Compromises That Have Led To The Bullying Epidemic

Forty Years of Small Compromises

Change has a way of sneaking up on you. One morning you wake up and wonder how you gained weight, contracted heart disease, lost your job, or in the case of dealing with a child’s behavior, you wonder why he or she can’t hold a job, get along in society, or cope with some of life’s most basic problems. Often, parents have strained relationships with their teenage son or daughter and throw their hands in the air when the child is very young and give up believing that there is really something that they can do, or they begin to blame themselves as the child who is now a young adult begins to experience social and emotional problems in their own lives. Some parents may begin to feel so guilty about their child’s inability to get along in life that they enable the behavior by offering excuses based upon some circumstantial or environmental defect and actually blame teachers and society for their child’s disrespectful and irresponsible behavior.

Children didn’t wake up one morning and decide that they were going to be disrespectful and irresponsible. The poor relationships that children have with their peers and ultimately other adults didn’t develop in one day, month, or year, it happened over a long period. The change was incremental, and it occurred over the course of thirty to forty years because of the small compromises that parents, teachers, and society have made in the areas of respect, responsibility, and relationships. Here are some illustrations of where society was forty years ago.

Illustration One

What Ever Happened to Mr., Mrs., and Ms.

Thank God for Nick at Night. You know that station that gives you shows like Leave it to Beaver or Lassie. I was watching Leave it to Beaver the other morning and could not help but notice how all the adults were called Mr. and Mrs. No Ms. back then. Of course Eddie Haskell was a bit of a phony when he addressed Beaver’s parents. Hello Mrs. Cleaver or hello Mr. Cleaver. Then he would run up to Wally’s room and refer to his dad as “Your old man.” The question I asked myself is, What ever happened to Mr. and Mrs.? Even when I worked as a principal the students called me Burns not Mr. Burns. I listen to my kids refer to their friend’s mom or dad as Colleen, or Tony, or Rich, or Barbara. Let’s face it respect is just not there any more. Everyone thinks that the ground is level. Is anyone in charge out there or is a kid our peer? The less respect kids have for the casual adults they meet the less respect they will have for teachers, police officers, and yea their employers. Let’s see if we can turn the tide a little. Speak to the parents of your kids friends and call them Mr. or Mrs. especially in front of your kids. Let’s get our kids to show respect for folks that are older than they are and make them aware that the ground is not level; somebody is older and smarter than they are, and they should be treated that way. I have a dear friend who I have known for twenty-five years. He has four boys between the ages of twenty-six and thirty-nine. I have known them since they were teenagers and younger. They were calling me Mr. Burns up until five years ago. That is when I told them to call me Jim.

Illustration Two

Kids Can’t Say Anything They Want

Many years ago, a wonderful friend of mine asked me what the smallest part of the body is. I was very young and probably very stupid at the time and responded with, “Duh, a finger.”

“No, it’s the tongue.” He also said to me that, although the tongue is the smallest part of the body, it can do the most damage. I never forgot the conversation that I had with him. Our words can really do some damage. Damage sometimes that can be life long, and sometimes we don’t even know what were doing, probably because we just we’re never taught how to shut-up. Kids and adults can shoot their mouth off and think that they are being funny or that they’re standing up for themselves when, in reality, they may be doing more harm than good. I was watching a baseball game very recently and watched one of the players go crazy over a called third strike. This was a grown man. He had to be restrained by three other players and the manager. Of course he was thrown out of the game. He was also suspended for three games right in the middle of a pennant race. I guess he really showed them. What a dope.

We also like to have laughs at someone else’s expense. My philosophy is, if we both aren’t laughing it’s not funny. Kids today have a real problem with behavior like this. They say things, get a laugh, having hurt the feelings of another person. I don’t even think that they are aware that people are listening, not everyone is impressed with their wit, and they are creating a negative image of themselves in the minds of other people.

My friend was also full of illustrations and stories that were inspiring and instructional. He illustrated this societal problem with a true story that I always refer to as the “Deaf Boy Story,” and it is worth sharing here.

