Primary NQTs - Managing Behaviour

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  • čas přidán 15. 12. 2011
  • The Teachers TV programme follows follows newly qualified teachers Tara and Rosie on the first week of their induction year in teaching. Both are concerned about behaviour in their classes and adopt different approaches to address this. Rosie tries concentrating on her body language and tone of voice and seeks advise from her mentor, Liz. Tara introduces a points system and attempts to enlist parental support. As well as classroom footage, the video features the two teachers expressing their feelings about the problems they are experiencing and reflecting on their practice.

Komentáře • 44

  • @pcsmush
    @pcsmush Před 9 lety +33

    Thank you for uploading this. Just watching the teacher scold behaviour instead of rewarding positive behaviour, is a real eye opener.

    • @adamdaly8846
      @adamdaly8846 Před 8 lety +12

      Exactly! She should say "thankyou to those who are doing what I've asked" whilst looking disapprovingly at those misbehaving. Also, standing near those misbehaving individuals really helps. Additionally, if you speak to each offending child IN PRIVATE then that will have a positive effect. Never let even the tiniest thing slide. If they are being disruptive, quiet them and the class (without directly negating them, as explained before) and then after the task is set, approach them and give them options. Let them think that you are treating them like adults, put the power in their hands. Show them respect by not embarrassing them in front of the class. Most children will respond better to individual, private corrections. It also shows that you've got eyes in the back of your head!

    • @peterbarry4112
      @peterbarry4112 Před 8 lety +6

      I'm sure you're right but it's a very tough job and the lady has accepted her weakness. Give her a break.

    • @peterbarry4112
      @peterbarry4112 Před 8 lety +5

      It's not actually that easy to ignore poor behaviour. It's an easy trap to fall into. Why are so many teachers so judgmental?

    • @pcsmush
      @pcsmush Před 8 lety +1

      +Peter Barry did I make a personal attack? no? I noticed something she needed to improve in her teaching and applied to it my own. I find it very amusing that you ask why teachers are so judgemental, whilst making judgements about me....

    • @peterbarry4112
      @peterbarry4112 Před 8 lety +2

      I'm sorry but I find the culture of teaching quite judgmental at the present time. I was protecting the teacher who I felt was getting a hard time. Because teaching is actually incredibly hard work and if anything goes wrong in a classroom it is usually the teacher who is held, sometimes unfairly, to blame.

  • @Professormac10562
    @Professormac10562 Před 12 lety +11

    Like other videos in this series, great discussion prompters. This one shows the need for better training in positive behaviour management. The new teachers need to work on effective individual & group praise, phrasing of directions, prevention rather than reaction, DRL for individual & group behaviors etc. Good beginning of semester assignment to offer recommendations, & then a redo of the same assignment at end of term when we've learned effective interventions. BehaviorAdvisor

  • @stalfithrildi5366
    @stalfithrildi5366 Před 11 měsíci

    I trained the same time as these guys and still teaching. As its September I thought back to my first teaching job and was worse than these but so much better now. I hope they're still in the profession and thriving.

  • @louarmour5107
    @louarmour5107 Před 10 lety +28

    Shit parenting is the main problem, I've taught violent, aggressive 14-16 yr old boys who're still going through the 'terrible twos' ,,, and then I meet the parents and it all makes sense. One sees it in early Primary settings, too. The kids know all about computer games but cannot read ... Parents shrug and say "he doesn't want to read". Oh, that's okay, then. Just let him do what he wants because he's 6 yrs old and you're just his parent.

  • @daniellepalao4089
    @daniellepalao4089 Před 2 lety +1

    I like that Devonté tells his mom everything.

  • @joerichards3152
    @joerichards3152 Před 3 lety +7

    Would love to know where they are now!
    Watching in my trainee year under lockdown to get a more broad experience. Kudos to these NQTs for allowing these to be shared!
    Love the self reflection these two have, great quality. You can see that they can't see what they're doing wrong, and they are trying to improve - nice work. Really helped me watching this.

    • @Kulsum898
      @Kulsum898 Před 3 lety

      Doing the same thing! So nervous in terms of behaviour management as all kids are back on Monday 😬 Feels like starting back in September!

