Developing Inner Self Discipline
Workshop Agenda
The following information was the "bare bones" idea of a workshop I gave at the Boyd School on this topic. All ideas that help the children grow are worth sharing.
I hope that you can use it and have it ripple through your community for the benefit of your children.
If you do decide it has value and use any or all part of it please stick my name somewhere on the paperwork just to be remembered. Except for the quotes at the end, this workshop is based on my years as an educator. Contact me with any questions. Gail Moore (gailmoore@gmail.com)
I followed this sequence of events:
Action: Set up a question box/chart/basket prior to the meeting.
Have participants come up and post
questions as they think about it.
Read the Poem: If you can
remember…by Marti King for the Montessori Foundation:
If You Can Remember by Marti King
If you
can remember that it takes three of my steps to equal one of yours;
If you
understand that I must view life at an eye level three feet below yours;
If you
can touch my life with your faith, without taking away my need for
self-determination;
Then I
can grow, learn, and become.
~ ~ ~
If you
can remember that it takes time for me to gain the experience in living you
have already had;
If you
can understand that I can only relate to those things, which have meaning on my
levels of maturity;
If you
can let me take a step of independence when I can, instead of thrusting me out
or pulling me back;
If you
can touch my life with your hope, without destroying my sense of reality;
Then I
can grow, learn and become.
~ ~ ~
If you
can remember that it takes courage for me to try again after failure, just like
you;
If you
can let me find my own path when I want, instead of choosing for me the way you
think I should go;
If you
can touch my life with your love, without taking away the space I need to
breathe;
Then I
can grow, learn and become.
~ ~ ~
Marti King For
The Montessori Foundation
Welcome and Introduction:
- This
is a discussion not a lecture.
- Write down your questions and put them
into the question box. We will
answer as many as possible at the end.
- We want to put together a “tool box” of techniques for you to utilize as you need them
First Tool: Create Basic
Ground Rules of Class - A tool that helps children to own the rules
· Create the rules with the children present. (Circle time is a great opportunity. This investment of self helps the child understand and follow the rules
· Rules are at a maximum of five simple statements or one word rules that are easy to explain and follow.
· Etc.
· Review these basic rules often to help the children remember their important task
· Remember that some children need many reminders and suggestions.
· Too many rules then the children get confused. Some simple ideas and suggestions might include words like:
· cooperate,
· respect,
· walk,
· Whisper
· Review these basic rules often to help the children remember their important task
· Remember that some children need many reminders and suggestions.
· Adults who enter the classroom need to follow the same rules and model the expected behaviors.
· Children
watch adults closely and pattern the behaviors they see. The old adage ‘do as I say not as I do” really
doesn’t work for children who want to do it just like you do.
Choose your Battles Wisely and Use Redirection whenever possible.
- Engage the child in meaningful work. (follow the needs and interests of the child)
- Another old
adage says, “Mischief makes work for idle hands" The work has to be important to the child.
- A child who is focused and interested will want to work.
- Child who cannot focus will need redirection to find their own work. Sometimes having the child be your friend and observing others at work will help them decide on their own.
Buzz Group: 5 - 10 minutes (set timer)
connect with three people you don't know and ask for their ideas on a redirection statements that are positive and encouraging. ( let me help you…, Can I show you again…, etc.) Compile a list of those statements to share
connect with three people you don't know and ask for their ideas on a redirection statements that are positive and encouraging. ( let me help you…, Can I show you again…, etc.) Compile a list of those statements to share
Using Limited
Choice:
- By making a quick assessment of what is happening can help an adult create options for the child before offering a limited choice:
- For example: if a child is crying and won’t cooperate by putting on their shoes the limited choices might be:
- Make the choices small, real and attainable to the child
- Help
children decide what best option is.
- Giving a limited choice teaches good decisions
· Waiting until the child is ready to put them on, patience and consistent positive encouragement is needed for this to be effective
· Putting them on for the child (which takes away the opportunity for the child to be independent and self sufficient)
· Allowing the child to carry their shoes until they are ready to put them on (natural logical consequences)
· Putting the shoes on together. You put one on and the child puts the other on….team work or the child puts them on and you do the tying.
