The Student and the Behavior



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Ms. Deborah Haislip

Ted 414 Classroom Management

Dr. Sapp


Individual Behavior Management Plan

3 August 2016


The Student and the Behavior
Cameron is a 9th grade remedial English student. He shows that he is not too shy to participate in class and his enthusiasm for watching his classmates participate is evident. However, he loves to text/browse during class. The school does not have a policy against cell phones, so students are allowed to have their devices on their desks if they wish. Texting/browsing is an obvious distraction. When the teacher tells him to put it away or focus, Cameron shifts his phone under his desk to text/browse more discreetly.
My Perspective
I’m a millennial; I love my phone. A phone feels like an extension of myself. I understand that being forced to put my phone away makes me feel fidgety. Social media notifications cause a small release of dopamine, so like lab rats reaching for the button that releases sugar water, I check my phone constantly. This is something that takes patience and effort to lower the frequency of. I have no issue against allowing students to have their phones out, if school policy does not forbid it, but Cameron needs to become more engaged in the lesson.
Function of the Behavior
This behavior functions to distract from the current situation. Cameron has failed this class before and so he either lacks the confidence to become fully engaged in a class he has failed or reviewing this class all over again is boring and not engaging. By texting or browsing, Cameron shows that he is more engaged by a stagnant Instagram feed than the lesson. A device also provides belonging, according to Choice Theory, because of the connection the student feels to their friends and youth culture on social media.
Two Teacher’s Perspectives


  • First, Ms. Carol will give them a verbal warning to stop checking their phone or she will have to keep the phone in her desk for the rest of the period. Then if Ms. Carol sees them check again, she takes the phone and puts it in her desk.”

– Miryam H., Antioch Unified School District, 14 year veteran Aid, my mom!




  • I have students keep busy, so busy that they don’t have time to waste. We all know that students compulsively use their phones when they feel it’s “down time” so my lesson plans always include a string of tasks.”




  • Heather S., Green Dot Los Angeles, 5 year veteran Teacher


Strategies to Modify Behavior
This is something that I will discuss with my students when we collaborate on creating classroom rules. I want to be on the level – checking your phone is not a bad thing, it is not malicious, it is not mean spirited or offensive, but the problem is that it disenfranchises their quality of education. The precursor to learning is attention. So one main thing I want to change in the classroom is how cell phones can be used.
Cell phones are amazing computers. The smartphone is a million times faster than NASA’s Apollo era processors. I want to teach that such amazing computing power is more than just an Instagram machine.


  • Student Response Systems (SRS), common brands like Sentio and eInstruction use clickers to gather multiple choice answers. There are free options that use cell phones. Use the cell phone for SRS whether multiple choice as in polleverywhere.com or a teacher screen where students send written response to the shared board in answerpad.com –by making the cell phone an ally, students are too busy to mess around if they’re phones have to be used to participate.

  • Teach research skills using the cell phone in class. Students are welcome to use their device to frontload before a lesson. Make it routine to use the phone to frontload. Start every class period with a warm-up think-pair-share, then introduce what will be covered today and give the students 5 minutes to frontload for the lesson using their devices.

  • Have a lesson on compulsive phone use, and the science behind why we’re so addicted to checking our phones. This lesson will serve to explain why our desire to check our phones constantly is an addiction that can be controlled in the classroom, an environment for learning not social media.

  • When a student is using their phone to distract themselves, have tasks prepared to assign to that student. Jobs such as collecting the data from the SRS, creating the next couple of prompts for the SRS, passing out papers, choosing that day’s exit-slip prompt, reading the SRS questions aloud, etc. The reason to do this is not to punish the student per say, but to re-engage them – besides most students enjoy having jobs. This fulfills the behavioral function of belonging, according to Glasser’s Choice Theory.


Online Resources
http://theinnovativeeducator.blogspot.com/2013/03/6-free-ways-to-capture-student.html
http://www.teachhub.com/how-use-cell-phones-learning-tools
https://www.polleverywhere.com/

References
Glasser, William. Choice Theory: A New Psychology of Personal Freedom. 1998
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