There were two brothers. One was deaf. They had a friend who hung around with them all the time. This friend was the biggest jokester on two feet. He was always telling jokes or making fun of someone or something. One day, the three boys were headed out of the house and this jokester started to make fun of the way the deaf boy spoke. The deaf kid couldn’t hear, the brother gave a half-hearted laugh, and they left the house. No harm no foul? The deaf kid didn’t hear, so no one got hurt. No one else heard, right? No one heard except the deaf kid’s father who was reading the paper in the den.

Let’s fast-forward the tape. At the time of this incident, these two boys were sophomores in college. Two years went by and they both graduated with degrees in business administration. They both went on the job hunt. This jokester had an interview with a large insurance company. He had to go through one more phase of the hiring process. He had to meet the vice-president of the company. Who do you think the vice-president was? The deaf kid’s father, and the only perception that he had of this young man was that he had made fun of his son. It cost him the job. People hear, and they watch too. You never know when you are going to need someone or something. The things that are the greatest desires of our hearts are the things that will be withheld from us because of our past words or actions. Self-control is important, and if your tongue, a one ounce body part, has more control over you than you have over it, it will cost you when you least expect it. You never know.


  Illustration Three

Self Control is Taught

Going to a Catholic grammar school for nine years had its benefits. We had to wear uniforms, so there wasn’t any clothes competition. We went to church all the time, so we got some formal spiritual training. You couldn’t even think of using profanity because you thought the nuns read your mind and would find out what you were thinking. We learned good penmanship. We were respectful, compliant, and responsible. The crazy thing was, no one gave me a choice in any of these areas; I was forced to do them. It wasn’t like the nun said to me, “You can go to church if you like…why don’t you try to hold your pencil this way?…is that the way to speak to someone? If I didn’t do it the way it was supposed to be done, there would be blood stains on the floor, and it wasn’t Jesus’; it was mine. As I look back at this experience, the one thing that I realize is that this type of education taught me something that no one talks about today: self-control. The majority of the problems that a person faces in their life are related to a lack of self-control. Everybody either eats too much, drinks too much, spends too much, can’t control their temper, lusts after things that they can’t have, like someone else’s spouse, and develops habits that they can’t break that could kill them or someone else, like smoking or driving too fast.

Now why does this stuff happen? I never remember my parents or any teacher in my life saying to me the choice is yours: you can smoke or not or you can lose your temper or not or you can overeat or not. Self-control is taught. If I did something that exhibited a lack of self-control, I got grabbed by someone and got clobbered. I was taught to wait on line, raise my hand, take my time, practice until I got it right, memorize, and I got drilled on skills that everyone knew were necessary for life-long success. Look, musicians practice endless hours to perform a single piece of music. Students study instead of watch TV. Athletes devote years of their lives to prepare for an Olympic event that may last only a few minutes.

The concepts of self-control, delayed gratification, and discipline seem counter to our cultural values. I myself have suffered the consequences of the lack of self-control.  I used credit cards because I wanted things right away. I am impatient, and vacillate between exercise and a sedentary life style, at times with little consideration of the long-term consequences. Self-control should be graded in school and looked at as a quality necessary for success as an adult. If you or someone you know is having trouble with self-control, I have a good friend named Sister Houlihan who still thinks self-control is important. She is 4’8” tall and can still make a grown man hold his pencil the right way.

Illustration Four

The Medicalizing of Education has Produced Excuses for Disrespect and Irresponsibility

I don’t think that there is anyone in society today that doesn’t take medication for something: high blood pressure, diabetes, prostate problems, thyroid dysfunction, ulcers, or depression just to name a few. For sure, medication is something that is needed by many just to stay alive.

Children have always needed medication for childhood illnesses and some childhood diseases. It is only within the last twenty years that we have seen children being medicated with psychotropic drugs, sometimes even as early as preschool. About fifteen years ago, when I was a vice-principal of a school for conduct disordered kids, I was on the phone with a doctor who was treating one of my students. I mentioned to the doctor that the student was hyperactive. He informed me that I was using the wrong terminology, that she wasn’t hyperactive, but that she had ADHD. During our discussion, the doctor further explained that this student’s ADHD was the reason why she had such poor impulse control and that she needed medication to help control her. In my opinion, poor parenting and the lack of good old fashioned discipline have played a huge part in the very popular current trend in society and especially in education where some professionals, including school psychologists, social workers, guidance counselors, administrators, and teachers take the easy way out and look for a quick fix to deal with students who in days gone by would have been considered disrespectful and irresponsible, not mentally ill.

