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7 Biggest Challenges Teachers Face

7 Biggest Challenges Teachers Face

TheApple.com

CHALLENGE: Students With Bad Behavior

about Kate Adams, Pre-K teacher, New York State

That first year, she was overwhelmed by the magnitude of her responsibility. She had 20 children in her class, and she felt solely accountable for the welfare, the academic progress, and the social development of each one of them. “At Baby Gap, I was responsible for the denim,” she says.

One of her students had a difficult home life and acted out in class. She would stand on the table, bark at the students and staff, lash out violently, and roll back and forth on the floor, bumping into the other kids. She bit one of the teaching assistants and hit the other students. Ms. Adams says she was so stunned by the student’s behavior she didn’t know what to do or how to help her. She had studied behavior modification plans in college, but this child’s behavior was so severe that the measures she learned about did not seem to apply. She wound up holding the student’s hand practically the whole day to keep her calm and restrain her from harming the other students. The student respected Ms. Adams and never became violent with her.

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Source: Natalie Schwartz, The Teacher Chronicles: Confronting the Demands of Students, Parents, Administrators and Society (Laurelton Media, 2008).

How to Handle Bad Behavior

Every student is unique and thus every behavior problem requires a unique approach. It’s hard to say that a teaching training program would have prepared this teacher for a barking student, so her quick and calm thinking did the trick.

TheApple can help you learn more about dealing with bad behavior.

Top 10 Behavior Articles on TheApple:

How to Approach Behavior Problems in Class
Taking Control of Your Class
Dealing with an Oppositional and Defiant Student
5 Surefire Tips for Handling Behavior
4 Ways to Work With Difficult Students
Punishment or Positive Reinforcement: Which One Works?
5 Ways To Win When Students Test Your Limits
5 Tips for Teaching Students to Respect Authority
How to Work With Disruptive Students
How Do I Keep My Students Quiet?

Next page: #2 Challenge Teachers Face


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  • Photo_user_blank_big

    kjthef

    27 days ago

    6 comments

    i have repeatedly invited the "administrators" who baby-sit the BD brats to come show me how to manage their "pets"; not ONE has came yet..., collectively, they all say -- it's YOUR responsibility, you're the teacher. And we wonder why our educati9on system is in a shambles; we wonder why our country is in a shambles, and today's brats are this country's future leaders?

  • Photo_user_blank_big

    kjthef

    27 days ago

    6 comments

    teachers should NOT be responsible for society's little brats who have parents with NO parenting skills..., there is far too many education dollars being spent on "behavior disorder" brats when for, OVERWHELMINGLY, most of them a good swat or two would "cure" their "BD".

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    adammathewjones

    2 months ago

    88 comments

    All the 7 Challenges are Really interesting. Even I had faced some of the Challenges that are been listed in the 7 Challenges.

    life jackets

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    JackCourtney

    2 months ago

    2 comments

    I consider teaching as a noble profession. With our teachers, we can't be somebody today. Our success is the result of all their hard work. School administrator must do something for the welfare of all teachers. They must get more benefits than anybody else.

    Jack Courtney

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    9267currie

    2 months ago

    2 comments

    I find it interesting that teachers are responsible for behavior. Behavior is major problem in schools and it is not being addressed, only bulleying. We need to re-evaluate free education. If a student has bad behavior that disrupt other students who want learn, maybe they should be put out of school and required to go to a private school so the parents would have to pay. I bet that would get the parents attention. It would shift the behavior issue back to the parents and make them responsible parents. Parents should be put into jail if their children don't go to school. I do believe in free education, but I don't believe that you have a right to act a fool and waste resources.

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    Mike_V

    3 months ago

    8 comments

    IN NO PARTICULAR ORDER: An Additional/Alternate List of "7 Biggest
    Challenges Teachers Face."

    Federal Secretary of Education, Which I Hope We Live Long Enough to See One Whom Actually Was a Classroom Teacher. To not talk of Optimal Curricular Institutions (though they make great sound bites), but to realistically compare and strive for an Education That Will Match Future Required Employment Skills.
    “Arnie D.” Needs To Look At The Department of Labor’s Job Growth Statistics, Before He Continues with His Big Bad Wolf Impersonation!

    States Secretary of Education, to follow Nation Standards of Curriculum (no not the new National Standards) but to implement the Use of NCTM, NSF, NCTE and NCSS, et…al, rather than turning them into their States Concept of a “Good Education,” generally know as “Dumbing Down,” so their Stats Look Better.

    Congress, who Only Offers Lip Service, so They Appear to be Concerned, so it Improves Their Reelection Chances.

    Principals who were in the Classroom only long enough to get their Administrative Credential.

    Constant Curricular Mandates/Changes, without Proper/Complete Funding and Inservicing.

    Districts whom Allow Bad Behaviors by Not Enforcing their State’s Education Code!

    Stop Training Teachers as Journeyman For District Needs and Return to the Study of Comprehensive Instruction & Techniques, thereby, Returning It To the Status of Professional Educator.

