EdWorld Internet Topics





Our Top 10 Professional Development Features
Math Corner
New Teacher Advisor
Reader's Theater
Reading Coach
Responsive Classroom
Strategies That Work
Teacher Feature
Voice of Experience

Columnists

Eric Baylin
Dr. Fred Jones
Professor Joe Martin
Emma McDonald
Cathy Puett Miller
Dr. Ken Shore

More Professional Development Features
Article Archives
Best Books for…
Bulletin Boards
Backpacktivities
Contests & Competitions
Letters About Literature
Love Teaching
Message Boards
Organization Tips
Reading Room
Reading Tips
Stress Relief Kit
Teacher Diaries
Teacher Tunes
Total Reader
Virtual Workshop
Web Wizards

Professional Development By Subject
The Arts
History
Interdisciplinary
Language Arts
Math
Science
Social Science
Special Ed. And Guidance
Technology

More Professional Development Resources
Classroom Management
Holidays & Special Days
Parent Issues
Special Themes
Teachers' Lounge
Wire Side Chats

Visit Our
Other Channels


Article Archives
Free LP Newsletter
Holiday Lessons
Lesson of the Day
Work Sheet Library
See more...


Article Archive
Free Admin Newsltr
Admin Columnists
Ideas Library
PR for PRincipals
See more...


Article Archive
Sites to See
Tech Lesson of Week
Tech Team Articles
Techtorial How-To's
See more...


Article Archive
EW Goes to School
Regina Barreca Humor
School Issues Glossary
Wire Side Chats
See more...





A+ Site Reviews
Advertising Info
Contact Us
EDmin Planning Center
Education Standards
Financial Tips
Free Newsletters
Message Boards
Subjects/Specialties
Tips Library
Tools & Templates
See more...
Featured Programs
   E-Learning

Home > Professional Development Channel > Archives > Responsive Classroom Archive, Classroom Management > Responsive Classroom Article

RESPONSIVE CLASSROOM ARTICLE

What Teaching Matthew
Taught Me


Share

By Andy Dousis


"Matthew! Get away. You’re not sitting with us!” Libby hissed the words, her voice oozing with contempt as she stuck her leg out to keep Matthew from joining the small group gathered for silent reading.


From the
Responsive Classroom

Thousands of classroom teachers in hundreds of elementary schools are familiar with the Responsive Classroomâ approach to creating a learning environment where children thrive academically, socially, and emotionally. Nationwide, educators use Responsive Classroom strategies to foster safe, challenging, and joyful elementary classrooms and schools.

Education World is pleased to partner with the Responsive Classroom to bring you articles from their popular newsletter. We hope you will enjoy and learn from these practical articles and take time to visit the Responsive Classroom Web site. There you can explore the Responsive Classroom article library and sign up for the Responsive Classroom Newsletter.

I whipped around. The vehemence in Libby’s voice shocked me. Libby generally treated her classmates with kindness and seldom spoke sharply to anyone.

Disturbed by this exchange, I observed the interactions between Matthew and his classmates closely for the remainder of that mid-December day. I did not like what I saw and heard. At midday outside, Matthew was standing by the wall, crying. When I asked what was wrong, he replied through sniffles, “The boys won’t let me play. They said I’m not good enough.” After I spoke with the students he meant, they called for Matthew to join their Four Square game, but he no longer wanted to.

Later in the afternoon, when Matthew returned from his visit with a reading teacher, he approached a group of children and asked to join their activity. “No, we’ve already started,” one child said in an unfriendly tone. The child’s words were not the issue. It was her tone.

There were several more instances of children speaking sharply and negatively to Matthew.

I left school that day feeling discouraged. From the first day of school I had worked hard to help the students build a caring classroom community. I had seen it taking hold, but it sure was not flourishing today. What was going on?