Society has raised its tolerance for deviance. This same attitude has found its way into education and has resulted in lower expectations for student achievement and behavior. Years ago, if one person burned the American flag it was an illegal act, and the guilty person or group was held accountable with the appropriate societal consequences imposed. But, what happens if five thousand people burn the flag and the jails aren’t big enough to hold them? You either build bigger prisons or make it legal to burn the flag.

When I was a student, there were students who behaved in a disrespectful and irresponsible manner. These students were few and far between and were dealt with accordingly. What happens when the number of students who are disrespectful, irresponsible, violent, bullying, and are involved in illegal acts starts to rise? A condition such as ADHD becomes the excuse for the deviant behavior.

“ADHD was determined to be a mental illness by vote of the American Psychiatric Association members at their annual meeting in 1987, and the new definition was then added to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Children (and increasing adults)who exhibit behaviors such as inattention, distractibility, trouble in following directions, a tendency to lose things, and difficulty awaiting their turn to speak or participate in activities are now seen as victims of ADHD” (The Politics of Deviance, 2002).

In the past, these behaviors were seen as achievement-ability discrepancies or just unruly behavior. Now, parents and educators both seem to be relieved that the problems that exist with behaviors such as disrespect, irresponsibility in the home and in school can now be looked at as a type of mental illness that requires a treatment plan rather than individual accountability and self-control.

The medical industry has developed drugs that have improved the quality of life for millions of people. In reality, if some of these drugs didn’t exist, some people would not be alive today. I am a perfect example. I take high blood pressure medication to normalize blood pressure that would otherwise be too high. Taking this medication doesn’t make me any less responsible for my own health. I still have to walk, watch my diet, and not smoke. Because medication is so widely used in education, people often cite the decision of some parents not to medicate their children as the reason why a kid’s behavior is out of control. In my experience, I have often called parents to discuss their child’s unacceptable behavior and have been told that the child hadn’t taken his medication. The idea that the failure to take medication can be used as an excuse for deviance removes any form of responsibility on the individual for the behavior. I know that I am responsible for my own health with or without medication. Students are responsible for their own behavior and cannot use medication or the lack of it to get off the hook when confronted with the consequences of their lack of self-control.

Parents and educators see mental illness as an out for them. In fact, many parents actually request the diagnosis of mental illness for their children. In others words, the parent are saying, it’s not me as a parent, but rather biologically there is something wrong with my kid. There is no stigma attached to the label mental illness. Many parents and educators are convinced that their children who are diagnosed with some sort of mental illness are actually smarter, brighter, and more creative than kids who behave, pay attention, and are responsible. It almost becomes comforting for parents and educators to believe that it is not their parenting or behavior management techniques that may have caused the child’s problem. They are convinced that the inappropriate or deviant behavior that they have been observing and tolerating is a result of faulty wiring in the child’s head, which led him to throw tantrums, curse his teacher or parents out, bully other kids, and engage in violent behavior.

Medicalizing education sends the wrong message to parents, teachers, and administrators that a students’ poor academic performance or their lack of self-control can be clinically diagnosed and eliminated using psychotropic medication. A model focusing on respect, responsibility, and emotional maturity is the only response to the medication model that excuses behaviors and avoids relevant consequences that will provide permanent help not temporary relief.

 

The Intergenerational Tendency

Like it or not we will all become in some way like our parents. As time has past I have come to realize this more and more in my own life. I have grown to have a deeper appreciation for my own parents over the years. My father has been dead for almost 35 years, but I see him in me more now than ever. I had to post this song by Neil Young. About bullying? Not at all. Just something to remind us of where we are and where we have come from.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dVC2cszdTao&NR=1

Paul O’Neil Is A Bully

On April 4, 2011Bryan Stow a married father of two went to Dodger Stadium to enjoy the opening day of the baseball season with two of his friends. Unfortunately, Stow and his friends did anything but enjoy the game. They were taunted and threatened by two men during the game, and attacked outside the stadium in the parking lot. Two of Stow’s friends got away but the assailants caught up with him, struck him on the back of the head knocking him to the ground and then kicked him senseless. Both assailants fled in a four door sedan driven by a woman.  The event was all over the news and the assailants were eventually caught. Stow had to be placed in a medically induced coma because of the brain damaged he suffered from the attack.