    • @johndrakes6867
      @johndrakes6867 Před 3 lety

      I taught in a similar school in South London as an NQT around 10 years ago. It really can be a baptism of fire - it was for me and seemed to be for these two. I made many of the same mistakes these teachers made, but it was a huge learning curve for me. It meant a decade later classroom management is my great strength. It’d be interesting to know if these two stuck it out. If they did, I’d bet they’re outstanding teachers by now. Unfortunately a lot of new teachers give it up after a few years

    • @osospecialvixx
      @osospecialvixx Před 3 lety

      Miss Tara was my teacher and I’m actually in the videos a few times. Would LOVE to know where she was now. She was my favourite teacher

  • @43bikeguy
    @43bikeguy Před 9 lety +4

    The government has cut budgets so that behaviour support has gone in many authorities. These teachers could get some support for really difficult children which would help the rest of the class and give them some powerful strategies early in their careers.

  • @carolinekelly3415
    @carolinekelly3415 Před 4 měsíci

    Hello, you are doing a good job. Thanks for sharing this video.

  • @carolinekelly3415
    @carolinekelly3415 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for sharing this video! Perservere and stay blessed!!!!! Practise, practise.

  • @TheAnonymous63
    @TheAnonymous63 Před 11 lety +1

    So cute how Tara treats the boy like an adult at 9:03 :D

  • @o0omethvero0o
    @o0omethvero0o Před 9 lety +11

    Very silently...either you're silent or you're not haha

  • @pinapplecruize22
    @pinapplecruize22 Před 8 lety +1

    very helpful, thanks

  • @aeon2348
    @aeon2348 Před 12 lety +4

    Is Tara an American?

  • @sylviapavlakovich4281
    @sylviapavlakovich4281 Před 11 lety +3

    She sounds Canadian...I'm an American teaching in London schools and get asked if I'm Canadian all the time. The accent is very difficult to distinguish, very similar..just a few different pronunciations in certain words.

  • @megupshall6389
    @megupshall6389 Před 8 lety +10

    No offence to the brunette teacher but she has no control of the kids. Personally I think it's okay to be stern but keep the voice level quiet, if needed you could raise your voice but not shouting or often or the kids wouldn't learn.

    • @peterbarry4112
      @peterbarry4112 Před 8 lety +9

      But she is new to teaching...most people (unless they're perfect) make these kind of errors. I'm sure she is much better now.

  • @ryanthepunkpony2229
    @ryanthepunkpony2229 Před 11 lety +2

    like aboot?

  • @yuliangfeng1945
    @yuliangfeng1945 Před 2 lety

    guys i go to this class!!! BRO

  • @caveman221
    @caveman221 Před rokem

    That mentor is good. The lady that mentors the brown hair teacher.

  • @martpast1
    @martpast1 Před 9 lety +2

    the pronunciation is not clear. never mind about the psychology

  • @fionascheibel977
    @fionascheibel977 Před rokem

    5 minutes in and i cant cope with watching the way the poor kids are being treated. They are kids in school not adults in the military.

  • @relevantusername1575
    @relevantusername1575 Před 2 lety

    couldn’t physically watch when she was holding his wrists

  • @Celestialtarotreadings
    @Celestialtarotreadings Před 5 lety +6

    I didn't see any kids misbehaving. Just inexperienced teachers.

  • @caveman221
    @caveman221 Před rokem

    Inner city London. No wonder. The society is broken. Why would you want to teach there unless you were desperate.

    • @RelaxingForLife
      @RelaxingForLife Před rokem

      Lol... I'm a supply teacher... and really quiting after this term. Its year 1 and they listen but get too excited

  • @alexanderpaul3939
    @alexanderpaul3939 Před 11 lety +5

    the brunette's behaviour management is absolutely terrible. I'm in my final year of teaching at Uni and she has nothing on me. just sounds like a nagging woman

  • @jameskeeth4037
    @jameskeeth4037 Před 4 lety +1

    The brown haired lady is far too negative. And her teaching is incredibly dull.