Best Prepared by: Del Castillo, Reine Ros
  • 4. Guiding children’s behavior is a process by which all children learn to control and use positive behaviors, it involves behavior guidance. Behavior Guidance is a process by which all children learn to control and direct their behavior and become independent and self-reliant. is a process of helping children develop skills useful over a lifetime. They learn to plan, monitor, and guide their own thinking, feeling, and behavior.
  • 6. 12 Essential Steps In Guiding Children’s Behavior Step 1. Clarify Your Beliefs. Step 2. Know developmentally appropriate practice. Step 3. Meet children’s needs in individually and culturally appropriate ways. Step 4. Help children build new behaviors and skills of independence and responsibility. Step 5. Establish appropriate expectations.
  • 7. Step 6. Arrange and modify the environment so that appropriate, expected behavior and self-control are possible. Step7. Model appropriate behavior. Step 8. Avoid creating or encouraging behavior problems. Step 9. Develop a partnership with parents, families, and other who are responsible for children.
  • 8. Step 10. Recognize, value, and support teaches, parents, and children’s basic rights. Step 11. Teach cooperating living and learning. Step 12. Teach and use conflict management.
  • 9. 12 Essential Steps In Guiding Children’s Behavior
  • 10. Step 1. Clarify Your Beliefs • The first rule in guiding children’s behavior is to know your attitudes about guiding children’s behavior. A good way to do this is to develop a philosophy about what you believe concerning child rearing, guidance, and children.
  • 11. Step 2. Know developmentally appropriate practice • The foundation for guiding all children is to know what they like-how they grow and develop. Knowing child development is the cornerstone of developmentally appropriate practice.
  • 12. Step 3. Meet children’s needs in individually and culturally appropriate ways A major reason for knowing children and child development. • Physical Needs – Children’s abilities to guide their behaviors depends in part on how well their physical needs are met. • Safety and Security – Teacher can’t teach in fear. Children should feel comfortable and secure at home and at school.
  • 13. Step 3. Meet children’s needs in individually and culturally appropriate ways Belonging and Affection – Children need to love and affection. Self-Esteem - Children who views themselves and learn better. Self-Actualization - Children’s wants to do things for themselves and be independent.
  • 14. Step 4. Help children build new behaviors and skills of independence and responsibility. • Helping children build new behaviors means that you help them learn that they are primarily responsible for their own behavior and that the pleasures and rewards for appropriate behavior are internal, coming from within them as opposed to always coming from outside. • This concept is known as locus of control, the source or place control. The preferred and recommended locus of control for young children is internal.
  • 15. Lagyan ng  ang patlang kung larawan ng tao at  kung hindi. 2. _____ 3. _____ 4. _____ 1. _____ Step 5. Establish Appropriate Expectations • Expectations set the boundaries for desired behavior. They are the guideposts children use in learning to direct their own behavior. Like everyone, children need guideposts along life’s way.
  • 16. Lagyan ng  ang patlang kung larawan ng tao at  kung hindi. 2. _____ 3. _____ 4. _____ 1. _____ • Teachers and parents need to set high and appropriate expectations for children. When children know what to expect, they can better achieve those expectations. Up to a pint, the more we expect o children, the more and better they achieve. Generally, we expect too little of children and ourselves. Step 5. Establish Appropriate Expectations
  • 17. Step 6. Arrange and Modify the Environment • Environment plays a key role in children’s ability to guide their behavior. Arrange the environment so that it supports the purposes of the program and makes appropriate behavior possible. Appropriate room arrangements signal to children that they are expected to guide and be responsible for their own behavior and enable teachers to observe and provide for children’s interests.
  • 18. How To Arrange The Classroom To Support Positive Behavior
  • 19. Lagyan ng  ang patlang kung larawan ng tao at  kung hindi. 2. _____ 3. _____ 4. _____ 1. _____  Have an open area which you and your children can meet as a whole group. This area is essential for story time, general class meetings, and so on. Starting and ending the day with a class meeting provides an opportunity for children to discuss their behaviours and suggest ways they and other can do a better job.