Why were these men taunted, threatened, and then attacked? The answer, they were all wearing Giant’s jerseys. They were Giant fans at a Dodger game. I guess you can’t wear your teams’ jersey to a game without the fear of being attacked by the fans of a rival team. At least that is what Paul O’Neil, the part time broadcaster on the YES network for the Yankees says. This past Sunday (September 4, 2011) the Yankees were playing the Toronto Blue Jays. I was flipping back and forth watching both the Mets and the Yankees. Between innings, the camera panned into the stands revealing a fan wearing a Boston Red Sox jersey. O’Neil seeing this commented, “It takes a lot of nerve right there wearing a Red Sox Jersey to Yankee Stadium.  There not even playing the Red Sox.” After what happened at Dodger Stadium in April I was stunned. So stunned I had to watch the encore presentation of the game to be sure I heard what I heard. Unfortunately what I heard was accurate.

O’Neil, a long time player for the Yankees was always known for his hot head.  If he got called out on strikes, or didn’t get a hit in a clutch situation the camera would pan into the dugout to find him reacting in some type of immature rant or worse case scenario taking his bat and smashing it into a Gatorade cooler. When the pitcher for the Blue Jays Bret Cecil was taken out of the game after giving up a homerun, the camera caught him in the dugout smashing equipment. O’Neil seeing this said on the air, “Don’t stop there, there is a few more things that you can throw.”  O Neil’s fans may have viewed him as a role model for his grit and determination; I view him as a bully because of how he uses his position to instill fear and intimidation.   As an announcer he put the entire country on notice; don’t wear an opposing team’s jersey to a Yankee game or you might end up like Bryan Stow.   As a player, call me out on strikes and the dugout will look like Beirut.  He is no longer a player, and the truth be told he was mediocre at best on any other team but the Yankees. That’s why the Cincinnati Reds gave him away for Roberto Kelly. Maybe the Reds got fed up with his immature antics and saw him as a poor example for their young fans. Bravo.

O’Neil needs to be called out by the YES network and Major League Baseball. It is comments like the one he made that contribute to a pervasive attitude which tells our youth to draw lines in the sand, and bully and intimidate any person with a different view or in this case a different team.  Players and announcers have the ability to influence our young people in a variety of ways and have the responsibility of making sure that their influence is a positive one. Even the great Mickey Mantle commented after his liver transplant what a poor role model he was and pleaded with young people not to be like him. O’Neil doesn’t have the courage to emulate Mr. Mantle.  He is too prideful and too arrogant.

 

Society’s Morality Can’t Keep Up With Technology

A  student is accused of posing as a girl on Facebook, tricking at least 31 male classmates into sending him naked photos of themselves and then blackmailing some for sex acts. Anthony Stancl, 18, of New Berlin, west of Milwaukee, was charged with five counts of child enticement, two counts of second-degree sexual assault of a child, two counts of third-degree sexual assault, possession of child pornography, repeated sexual assault of the same child and making a bomb threat. A survey of 1,280 teenagers (users age 13-19) and young adults (age 20-26) conducted by the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy and CosmoGirl.com has revealed that one out of five (20 percent) teens overall have posted nude photos or video of themselves on the Internet-that number goes up to a third when young adults are included. While 71 percent of teen girls and 67 percent of teen guys who have sent these photos say they’ve sent them to a boyfriend or girlfriend, 15 percent overall said they’ve sent nude photos to people they only “knew” online. For women, that percentage stays the same when they turn into young adults, although the percentage of young adult men goes up to 23 percent.

This is just another example of what society developed for good, deviant minds have used for criminal, and immoral purposes. What is the problem? Is it to difficult for individuals to enjoy the tools of convenience without trying to figure out how to use it to satisfy their own immoral appetites? I believe that speed and the lack of impulse control plays a big part in why these acts occur on a regular basis today. The speed of text messaging, and sending emails and pictures from a cell phone, combined with the poor impulse control on the part of deviant individuals creates an environment where people can say and send anything they want to another person, things that they wouldn’t say in person like “do you want to screw,” or do in person, like getting naked.

