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Keels, Micere – Educational Leadership, 2021
As schools continue to transition from pandemic-induced disruption to a new normal, educators must realize that the most vulnerable students are the ones who've been harmed the most. The problem is, because trauma and mental health distress aren't immediately visible, educators won't know "which" students are in a quiet state of…
Descriptors: At Risk Students, Trauma, Mental Health, Student Behavior
Souers, Kristin – Educational Leadership, 2018
Exposure to trauma--which many experts view as include ongoing life stressors like poverty, parents divorcing, death of a family member, or drug abuse in the home--is prevalent among school-aged children. Teachers know that facing trauma impedes students' ability to focus and learn, but it can be challenging to keep responding caringly to a…
Descriptors: Trauma, Coping, Stress Management, Teacher Role
Anderson, Mike – Educational Leadership, 2018
Teachers struggle with using consequences for misbehavior--because using consequences well requires a nuanced view of disciplinary situations. Anderson explores six factors that complicate the use of consequence: Confusion over what consequences means; confusion over what it means for a punishment to "work;" the fact that teachers'…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Classroom Techniques, Discipline, Punishment
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Wiggins, Alexis – Educational Leadership, 2014
When Alexis Wiggins returned to full-time teaching after having a baby, she took with her an idea from the book "A Path With Heart" by Buddhist Jack Kornfield. The idea was that each day might go better if she viewed everyone she encountered during that day, including any student or parent who seemed to make her teaching life harder, as…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Teacher Role, Student Role, Classroom Techniques
Brackett , Marc A.; Simmons, Dena – Educational Leadership, 2015
When students chronically misbehave and act disengaged in school, how do we know what they're really feeling? In this article, Marc A. Brackett and Dena Simmons of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence describe how understanding the science of emotions can help both students and teachers take charge of their emotions to achieve their goals.…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Behavior Problems, Emotional Response, Emotional Intelligence
Benson, Jeffrey – Educational Leadership, 2015
For many emotionally troubled students, adults in their lives have acted like the mountain trolls featured in the Harry Potter books: scary, unpredictable creatures who can't listen and who respond to conflicts with the club of punishment. Although emotionally fragile students often "act out" or withdraw in ways that create problems, and…
Descriptors: Emotional Disturbances, Adults, Student Behavior, Behavior Problems
Gottschalk, Barbara – Educational Leadership, 2016
ESOL teacher Barbara Gottshalk frequently hears well-intentioned but misinformed comments and questions about English language learners and her teaching field. In this article, she clarifies the misconceptions revealed by 10 common remarks--for example, "The students will never learn English if they don't speak it in their home,"…
Descriptors: English Language Learners, English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction, Misconceptions
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Weissbourd, Richard; Jones, Stephanie M. – Educational Leadership, 2014
James is 14 years old. Tall, handsome, funny, athletic, attuned to others, he is one of the popular, high-status students in his large freshman class. He can also be remarkably caring and attentive with his close friends. But James has a dark side. Sometimes he uses his social skills to manipulate others, and he draws a bright line between those…
Descriptors: Peer Relationship, Bullying, Behavior Problems, Perspective Taking
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Benson, Jeffrey – Educational Leadership, 2012
One hundred repetitions--100 "useful" repetitions. This notion has guided the author's work in alternative education programs for almost 20 years, dealing with the most challenging students, from addicts to conduct-disordered adolescents to traumatized 5th graders. There are no magic tricks. The role of educators is to align with the healthy…
Descriptors: Caring, Nontraditional Education, Teacher Role, Grade 5
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Bilmes, Jenna – Educational Leadership, 2012
Ten percent of kindergartners show behavior problems or disrupt their class. This number triples for at-risk children. And children with self-control problems rarely succeed academically. With all a teacher has to accomplish during the kindergarten year, having students who lack the skills to "do school" is a real challenge. Other students are…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Kindergarten, Young Children, Social Development
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Roney, Anne Meek; Richards, Suzanne T. – Educational Leadership, 1985
Draws parallels between a supervisor helping troubled teachers and a teacher helping troubled students, using a fictionalized example. Recommends that supervisors use both professional methods and personal relationships to help teachers become more effective. (MCG)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Behavior Problems, Elementary Secondary Education, Helping Relationship
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Dowd, JoAnne – Educational Leadership, 1997
Frustrated by her ninth graders' misbehavior with a substitute teacher, a high school English teacher shelved her recriminations and engaged miscreants in a problem-solving exercise examining the incident. Establishing a protocol to talk about problems openly, without fear of retribution, made a big difference. Boys admitted to some poor choices;…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Discipline, English Teachers, High Schools
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Hotvedt, Rebecca – Educational Leadership, 2001
Integrating the arts into daily instruction can enhance at-risk students' learning of academic subjects. To overcome learning barriers, students need a talent or skill (like role playing) that takes them to a new environment, and they need a dedicated mentor to provide emotional support while they are still learning. (MLH)
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Art Education, Behavior Problems, Disadvantaged Youth