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Lloyd, Blair P.; Weaver, Emily S.; Staubitz, Johanna L. – Beyond Behavior, 2017
When results of descriptive functional behavior assessments are unclear, hypothesis testing can help school teams understand how the classroom environment affects a student's challenging behavior. This article describes two hypothesis testing strategies that can be used in classroom settings: structural analysis and functional analysis. For each…
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Functional Behavioral Assessment, Student Behavior, Classroom Environment
Dierke, James S. – Leadership, 2012
The author's 40 years as an educator have led him to an important insight: stress is crippling the schools. On top of other extreme conditions in schools and on students, there is the pressure to achieve and succeed in a fast-paced, chaotic world. This pervasive stress compromises the physical health, and in turn the cognitive and psychological…
Descriptors: Physical Health, Educational Change, Learning Readiness, Stress Management
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Black, Laurel Johnson; Wygonik, Mindy L.; Frey, Barbara A. – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2011
The purpose of this study was to identify the frequency and seriousness of disruptive student behaviors and the effective strategies used by educators to manage these classroom behaviors. At a mid-sized state university, 228 of 780 faculty members (29.2%) completed a 76-item survey. Results indicated that as faculty members' participation in…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Student Behavior, Classroom Environment, Change Strategies
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Obiakor, Festus E. – Advances in Special Education (MS), 2012
Hobson's choice is a "no-choice" choice that gives general and special educators the traditional impetus to do what they want in classrooms. While there is some "goodness" in having this power and audacity to control whatever happens in classrooms, it does not allow for creativity, flexibility, adaptability, modification, especially in behavior…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Response to Intervention, Integrity, Special Education Teachers
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Rafferty, Lisa A. – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 2010
An overarching goal in education is to enable students to become independent and self-sufficient individuals who are able to manage their behaviors without the assistance of others. When students are able to manage their own behaviors (also known as self-regulation), they do not rely on external controls, such as teacher prompting. In general…
Descriptors: Intervention, Self Management, Student Behavior, Behavior Problems
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Roache, Joel; Lewis, Ramon – Australian Journal of Education, 2011
This article examines teachers' views of their management styles, classified as either "coercive" or "relationship"-based, for 145 primary and 363 secondary school teachers in Victoria, Australia. It finds that management that combines punishment with aggressive and hostile behaviour can exacerbate misbehaviour and increase…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Foreign Countries, Student Responsibility, Teacher Attitudes
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Smith, Jaime – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2009
Sometimes students will exhibit various aggressive behaviors in the preschool classroom. Early childhood educators need to have behavior management strategies to manage the students' negative behaviors within the classroom setting. This article will provide a rationale for embedding literacy instruction within behavior management strategies to…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Reinforcement, Literacy, Developmentally Appropriate Practices