I am 67 years old, 40 years ago if I or anyone of my friends wanted to take and send nude pictures of ourselves or anyone else (By the way we never did) we would have to live with the embarrassment of having these pictures developed by a photographer. In order for a picture to be taken it needed two things, a subject and a photographer. No teenage girls were going to take their clothes off for some sex crazed boy and let him take her picture. Any pictures that were taken of anyone, and I mean clothed usually required a five day period for development. Everyone had time to think. It wasn’t as easy as hitting the send key.

Once the send key is hit everyone has a record of what was sent, a record that will last a lifetime, and probably create a lifetime of misery. Society’s stagnant morality just can’t seem to keep up with the rapidly moving technology. We haven’t figured out how to use our new toys and are always looking for ways to use these things to self destruct or to ruin the reputation of another person. When I was a kid I was told, never write a letter, and to never throw away a letter. I understand this now better than ever. At least 40 years ago if I wrote a letter I could decide if I wanted to mail it off. If it was written in anger I could think about it and allow my impulses to calm down. If someone sent me a letter that was less than friendly I had a permanent record of that person’s thoughts of me.

Today people just don’t think, they get a thought, no matter where they are and immediately begin to text someone and begin to berate another person without even giving it a second thought. It is just as easy as hitting the send key. Below is an article I wrote a while back about how this type of selfish and uncontrollable behavior affected an evening that I was spending with my daughter Sarah. It is living proof how texting if not used correctly can ruin and day, and evening, or a life. Thank God things worked out, but remember it all started with an impulsive text message. I left in my advice for those of you who have children who could be impacted by such insensitivity by others.
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Many years ago when my oldest daughter Sarah was about 4 years old a good friend of mine told me that girls were easier to raise than boys. Well my oldest daughter is now 20 years old and I still haven’t figured it out yet. One thing I do know is that I hate to see my daughter upset. I don’t mean mildly upset, that just goes with being a teenager, but upset to the point of tears. This happened to me one night when my daughter was 17. She received a text message from one of her friends. The text message said that she wanted to talk to her about something. Sarah couldn’t get in touch with the girl that sent the text so she called another one of the girls in this group. She has been friend with 4 girls for about the last two years. These girls did everything together. Hang out mostly as Sarah calls it. They went to parties together, studied together, drove to school together, and yes, they got into trouble once in a while together.

When she called one of the girls up the girl told Sarah that all four girls were upset with her because they were starting to view her as being selfish, and annoying. My daughter was blindsided by this information and really didn’t know what to say. She didn’t even know what they were talking about. I asked her if she thought this information was true. She told me no. I then asked her if she thought she might have a couple of blind spots and the girls were possibly seeing something in her that she just didn’t see in herself. She said no, and I must say did a pretty convincing job backing up what she told me. The question is this; how do you as a dad offer a teenage daughter advice in situations like these? I am no expert but, I believe that I did a pretty good job based upon the outcome.

Teenage girls always seem to like to be connected to some group outside their family. Teenage boys like the connection also, but a boy’s connection is usually with some type of sports team, or club. Girls like to be connected to each other. The longer this connection lasts the greater the chance that their weaknesses will be exposed, and for sure they will start engaging in rumors, and gossiping about one another. Girls also tend to become more jealous in these relationships if a boy becomes involved in this mix. Once one of the girls has an opinion about someone else in their group they will bend over backward to try and convince the other members of the group that it is true. They will even search for the evidence to prove their point. This behavior becomes crushing and emotionally painful to the girl who is being ganged up on, as was the case with my daughter.

What can you do when your daughter confides in you enough to tell you what is going on? First, listen, and I mean listen well. Find out all the facts and please don’t react or condemn your daughter. Don’t say to her you better change your ways. If you are condemning her it’s a good chance that that’s the reason why she looking for connections outside the family. The next thing is to love her to death with your actions and words. My comment to my daughter was, I like everything about you. I like how you talk and how you act. Help her understand that you are her biggest fan. Let her know that she doesn’t have to apologize for something that she truly believes she is not guilty of. I mean are these girls the only one with an opinion. Of course if she feels as if she has done something to offend someone apologize, and move on.
Tell your daughter that long term relationships give everyone an opportunity to show their true colors. These relationships may be nice at first, but the longer that a person is in them the greater the chance that the true character of someone will pop up. That’s when a person has to decide if they want to stay friends with someone who is not a very loyal friend. Tell your daughter to stand tall, hold her head up, and don’t let them see you cry, and that you will be there to help her do all of these.