  • Photo_user_blank_big

    Mike_V

    3 months ago

    8 comments

    Hi Katie,
    Welcome to LAUSD and I know your pain! At the moment, I can only tell you that it's going to get worse and that the majority of "Suits" on Beaudry, our delightful Mayor, and both the State and Federal Secretaries of Education, could care less! They are all looking for TOTAL Control, so they can administer their Political Sleight of Hand, briefly pacifying a public who has been intentionally kept in the dark and/or fed a diet of highly massaged statistics, to justify their agenda, which will only weaken the system further. This pages comment is very nice, but equally out of touch and should have been started with "Once Upon A Time..."Please feel free to contact me and discuss some possible options! Take Good Care!

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    the8rnut

    3 months ago

    2 comments

    Like Cynthia, I thought I was "on track". Then suddenly my observations became negative and I was told that I probably wouldn't be rehired. I was told that I didn't collaborate well with my peers, didn't respect the parents and had multiple complaints (which I was not allowed to see). I was removed as director of the school play and a parent replaced me. Then I was also told that if I resigned the negative observations would stop. I resigned but the abuse continued until I threatened legal action.

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    putt4cash

    3 months ago

    2 comments

    I empathize with Cynthia in the story. I had a very similar situation and had to resign to save my mental health. I was a first year teacher doing 4 preps and moving classrooms. I was coaching an athletic team, but my schedule was so messed up that I was not in their athletic period, so I did not know all of the players on my team before we started after school practice. I had great success with 97% passing rate on our TAKS test and winning record in every athletic sport. I normally ate lunch in my office at the gym because of how chaotic my schedule was. I was called into my principal because there were other teachers who resented me and felt like I was not part of the overall team since I did not eat lunch in teacher's lounge and was not part of the hospitality committee. Everything I was told in school was to stay OUT of the teacher's lounge because of the negativity and many abuses of confidentiality. I asked him about the hospitality committee and he apologized because he had not mentioned anything about it me, but I was the one being held accountable. School politics can ruin a very good environment. My only solace was during class with the kids, no matter how many behavioral problems were present and I have several classes that had over 33% of the class with IEPs.

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    broadwaylady1

    3 months ago

    94 comments

    Ditto "schoolcrusader" And hopefully, school districts, our state and our federal government will wake the heck up-behavioral problems are the number one problem that I see. And if we don't start getting the support we need, the point was already made-it is not fair to hold us accountable for the students not achieving.
    I will premise this with the fact that I used to have a fantastic administrative team who were visible and genuinely cared. I'm not in that environment anymore (having been pink-slipped due to economic cutbacks in the school district)
    I'd like to share just one example from my classroom today- I tried to teach Science( 45 min., 29 students) Some students actually wanted to learn and asked for some help on a few things. However, I couldn't give them that help because let's see...there needed to be a special ed. co-teacher in the classroom to deal with the two emotionally disturbed students who have major anger issues and were yelling out and being totally disruptive, several students were just lazy(intelligent but didn't want to do the work)-One propped his feet up on the desk and smacked gum, another decided to go over and bother the other students who were actually trying to work, one student decided to lock the other students out because they were tardy-she just made up the rule on her own... And one student shared with me she's 2 weeks late(7th grader)-so I reported that directly to the counselor and my other team members. So, I never got to teach the students who really wanted to learn-there's something very wrong with that picture...now, I will say there is hope for humanity-I had 2 smaller classes of Pre-AP Science of 12 and 15 and actual teaching and learning took place. I know as teachers we are trying our best(almost all of us) We don't get the kuddos near enough-so today I would like to say congratulations fellow teachers to all of us for showing up and doing our best!

  • Shady_me_max50

    AEscalante

    3 months ago

    90 comments

    This is pretty helpful. Will refer back to this for future reference!

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    schoolcrusader

    3 months ago

    4 comments

    Boy, if this isn't yet another data point for why comprehensive social skills education is needed. Consistently teachers rank problems with students that are ill-behaved, unruly, and unfocused as their #1 problem. Yet, ask a school about why they don't have an effective program in place and they'll say "we can't afford it" or "we don't have time."

    Well, it's already costing teachers precious teaching time to have students that are disruptive and unprepared to learn. It costs EVERYONE in the school system from lack of achievement, to loss of productive learning time, to bullying and other anti-social behavior and more.

    It's not fair to hold teachers accountable for student achievement when so many of the kids come to school unprepared to succeed in a classroom setting. It's not that "we can't afford it"...it's obvious we can't afford NOT do something about it.

    - Corinne Gregory
    www.socialsmarts.com

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    yorkiehistorybuff

    3 months ago

    6 comments

    workplace politics have made my workplace a living hell. Every moment I spend with students is wonderful but I work with many people who are petty and mean spirited. They have successfully managed to destroy the collaborative spirit that existed in our department. My department head has contributed to this environment by listening to and encouraging backbiting and gossip.

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    k8ddid

    3 months ago

    2 comments

    I agree with the article that behavioral problems outweight anything related to presenting content or curriculum demands.

  • 79124_melissa-george-on-joining-greys-anatomy_max50

    sarareid

    3 months ago

    538 comments

    Hello. In my experience I can tell you that one of the biggest challenges you can face when teaching is to answer in a simple, short and precise way to the student and then give the student an example or as many as needed.

    clavier

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