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9781892005069: The Compassionate Classroom: Relationship Based Teaching And Learning

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The Compassionate Classroom is a long awaited how-to guide for educators who care about creating a safe, productive learning environment. With 45 years combined teaching experience, Sura Hart and Victoria Kindle Hodson merge recent discoveries in brain research with the proven skills of Nonviolent Communication and come to a bold conclusion - when compassion thrives, so does learning.

Learn powerful skills to create an emotionally safe learning environment where academic excellence thrives. Build trust, reduce conflict, improve cooperation, and maximize the potential of each student as you create relationship-centered classrooms. This how-to guide is perfect for any educator, homeschool parent, administrator or mentor. Customizable exercises, activities, charts and cutouts make it easy for educators to create lesson plans for a day, a week or an entire school year. The Compassionate Classroom is the first complete curriculum for teaching NVC to elementary age students.

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Informazioni sull?autore

Sura Hart and Victoria Kindle Hodson are co-authors of Respectful Parents, Respectful Kids; The Compassionate Classroom; and The No-Fault Classroom&;all based on Nonviolent Communication and translated into numerous languages. In addition, Victoria and Sura have developed The No-Fault Zone Game&;a communication and conflict resolution tool used in homes and classrooms throughout the world. Sura Hart is an educator, author, and certified trainer with the international Center for Nonviolent Communication and worldwide leader in the incorporation of the proven process of Nonviolent Communication in school communities. She offers Compassionate Classroom and No-Fault Zone workshops and trainings throughout the world&;in the United States, Canada, Europe, Central America, Australia, and China. When not traveling, Sura makes her home in Seattle, Washington, where she enjoys spending time with her family and coaching educators and parents in collaborative communication skills and restorative conflict resolution. Victoria Kindle Hodson, teacher, consultant, and internationally recognized author, is a passionate proponent of respectful interactions between adults and young people. For four decades, she has been sharing compassionate practices from the fields of parenting, education, positive psychology, and brain science with thousands of parents, teachers, and students. Victoria lives in Ventura, California, where she is currently training teachers in The No-Fault Zone curriculum, designing professional development programs for personalizing classroom instruction, and working with private clients. www.thenofaultzone.com

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The Compassionate Classroom

Relationship Based Teaching and Learning

By Sura Hart, Victoria Kindle Hodson

PuddleDancer Press

Copyright © 2004 Center for Nonviolent Communications
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-892005-06-9

Contents

Acknowledgments,
Letter from the Authors to Teachers,
Introduction,
Appreciation: Listening to Teachers,
Section I - The Relationship-Teaching-Learning Connection,
Chapter 1. Creating Safety and Trust,
Chapter 2. Relationships in the Classroom,
Section II - Tools for Creating The Compassionate Classroom,
Chapter 3. Rediscover Your Giving and Receiving Nature,
Chapter 4. Relearn the Language of Giving and Receiving,
Chapter 5. Develop Skills Through Activities xs & Games,
Chapter 6. A Guide to Lesson Planning,
Appendices,
References,
Resources,
Recommended Reading,
Index,
About PuddleDancer Press,
NVC Books from PuddleDancer Press,
NVC Booklets from PuddleDancer Press,
About The Authors,


CHAPTER 1

Creating Safety and Trust


What do teachers and students need and want? Students we talked to often told us that teachers don't listen to them and that all that teachers want is for students to be quiet and to turn in their homework on time. In short, what students say they want most is for teachers and other adults to listen to them, respect their ideas, and consider their needs.


Kids learn in communion. They listen to people who matter to them and to whom they matter.

Nel Noddings


Teachers want students to take more responsibility for their behavior and learning. They want to have more time to give attention to individual learning needs and to see more engaged learning taking place in their classrooms. They want school policies that are more respectful of students and that would encourage more respectful interactions between students. For themselves, they would like to have more respectful interactions with administrators and other policy makers.

To meet the needs of both students and teachers we suggest placing relationships at the center of classroom concern. In a "relationship based" classroom, safety, trust, student needs, teacher needs, and modes of communication are considerations as important as history, language arts, science, or other academic subjects. Teachers may think that these new considerations require more work for them. However, we hope to show that time spent creating safety and trust, meeting individual needs, and improving communication skills actually creates what educators want most — a compassionate learning community where engaged learning flourishes.


