Discipline in Schools

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classroom
classroom behaviour management
Classroom Behaviour Problems
Colin J. Smith
Conceptualising Behaviour Problems
Contingency Management Procedures
Ecosystemic Approach
Ecosystemic Intervention
educational psychology
Effective Classroom Behaviour Management
elton
Elton Committee
Elton Report
Entire School Staffs
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Frank Merrett
Good Teacher Pupil Relationships
Graham Upton
group
Group Management Skills
Initial Teacher Training Courses
Josh Schwieso
Large Scale Observational Studies
learning difficulties intervention
Local Education Authority Training Grants
Managing Classroom Behaviour
Mixed Sex Seating
Multiple Baseline Design
Multiple Baseline Design Study
Nigel Hastings
Paul Cooper
positive behavioural strategies
Positive Teaching
Prevent Learning Difficulties
psychological models for classroom disruption
Reality Therapy
report
Robert Burden
Roy Bennett
Secretary Of State
skills
Specific Praise Statements
teacher student relationships
Team Approach
Ted Glynn
Troublesome Classroom Behaviour
whole school discipline approach

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138637672
  • Weight: 230g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Oct 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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What can schools and teachers do to promote discipline in the classroom? How do discipline and learning interact?

The Elton Committee was set up in 1989 to consider ‘what action can be taken to secure the orderly atmosphere necessary in schools for effective teaching and learning to take place’. In this collection of papers, originally published in 1992, ten leading figures in the psychology of education reflect on some of the issues raised by the Elton Report and provide a series of psychological models for tackling problems of discipline, disorder and disruption in schools. Areas covered include whole-school approaches to discipline, the connection between learning difficulties and discipline problems, the effectiveness of positive behavioural methods of classroom management, the possible uses of techniques derived from family therapy in classroom discipline situations and the ‘good relationship’ between teacher and student as an agent of change. Though the perspectives of the contributors are very different, the emphasis throughout is on establishing a way forward for schools that will be valid and workable both in institutional terms and for the individual teacher in the classroom.