· Discussing what the problem is with the shoes to see if it can be easily resolved by switching to a different pair of shoes.
· Make the statement: “you can either or . What will you do? I can make the choice for you but I would like for you to have the chance to decide for yourself.
Stay Calm and use Patience:
Patience becomes a magic key to observing, analyzing and deciding what options are available.
-Children need time to work through their issues. Often time is difficult to provide due to circumstances at the moment.
-It is important to let children process their own decisions because this is an important step toward self discipline.
-Adults have the tendency to view children’s issues as small but to the individual child that issue is huge.
-Give the child the gift of your patience and your time and you will find that anything can be worked out together.
Patience becomes a magic key to observing, analyzing and deciding what options are available.
-Children need time to work through their issues. Often time is difficult to provide due to circumstances at the moment.
-It is important to let children process their own decisions because this is an important step toward self discipline.
-Adults have the tendency to view children’s issues as small but to the individual child that issue is huge.
-Give the child the gift of your patience and your time and you will find that anything can be worked out together.
Buzz Group: 5 - 10 minutes (set timer)
Find a someone you haven’t met. Discuss the things that you generally rush a child through. What can you do differently or more slowly that will help a child by giving them more time to be successful? Share responses
Find a someone you haven’t met. Discuss the things that you generally rush a child through. What can you do differently or more slowly that will help a child by giving them more time to be successful? Share responses
Discussion: Natural Logical Consequences:
- PLEASE NOTE: the safety of the child is always ensured by the proximity and the attention of the adult.
- Definition of Natural Logical Consequences: Are
those things that will happen naturally after any give action. ex: If you put your hand under water it gets
wet or touching a hot stove burns the skin
- Humans learn a great deal from these types of life experiences.
- Mistakes are the result of Natural Logical Consequences with a certain course of action resulting in a consequence.
- Those consequences can have a positive, neutral or negative result for the child.
- Incorporating logical natural consequences into our limited choices for the child allows the child to benefit from the results even if the results are somewhat negative.
- At school if one child hurts another we
have them both go inside to care for the injured child. We try to have the child who did the
injury to help their friend feel better.
- Adult
attention is mostly centered on the injured child.
- The natural logical consequence of the is
if the child who was hurt has to miss playtime the child who did the
hurting has to miss it as well until both can play again and be
friends.
- I always ask a child (victim of aggression), Is it your body that hurts or your heart/feelings that hurts? Once a response is given I have the child who was the aggressor ask the child who was hurt, "What can I do to help your feel better?" It is amazing to me the different responses I have heard.
Work
vs. Play:
A definition of work: 1:
an activity in which one exerts
strength or faculties to do or perform something: sustained physical or mental effort to
overcome obstacles and achieve an objective or result.
A definition of play: play
- play by children that is guided more by imagination than by fixed rules;
"Freud believed in the utility of play to a small child play - utilization
or exercise.
- Children
love to do real work. The line
becomes blurred between these two words as children begin their journey
through their development.
- Playtime
in the adult view is often the same as work time for the child. Children want what they do to be
important and meaningful.
- Maria Montessori believed that a child’s
work is to build the best human being they can.
- Children develop their sense of focus and
task completion as they work.
- Not
interrupting a child’s focus while at work helps the development of inner self discipline
- Task
completion also
Communications:
·
Communications are core of every human interaction
o
verbal, nonverbal interaction, words,tone, facial expression, eye contact, physical positioning of the
body.
o
All of these factors are equally important in
getting our ideas and thoughts across to each other.
o
Consistency is one of the important keys for
communications being heard and understood
§
Consistency of words and actions, tone of voice,
facial expression and the words all have to be in place in order for understanding to happen.
Child communications:
·
Back talk – a control issue to get what they
want
·
Stay calm, listen once make sure your voice is
calm
·
Make a positive statement of acknowledgement
·
Let them k now that you will not argue w/them
·
what to do next
o look
at tone of voice,
o the child’s level of upset,
o the child’s ability to reason or rationalize,
o parents level of emotional calmness while
dealing with the event.