The Case for Safety First

Alfie Kohn points out in his book No Contest that if we want learning to take place, students need the emotional safety provided by "an environment built upon support, nurturing, consideration, mutual contribution, a sense of belonging, protection, acceptance, encouragement, and understanding" — in other words, a relationship based classroom where needs of students and teachers are respected. In such a classroom there is safety and trust. And where there is safety and trust, there are the seeds for compassion and engaged learning.

Fear in whatever form prevents the understanding of ourselves and of our relationship to all things.

J. Krishnamurti


When teachers consciously create caring relationships and teach relationship skills, they build a strong foundation of safety and trust. Studies show that this increased safety and trust result in more cooperation, less conflict, and fewer verbal put downs in the classroom. Students are more sensitive to the needs of others, and empathy increases between teachers and students as well as between students. In addition, better scores on standardized achievement tests and improved ability to acquire skills have been reported.

Results of a year long study of the effects of teaching NVC to elementary school age children showed improved relationships between students and teacher, reduction of conflicts, increased confidence in communication skills, and, in general, more harmony and cooperation in the school community.

In spite of the evidence showing the importance of safe, trusting relationships, we know that many students and teachers do not feel safe at school. From pressure and stress in classrooms to playground conflicts, there is much about school life that contributes to anxiety and fear. Physical violence on school campuses is the most obvious sign that there is a lack of safety for students. The fear that these incidents engender has profound effects for students and their families.

Many parents we have spoken to are afraid to send their children to schools and are choosing to homeschool them. A guidance counselor in a Southern California junior high school told us that, for the first time in her twenty-five-year career, she is working with students who are so

fearful about their physical safety at school that they refuse to attend. This phenomenon is taking place in schools throughout the United States. The National Education Association reports that 160,000 students stay home from school every day due to fear of attack or intimidation.

While acts of physical violence cause general alarm and concern for the safety of our children, there are less dramatic daily occurrences at school that induce fear in students by undermining their emotional safety. As a result of the compulsory nature of one-size-fits-all curricula, methods, and school policies, many fourth, fifth, and sixth grade students realize that school is not a place where they will be able to get their needs for understanding, contributing, and learning met. Out of their sense of hopelessness and frustration, some lash out with name calling, verbal put downs, taunting, or other aggressive behaviors. These are counter-productive strategies for meeting fundamental needs. However, bullying in one form or another is a common occurrence in most schools. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that approximately 75 percent of students say they have been bullied at school.

Bullying creates a climate of fear and dread that threatens the physical and emotional safety of all students. It is very difficult to stay focused on studies when you are trying to recover from the altercation you just had or when you are anticipating the next one.

As James Garbarino and Ellen deLara have shown, "Many schools inadvertently support and enable hostile and emotionally violent environments." Although teachers feel discouraged by the daily round of bullying, put downs, taunting, teasing, blaming and cliquish behavior, and recognize the cost to themselves and students, they don't know what to do about it. And all too often they don't even know that they are contributing to it.

Marshall Rosenberg tells the story of a school principal he visited who was looking out at the school playground from his office window. The principal saw a big boy hit a smaller boy. He ran from his office, swatted the bigger boy, and gave him a lecture. When he got back to his office, the principal said, "I taught that fellow not to hit people who are smaller than he is." Dr. Rosenberg said: "I'm not so sure that's what you did. I think that you taught him not to do it while you're looking." The principal did not see that he was modeling the very behavior that he was trying to stop.

Other ways that teachers, often unknowingly, stimulate fear in students include: using labels and comparisons, criticizing, making demands, and threatening punishment. These have become part of the daily climate of school life and are therefore taken for granted. Unrecognized and unchallenged, they provide powerful modeling of behaviors that students will mimic in their interactions. These practices stimulate fear and contribute to excessive stress, under-performance, a wide range of violent behaviors, and high dropout rates in later years.


Our first question should be, "What do children need?" ... followed immediately by "How can we meet those needs?"

From this point of departure we will end up in a very different place than if we had begun by asking, "How do I get children to do what I want?"

Alfie Kohn


Whether students act aggressively toward one another or teachers habitually use aggressive practices to control students, the effects are the same. Fear inducing behaviors of all kinds erode safety and trust, and thus inhibit learning.


