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Special Ed 101
Looking beyond "atrisk" misbehavior
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<blockquote data-quote="Allan-Matlem" data-source="post: 6796" data-attributes="member: 10"><p>Thanks for sharing - </p><p>This reinforces my belief in working with approaches</p><p></p><p>From Alfie Kohn article - Unconditional Teaching - <a href="http://alfiekohn.org" target="_blank">http://alfiekohn.org</a> </p><p>the site has great parenting, educational and business articles - all with the same theme</p><p> </p><p>Imagine that your students are invited to respond to a questionnaire several years after leaving the school. Theyre asked to indicate whether they agree or disagree and how strongly with statements such as: Even when I wasnt proud of how I acted, even when I didnt do the homework, even when I got low test scores or didnt seem interested in what was being taught, I knew that [insert your name here] still cared about me. </p><p> </p><p>How would you like your students to answer that sort of question? How do you think they will answer it </p><p> </p><p>Allan</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Allan-Matlem, post: 6796, member: 10"] Thanks for sharing - This reinforces my belief in working with approaches From Alfie Kohn article - Unconditional Teaching - [url="http://alfiekohn.org"]http://alfiekohn.org[/url] the site has great parenting, educational and business articles - all with the same theme Imagine that your students are invited to respond to a questionnaire several years after leaving the school. Theyre asked to indicate whether they agree or disagree and how strongly with statements such as: Even when I wasnt proud of how I acted, even when I didnt do the homework, even when I got low test scores or didnt seem interested in what was being taught, I knew that [insert your name here] still cared about me. How would you like your students to answer that sort of question? How do you think they will answer it Allan [/QUOTE]
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Looking beyond "atrisk" misbehavior
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