Adolescent relationships are a growth process. There is pain that can come from being hurt by a so called friend. Guess what? By the time your daughter is 22, she will have the savvy to manage this type of crap and she won’t be emotionally immature when it comes down to relationships. All friendships are not intimate, and by that I mean a relationship that involves a person’s heart, mind, and soul. The relationships that your daughter has with someone in high school might be viewed by her as intimate. Relationships have a continuum that go from, acquaintance, friend, close friend, and then intimate friend. An intimate friend is usually someone that is a life long friend.

By the way after I offered my daughter some of my wisdom, which by the way took me two days, she said to me “I really love you dad,” and was happier than I have seen her in a long while. When I was alone, I cried, yes I cried again. I am such a big baby.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Leadership and Anti Bullying

It doesn’t matter if you are a school teacher or a school administrator you are in the business of leadership as well as education. With all of the responsibilities that teachers have the one that is the most critical is the one that seems to get over looked and that is leadership. Principals and vice-principals have to lead, that is the nature of their position. However, many administrators lack leadership qualities for a variety of reasons many of which are personality based. Teachers who embrace leadership posses certain qualities that ultimately translates into them becoming effective school administrators. Teachers who aspire to be school administrators, principals and vice principals need to develop five essential qualities if they are going to be effective educational leaders

 

The First C of Effective Educational Leaders

 Character

 Character is a very abstract word and needs some type of definition in order to put some feet to this essential quality. Character is a set of behavior traits that define what sort of person an individual is. It determines whether a person will effectively achieve goals, be forthright in dealing with others and will obey the laws and rules of the group. Although character is related to personality, it is not the same thing. Personality is primarily inborn traits, while character consists of learned behavior and is usually taught to a person by his/her parents when they are very young. It would bode well for a person who is considering a leadership position to evaluate what their values are and decide if they have the character qualities that are necessary to effectively motivate, and inspire people to perform at their personal best. With that in mind I like to define character in very simple terms; “The ability to subordinate and impulse to a value.” An effective educational leader has a clear understanding of what his/her values are and has a core set of values and principals that they use to lead and base their decisions on.

 

Leaders make decisions based on who they are inside. They engage in activities based on

who they are inside. Without character a leader cannot “walk the talk” for the long-term.

Though he or she may start well, eventually the true character emerges and the path of

integrity is left behind for the path that gratifies self-serving desires. Hence, there are

situations where leaders espouse the talk but fail miserably in the implementation of the walk.

 

Character also determines how a leader will engage in the work of leadership. Those of

highly developed and noble character will handle problems with grace and tact, while

those of baser character will resort to such tactics as manipulation, power plays, over control, emotional outbursts, and tirades that tear down the one who is addressed.

Character then is a compass that shows which way to go. If the compass is off-kilter,

then so will be the steps of the leader.

 
The Second C

 Consistency

 I think that it is important to understand what the dictionary definition of consistency is: Consistency – steadfast adherence to the same principles, course, form, etc. There is consistency in his pattern of behavior. Check out the sentence that helps to define the word, educational leaders need to be consistent in their patterns of behavior. I also find it interesting that words like steadfast and principles are used. Educational leaders who are consistent produce security in the minds of the people who they are leading by creating an environment where everyone is aware of their methods of management and approach to solving problems. Teachers who are consistent, have clear expectations for their students have less behavior problems and spend more time teaching their students than disciplining them. Administrators who are consistent develop the same security in their staff and are viewed as a team player and who has the ability to see further down the road than those around him/her can.

 

The Third C

Confidence

 A confident leader knows what to do or how to go about finding out what to do in any given set of circumstances. Effective educational leaders know who they are and are confident in their own skin. Confident leaders know who they are. They not only know who they are but can they can separate who they are and who they want to be from what the world thinks they are and wants them to be. No one can teach a person how to become themselves, take charge, and to express themselves except the leader themselves. A confident leader knows how to teach themselves, accept responsibility (blame no one) and use their experience as a tool to reflect on their own performance. Confident leaders are not afraid of making mistakes and can admit their mistakes when they make them. They are not threatened by teachers or other administrators who may know more than them, rather they use these people as a resource to help improve instruction, student discipline, and school climate.