The Safety-Learning Connection

Emotional safety and the ability to learn have been correlated in contemporary educational and brain research. This research has shown that the emotional center of the brain is so powerful that negative emotions such as hostility, anger, fear, and anxiety automatically "downshift" the brain to basic, survival thinking. This can make learning very difficult, if not impossible. Under such stress, the neo-cortex or reasoning center of the brain shuts down. In his book Emotional Intelligence, Daniel Goleman calls this an "emotional hijacking." Goleman shows that in the presence of strong negative emotions stress hormones are secreted in preparation for fight or flight. The fight or flight response has been understood for a long time, but insight into the effect it has on a student's ability to concentrate, to memorize, and to recall information is relatively new.

Since many students don't experience emotional safety at home, they come to school already stressed and in a "downshifted" state. If they have hostile, discouraging, or otherwise negative interactions with teachers, some students remain in an almost constant state of fight or flight. The brain is so thoroughly preoccupied with survival needs that these students are literally unavailable for the complex activities of the mind that learning requires. Tragically, their curiosity, wonder, and awe have been usurped by a state of heightened vigilance and an immediate need for protection and security.

In addition, as Joseph Chilton Pearce points out, the emotional state that we are in at the moment learning takes place is imprinted as part of that learning and negatively influences recall at a later time. Perhaps you have noticed that some children feel afraid when they are learning the multiplication tables or when they are asked to write something. This fear can block the memory of learning that occurred the day before. Some students we have met suffered such fear and discouragement about writing in early grades of school that they refuse to write for months or sometimes years. Many adults we know still have intense emotions that arise when they are asked to write, to do math problems, or to read aloud.

Doc Lew Childre says, "Fear is beneficial if we are in real danger and need to react fast; but fear limits perception, communication, and learning if we are not in danger." The remainder of this book explores alternatives to fear inducing practices such as: punishment, reward, threats, bribes, moralistic judgments, and comparisons, that are the norm in many schools and families. This book introduces and emphasizes relationship based practices and structures that help students and teachers learn "relational power" or power with others.


Two Primary Ways to Create Safety and Trust in the Classroom

1. Focus on the Needs of Students and Teachers

Relationships in a classroom are essentially the interplay of needs — needs of the students and needs of the teacher. What needs do students have? What needs do teachers have? According to William Glasser the basic human needs are for survival, power, belonging, freedom, and fun. According to Abraham Maslow they are survival, protection/safety, belonging, competence/learning, and autonomy or self-actualization.

Nonviolent Communication greatly expands the vocabulary of needs. The subject of needs and NVC's unique way of accessing them through feelings are developed at length in Chapters 3 and 4. No matter how we categorize needs, learning is not the only need that students bring to school. They bring their needs for belonging, fun, freedom, competence, and autonomy as well. A teacher in a relationship based classroom knows this and treats all of these needs as important. Indeed, unless these needs are acknowledged and met to their satisfaction, students will not feel safe enough to fully engage in the learning process.


In general, only a child who feels safe dares to grow forward healthily. His safety needs must be gratified. He can't be pushed ahead, because the ungratified safety needs will remain forever underground, always calling for satisfaction.

Abraham Maslow


William Glasser asks the provocative question, "What if we change the focus [in schools] from disciplining students to meeting needs?" He goes on to say that "students who seem to be very different from each other in academic standing are suddenly the same, since they all have the same needs." The trust level rises markedly when students realize that a relationship based classroom teacher is supporting their common needs rather than ranking their academic differences.


2. Learn and Practice a Language of Giving and Receiving

Virginia Satir once said, "I see communication as a huge umbrella that covers and affects all that goes on between human beings." If this is true, why is there so little attention to the umbrella? How we communicate our needs and listen to the needs of others determines whether needs are likely to get met. In a relationship based classroom, teachers and students try to become aware of habitual ways of expressing needs and practice new ways of expressing them that are most likely to be heard. They also practice the art of empathy — of listening for their own feelings and needs and those of others. For these purposes, a relationship based classroom uses guidelines for how to communicate with one another. In order for all voices to be heard, no matter how loud or soft, and for there to be sharing without blame or criticism, teachers and students take the time to learn and practice a non-confrontive way of using language.