- Tone
of voice can be a non-verbal communication tool that can aid or get in the
way of positive interactions.
- When a child is using argumentative or
back talk techniques to communicate it is the adult’s responsibility to
address the child in very quiet calm tones.
- remind the child of the ground rules of
the classroom or the home.
- Children
have to learn that rules are not going to change at a moments notice just
because they are arguing
- It is helpful to wait till both the
child and the parents is calm before trying to talk or make decisions
- Let
the child know that you as a (parent, teacher or adult) care that they feel badly and that
they are upset but remind them that while they are (crying, in a tantrum,
screaming, kicking) that they can’t
hear you and you can’t hear them.
- you
will wait for them to calm
themselves before you can help them feel better.
- Explosive
child: try to isolate the child so that they have the privacy needed to
gain control. Time will always
allow a child to reflect and let go of some of the feelings that might be
causing the escalation of emotion.
Respect:
- Respect
is an important part of communication.
- It is something that all people of all
ages need from each other.
- Children
have those needs just the same as adults.
- Feelings
that are acknowledged by others help humans identify both problems and
solutions.
- When a child says no it is important that
we respect their choice.
- It is important to make statements when
you definitely need a child to do an activity.
- It
is important to ask a question when the child truly has a choice in the
matter.
Routine:
o Children
need routine that they can count on.
o routine
provides a child with a frame work to build their day on.
o worried
or frightened about what is unexpected or unknown.
o Children
find security and peace in what is familiar and well known.
o Maria Montessori said once, “The child’s work
is to build the best human being they can be.”
Children build their strong foundations from a normal daily
routine. Changes in routine for children
need to be handled carefully by letting the child know in advance what is going
to happen.
External
rewards and punishments vs. internal self control:
- Children
need to take ownership for their actions.
- Adults
need to help children take responsibility by allowing the child the
dignity to make a mistake.
- Rewards and punishments are external
controls.
- These
external controls generally teach the child to manipulate the situation so
that they can receive the rewards.
- Sometimes
punishment is the reward that children look for because it reinforces
their negative self-concept.
- If
a child can lean the internal control and take ownership for their choices
they become responsible, caring citizens who are capable of using freedom
wisely.
- A
child with a sense of responsibility is the basis for inner
discipline.
- A
child needs to feel safe in order for him/her to take full responsibility
for what they have done.
- Threats
toward the child only teach the child how to use control and aggression
against others.
- Children do not act out and try to
do things to us personally.
- Children are responding to their own
internal needs and past experiences.
- If adults take children’s actions
personally and escalate the event it causes a reinforcement of the child’s
behavior pattern, negative self perception or repetition of the behavior
on a larger scale later.
- When
adults can model a different method of responding to behaviors by choosing
to stay calm and centered, the child is allowed an opportunity to make a
different and more positive choice.
- By not rewarding negative behaviors with
lots of attention (either negative or positive) the child can not control
situations. Simple statements like:
“I see you need time to think about me?” what you need now”. “I can see you are angry. Shall I sit with you until you can talk?
Respect a child who says no to you.
- Don’t
let your personal issues as a parent, teacher or assistant become part of
the child’s problem.
- Let the child work through his/her own
problems whenever possible.
- If other children are in danger simply
give the angry child space for privacy and thinking time. This removes attention from the child
who is having difficulty.
- Attention
for negative behavior accentuates, multiplies or intensifies a problem or
an issue.
- Acceptance of the dignity of the human
soul even at its worst moment is a challenge for every child
caregiver.
- This
kind of acceptance can change a child’s negative patterns of
behaviors. Consistency, respect,
follow- through and understanding all will help a child to cope with the
issues he/she faces.
We live very close
together. So our prime purpose in this
life is to help others. And if you can’t
help them, at least don’t hurt them.
Dalai Lama
Kind words can be
short and easy to speak but there echoes are truly endless
Mother Teresa
You can accomplish by
kindness what you cannot by force.
Publilius Syrus
What you do not want
done to yourself, do not do to others.
Confucius
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