NOT AN EASY CHILD TO BE AROUND

Puzzling through this, I reminded myself that I had known all along that making Matthew a full member of the classroom community would be an uphill climb, for Matthew was not an easy child to be around. He had entered fourth grade saddled with more challenges than any one child should have to bear. He often came to school unwashed and in ill-fitting clothes. His shirt never covered his big belly; his pants never reached his ankles. He struggled with academics, barely reading at first grade level. He dissolved into loud sobs at the least frustration. Finding the right words to make his way into a conversation or to ask for something was a struggle. So Matthew frequently poked and pushed and grabbed. His chronic outbursts wore his classmates—and teachers—out.

Before school had even started I knew that I would have to work especially hard to make sure Matthew had a respected place in the room. I called on him for answers when I knew he had them. I partnered him with students who could be counted on to work patiently with him. In the first few months things seemed to go pretty well. Matthew was at least tolerated and well-treated, if not yet a cherished class member. Not so today. When did the students’ treatment of Matthew erode? What brought it on? And why had I not noticed?

TURNING MY OBSERVER’S EYE UPON MYSELF

My inner voice said that if I wanted the answers, I had to first look at myself. Over the years I’ve learned that good teaching involves having a willingness to look at your own behavior and ask what part you might be playing in what’s going on in your classroom—the good and the not-so-good. So the next day I turned my observer’s eye upon myself and began to note my own behavior. Before Morning Meeting started Matthew was butting his head into Tyler’s shoulder. “Matthew! Stop!” I snapped. As students moved from Morning Meeting into math groups, I heard myself barking, “Matthew! Sit down now!” I seemed unable to speak the child’s name without an exclamation point behind it.

I reflected. In September I would have redirected Matthew with a gentle hand on his shoulder or a quiet “Matt, move over here now.” In September I made sure to welcome him warmly at the beginning of each day. Today I did not check in with him before Morning Meeting. In September I made it a point to use Matthew’s name in positive comments. Today I was loudly and frequently calling attention to his awkwardness.

I realized how very tired I was. Tired from the intense energy that the first phase of the school year requires and hungry for the late December week off that marked the first substantial break of the year. In addition to this predictable energy dip, the effort required to help the intensely needy Matt navigate daily classroom life added to my fatigue. As my exhaustion grew, my alertness to our classroom interactions diminished. I managed to overlook the rough tones and edgy words creeping into the children’s—and my—interactions with Matthew until they had escalated to an undeniably attention-grabbing level.

But now I was noticing. Moreover, as I continued to notice, it became clear that I was contributing to Matthew’s mistreatment. But wait, let me be more precise: I wasn’t just contributing to his mistreatment. I was teaching it. When I snapped at him, I gave permission to twenty-three others to snap at him too. I was using a surefire teaching strategy: modeling. I knew well the power of modeling and used it often and intentionally: “Watch how I lift Matilda out of her cage.” “Watch while I dribble the soccer ball around Jen.” “What did you notice? Now you try it this way.”

I realized that my interactions with Matthew were a powerful, unintentional modeling. When I stopped seeking Matthew out to say a friendly hello in the morning, the students stopped too. When I snapped commands at him, they snapped too. I was treated to a painful refresher lesson about the strength of modeling.

DETERMINED TO TURN THINGS AROUND

Having seen and acknowledged my role in what was going awry, I needed to make some changes. It wasn’t easy, given how tired I was. But my determination was greater than my fatigue. I decided that I needed to see Matthew with new eyes, to look again for the positives in Matthew. And then, through intentional modeling, I needed to help the class see the positives in him as well. I found five specific ways to do this:

I did everything possible to use words and tone with Matthew masterfully. There was no room for slippage with him. I would call him “Matt,” his preferred nickname. I would speak quietly.

I looked for -- and publicized -- instances of positive behavior from Matthew. This was tougher than it might sound, because the things I noted had to be real. Students can spot any phoniness right away. But I was able to see real positive efforts on Matthew’s part when I worked at it—every single day. And it got easier. The more I watched, the more I noted how hard Matthew was working. And the more I noted, the harder he worked.

I sought help from the whole staff. I asked the principal if I could bring my struggle to our faculty meeting. “I’ve screwed up,” I stated to the group, “and I need your help.” I asked everyone to be especially patient and positive with Matthew so that he would receive consistent treatment from us all. Every colleague agreed to help.