Members of a relationship based classroom practice skills in "relational intelligence": guessing feelings of others from verbal and non-verbal cues; identifying values — one's own and those of others; translating judgments into statements of feelings and needs or strategies for meeting needs; and taking responsibility for one's own thoughts, feelings, and actions.

Without doubt, a classroom environment of emotional safety and trust is the foundation for learning to take place. To create such an environment it is vitally important to put the study of relationships at the center of the curriculum with the "core" subjects.

We move on now to show you how to turn your classroom into a "relationship based" learning community by revitalizing your thinking and your interactions with yourself, your students, and your curriculum.

CHAPTER 2

Relationships in the Classroom


There are at least four types of relationships in the classroom: 1) teacher to self, 2) teacher to student, 3) student to student, and 4) student to his or her own learning process. When we notice the dynamics of these relationships and become aware of how our values and actions affect them, we increase the possibilities for creating a compassionate classroom, one interaction at a time.

The curious paradox is that when I accept myself just as I am, then I can change.

Carl Rogers


A word of advice as you read this chapter: Focusing on the dynamics in classroom relationships is likely to stir up many feelings. You might feel sad, disappointed, or discouraged when you see the gap between your actions and what you want for yourself and for your students. However, taking time to notice the discrepancy, without judging yourself or others, can bring insight and lead to more effective strategies for creating what you want.

Along the way, we predict that you will also notice that many relationships in your classroom do support learning and compassion. We encourage you to take time to celebrate this when you see it. Acknowledging and celebrating successes is one of the powerful, life-serving practices we recommend to all learners.


1. Teacher-Self Relationship

In the important relationship with yourself, we invite you to take time to notice the following:

True compassion requires us to attend to our own humanity, to come to a deep acceptance of our own life as it is. It requires us to come into right relationship with that which is most human in ourselves.

Rachel Naomi Remen


What is your intention in teaching?

What qualities do you most value in yourself? In others?

What qualities do you want to cultivate in your students?

What kinds of relationships do you want?

What are your interests?

What are your talents?

What are your most effective ways to learn?


How Do You Think About Yourself?

A tendency to criticize and judge yourself usually results in being critical of others. Compassion for oneself is more likely to result in compassion for others.


How Do You Think About Your Work and Your Contribution?

Take time to recognize your contributions and track your successes. Take time to look at mistakes so you can learn from them: notice what needs you were trying to meet and consider how you might meet them more effectively next time.


What Do You Really Enjoy Doing and How Often Do You Do It?

Activities that bring genuine joy are rejuvenating. If you aren't having fun in your life, it might be hard to support your students' important need for fun in their lives.


Do You Ask For and Receive Support From Others?

As an educator you give a great deal of yourself to your teaching and to your students. Do you remember to ask for support from others who can listen to you and give you empathy for the countless daily challenges and frustrations that you face? Do you also take the time to celebrate your joys and successes with others?


(Continues...)
Excerpted from The Compassionate Classroom by Sura Hart, Victoria Kindle Hodson. Copyright © 2004 Center for Nonviolent Communications. Excerpted by permission of PuddleDancer Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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  • EditorePuddle Dancer Pr
  • Data di pubblicazione2004
  • ISBN 10 1892005069
  • ISBN 13 9781892005069
  • RilegaturaCopertina flessibile
  • LinguaInglese
  • Numero di pagine201
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Paperback. Condizione: Very Good. A copy that has been read, but is in excellent condition. Pages are intact and not marred by notes or highlighting.The spine remains undamaged. The Compassionate Classroom is a long awaited how-to guide for educators wh o care about creating a safe, productive learning environment. With 45 year s combined teaching experience, Sura Hart and Victoria Kindle Hodson merge recent discoveries in brain research with the proven skills of Nonviolent C ommunication and come to a bold conclusion - when compassion thrives, so do es learning. Learn powerful skills to create an emotionally safe learning environment where academic excellence thrives. Build trust, reduce conflict, improve cooperation, and maximize the potential of each student as you create relationship-centered classrooms. This how-to guide is perfect for any educator, homeschool parent, administrator or mentor. Customizable exercises, activities, charts and cutouts make it easy for educators to create lesson plans for a day, a week or an entire school year. The Compassionate Classroom is the first complete curriculum for teaching NVC to elementary age students. Codice articolo RWARE0000071661

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