The best advice I ever
received came from my mentor teacher back in my college years, “Make them love
you. When they love you, they’ll do anything for you… even learn.” This message
seemed so simple, and yet was so powerful, that became my most important
principle in behavior management, motivating me to develop skills in child
guidance and psycho-education. My mentor’s advice helped me understand that any
teacher’s ability to influence, persuade, and guide a habitually disruptive
student towards positive classroom behavior depends on the bond, or rapport,
established between the child and the adult. With rapport, and creating an
alliance for change, teachers can shift the balance from negative interactions
and disruptive behavior to positive interactions and compliance. Rapport with
the student will be our best psycho-educational tool during difficult times,
for example, during acting-out episodes or tantrums. The more the child likes
us and wants to please us, the more compliance we get. On the other hand,
without rapport, our ability to influence and guide the child will be very
limited.
What do you think? What was
the best advice in behavior management that you ever heard or read?