I looked for some area in which Matthew could be the class expert. I found it quite by luck. One day I brought in several discarded appliances gathered from friends—an iron, a couple of hair driers, an old-fashioned alarm clock—and created a Take-It-Apart station in the room.

It turned out that Matthew excelled in this area. He could take apart virtually anything and reassemble it. A pile of screws and odd-shaped metal objects that left his classmates baffled were an engrossing 3-D jigsaw for Matthew. I added more and more complex objects as the weeks went by, and I put Matthew in charge of the area. Students would come to me for help, and I’d furrow my brow, shrug, and say, “Ask Matt.” And ask Matt they did. “Thanks, Matt,” I began to hear routinely when I walked by the Take-It-Apart station.

I made sure the class also saw Matthew being competent in learning academics. This was challenging not just because of his beginning reading skills, but also because of his limited participation in the class’s academic program due to being pulled out often for intensive academic support. But remembering that he had once talked with some excitement about a TV show on wolves, I suggested that he learn more about them.

With help from his special education teacher, Matthew researched the topic, relying on videos and magazine articles with lots of pictures and captions, and planned a presentation to the class. He worked hard on an accurate drawing of a wolf with painstaking labeling. He created a set of posters with pertinent vocabulary words: endangered, predator, carnivore, hunter. He drew a map to depict where North American wolves live. He practiced his presentation in the resource room. On the day of the presentation to our class, his parents came in for the occasion. School was clearly not a comfortable place for them, but they were there, and they were proud.

I can still hear Matthew’s high-pitched voice and see him rocking back and forth, heels-to-toes-to-heels as he began, “I’m gonna talk about wolves. First I’m gonna show a little bit of a video … ” His presentation was well received. The class was genuinely interested and their questions were many and real. “Where do red wolves live?” “Are there wolves around here?” “How much does a wolf weigh?” “Why are wolves endangered?” Matthew had an answer for every question. He had acquired another area of expertise. In small, solid increments, Matthew’s classroom currency was growing.

A LESSON THAT SERVED ME VERY WELL

The rest of the year had its ups and downs, but it’s safe to say that it was a good year for Matthew and for the rest of the class. Although he didn’t have friends in the typical ten-year- old way, he had a respected place in the class. One colleague who knew Matthew came up to me one day in the spring and said, “You know, I think this is the best year that Matthew’s ever had.”

As I followed Matthew through the subsequent years, I was pleased to see him make continued progress. His path was not an easy one, but I think the lessons he learned in fourth grade served him well. I know that what I learned about teaching—courtesy of Matthew—has served me well in all the years since.

About Andy Dousis

Andy Dousis taught third and fourth graders for ten years at Flanders Elementary School in East Lyme, Connecticut. For the last seven of those years, he led Responsive Classroom trainings for NEFC and his own school. He is now an on-staff senior consulting teacher at NEFC, giving workshops and supporting teachers as they implement the Responsive Classroom approach.

The original version of this article can be found at the Responsive Classroom Web site.

Copyright© 2007 Northeast Foundation for Children

Article by Paula Denton
Education World®
Copyright © 2007 Education World

04/27/2007



 

Career School Directory





Fundraisers & Fundraising Ideas:
Earn 90% Profit!

Leading Trade and
Vocational Career
savings.


Online Degree Directory

Walden University
M.S. in Education
Degrees Online


Online Schools
University Degrees
College Programs


College-Review
Reviews of Top US Colleges


Search Colleges
Online Schools
University Degrees


EducationInc.com
University of Phoenix
& Accredited Colleges


Argosy University
Graduate Degrees
for Working Teachers


Grants for Public
& Private Schools
Free Information


APUS
Online Degree
For Educators


Educational Toys
& Expert Selected
Learning Toys

Special Needs Learning
Products and materials from
a trusted name in education.


Earn your master’s
without compromising
your commitments



Copyright 1996-2008 by Education World, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Home | About Us | Reprint Rights | Help | Site Guide | Fellows | Contact Us | Privacy Policy