 

The Fourth C

 Commitment

 It really doesn’t matter what profession you are in if you are not committed to it failure is imminent. Educators have always had to struggle to make a descent salary and many of them have had to work other jobs just to be able to feed their families. Often these jobs are at night and may require a person to work late hours, maybe as late as midnight. This leaves little time for rest and preparation for the task the next day of working with students. Sometimes these jobs may pound for pound pay more than the persons teaching job and may provide a better income than teaching. It is extremely difficult to be committed to a profession that doesn’t provide the necessary income to meet the needs of a growing family. Personally I experienced this problem with commitment during my first ten years of teaching. I suffered from the teacher, bartender, painter, real estate salesman syndrome. I worked as many jobs as I could in order to make ends meet. It wasn’t until I realized that in order to be successful I had to commit myself to something for the long term. I chose to remain in teaching and worked to develop my skills and use my credentials as a teacher and an administrator. Everyone benefited when I committed myself to one thing. I did and so did my family. My students did, and so did my career. There was a sense of security that developed in my mind and in the minds of my children. I became steadier, consistent, and yes committed to my job. Getting committed and staying committed not only improved my outlook about my profession but about life as well.

 

The Fifth C

 Courage

 When we think of courage in light of educational leadership I think it is important to realize what are fears really are. In my experience I have found that that the biggest fear that most people have is the fear of other people. Angry parents, administrators who are dictatorial, and power hungry students all have the ability to instill fear in the hearts and minds of educators and can make their professional and personal lives almost unbearable. It is obvious that we can’t control others so we have to have the courage to change ourselves and have the courage to manage the behaviors of people that we would otherwise fear. Our own emotional maturity is the key to developing courage and having the ability to confront without condemning can create a balance between courage and consideration. Stephen Covey in his book “The 7Habits of highly Effective People” offers a wonderful definition of emotional maturity, “The ability to express one’s own feelings and convictions balanced with consideration for the thoughts and feelings of others.” Courage then is the ability to express your concerns and still have the ability to see life from another person’s point of view. As educational leaders we certainly don’t want to be treated like a four year old nor do we want to be a door mat for an angry parent or child. Expressing ourselves without creating a stressful and tense learning environment is a true example of courage.

 

The First Week Of October In New Jersey Is Respect Week

The New 3Rs in Education

Respect, Responsibility, and Relationships

Remember: All Schools in New Jersey Must Designate

The First Week of October as Respect Week

Everybody knows what the 3 R’s of teaching are – reading, writing, and ‘rithmetic.  But educators don’t totally understand that in order to teach these basic subjects successfully, they must constantly be working to develop respect and responsibility in their students.  No longer can it be assumed that children develop these attitudes at home.  Plus, teachers must learn how to build positive relationships with their students.  Strong teacher-student relationships naturally foster a positive and safe learning environment where much learning will take place and where all students will become capable, connected, and contributing members of their classrooms.

 

Jim Burns the author of “The New 3R’s In Education – Respect, Responsibility and Relationships” is scheduling in-services, workshops, conferences, and keynotes for the 2011-12 school year. Jim brings over 30 of experiences as well as practical strategies to help teachers, administrators, and parents teach respect, encourages responsible behavior in their students and explains how to build more positive relationships with their students and children.

 

LEARN PRACTICAL STRATEGIES THAT WILL TEACH THE NEW 3R’S

Teach respect, responsibility, and compliance

Learn how to build strong positive relationships with students and parents

Understand how principles, rules, and procedures create a secure safe environment

Create a fair, and consistent learning environment that will be calming to even your most difficult students

Understand how to give instruction, warnings, and correction

Receive a set of effective consequences for grades K-12 that will impact future behavior

Practice proven verbal responses you can use in a crisis situation

Build respect and rapport with your most difficult students

Develop language that confronts without condemning

Break through the emotional wall of your students and increase motivation and responsibility

ORDER YOUR COPY OF “THE NEW 3RS” BY CALLING

1-732-773-9855 FOR $19.99 + SHIPPING.