  • 20. Create center areas that are well define and accessible to children and have appropriate and abundant materials. Make center boundaries low enough so that you and others can use them for proper supervision and observation.
  • 21. Provide for all kinds of activities, both quiet and loud. Try to locate quiet areas together (reading area and puzzle area) and loud centers together (woodworking and blocks).
  • 22. Lagyan ng  ang patlang kung larawan ng tao at  kung hindi. 2. _____ 3. _____ 4. _____ 1. _____  Locate materials so that children can easily retrieve them. When children have to ask for materials, this promotes dependency and can lead to behavior problem.  Establish a system so that materials are easily stored, and so that children can easily put them away. A rule of thumb is that there should be a place for everything and everything should be in its place.
  • 23. Provide children with guidelines for how to use centers and materials. Make the classroom a rewarding place to be. It should be comfortable, safe, and attractive. Provide opportunities for children to display their work.
  • 24. Basic Features of Classrooms that Support Guidance and Self-regulation
  • 25.  Community and a culture of caring  Clear expectation and high expectations  Consistent behavior from teaches and staff. They model appropriate behavior and expect it of children  Open communication between: Children-children Teacher-children Children-teacher Teacher-parent; and Parent-teacher
  • 26.  Sufficient materials to support learning activities.  A belief shared by all staff that children can and will learn. The teachers also believe they are good teachers  Routines establish and maintained.  A balance between cooperation and independent learning  An atmosphere of respect and caring  A partnership between teachers and children.
  • 27. Step 7. Model Appropriate Behavior Telling is not teaching. Action speaks louder than words. Children see and remember how other people act. Modeling plays a major role in helping children guide their behavior.
  • 28. You can use the following techniques to help children learn through modeling: Show - For example, show children where the block corner is and how and where the blocks are stored. Demonstrate – Perform a task while students watch. Model – Modeling occurs when you practice the behavior you expect of the children. Supervise – Supervision is a process of reviewing, insisting, maintaining standards, and following up.
  • 29. Step 8. Avoid creating or encouraging behavior problems. • It’s easy to encourage children’s misbehavior. Often teachers expect perfection and adult behavior form children. If you focus on building responsible behavior, there will be less need to solve behavior problems. • Ignoring inappropriate behavior is probably one of the most overlooked strategies for guiding children’s behavior • A combination of positive reinforcement and ignoring can lead to desired behavior.
  • 31. Children’s Rights Children have their rights in classrooms designed to promote self-regulation: To be respected and to be treated courteously. To be treated fairly in culturally independent and gender-appropriate ways To learn behaviors necessary for self-guidance To have teachers who have high expectations for them
  • 32. To learn and exercise independence To achieve to their highest levels To be praised and affirmed for appropriate behaviors and achievements To learn and to practice effective social skills To learn and apply basic academic skills Children’s Rights
  • 34. Teacher’s Rights • To be supported by administration and parents in appropriate efforts to help children guide their behavior • To have a partnership with parents so that they and their children can be successful in developing appropriate behavior
  • 35. Parent’s Rights • To share ideas and values of child rearing and discipline with teachers • To be involved in and informed about classroom and school discipline policies • To receive periodic reports and information about their children’s behavior • To be educated and informed about how to guide their children’s behavior
  • 36. Step 12. Teach and use conflict management. Teaching conflict resolution strategies is important for several reasons. First, it make sense to give children the skills they need to handle and resolve their own conflicts.
  • 37. Second, teaching conflict resolutions skills to children's enables them to use these same skills as adults. Third, the peaceful resolution of interpersonal conflicts contributes, in the long run, to peaceful homes and communities. Step 12. Teach and use conflict management.
  • 39. 1.Observe a primary classroom and identify aspects of the physical setting and atmosphere that influence classroom behavior. Can you suggest improvements? 2. In this chapter you learned twelve steps for guiding children’s behavior.
  • 40. 3. List five behaviors you think are desirable in toddlers, five in five in kindergartners. For each behavior, give two examples of how would you encourage and promote development of that behavior. 4. Interview five parents of young children to determine what they mean when they use the world discipline. What implications might these definitions have for you were their children’s teacher?