Great difficulties may be surmounted by patience and perseverance.
-Abigail Adams
In her book,
The Nurture Assumption: Why Children Turn Out the Way They Do (New York: Free Press, revised edition 2009), Judith Rich Harris caused a great deal of controversy by her argument that parents matter much less when it comes to shaping children's behavior than is typically assumed. She posited that one's peer group has a much bigger impact on behavior than parents. In an interview in
Scientific American MIND (July 2009), she also noted the important role of teachers...
"I've put together a lot of evidence showing that children learn at home how to behave at home (that's where parents do have power!), and they learn outside the home how to behave outside the home. So if you want to improve the way children behave in school — for instance, by making them more diligent and less disruptive in the classroom — then improving their home environment is not the way to do it. What you need is a school-based intervention. That's where teachers have power. A talented teacher can influence a whole group of kids.
"The teacher's biggest challenge is to keep this group of kids from splitting up into two opposing factions: one prosocial and prolearning, the other antischool and antilearning. When that happens, the differences between the groups widen: the proschool does well, but the antischool group falls farther and farther behind. A classroom with 40 kids is likely to split up into opposing groups than one with 20, which may explain whey students tend to do better in smaller classes. But regardless of class size, some teachers have a knack for keeping their classrooms united. Teachers in Asian countries seem to be better at this than Americans, and I suspect this is one of the reasons why Asian kids learn more in school. No doubt there's a difference in cultures, but maybe we could study how they do it and apply their methods here.
"The tendency of kids to split up spontaneously into subgroups also explains the uneven success rate of programs that put children from disadvantaged homes into private or parochial schools. The success of these programs hinges on numbers. If a classroom contains one or two kids who come from a different background, they assimilate and take on the behaviors and attitudes of the others. But if there are five or six, they form a group of their own and retain the behaviors and attitudes they came in with."
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Comments (1)
Displaying 1 CommentFullerton, CA, United States
I wonder if anyone has considered the seating arrangements as a factor as well, we have been using the same system for decades, and as we all know class room participation is greatly reduced the further back the student sits, perhaps a "round table" approach would be something to consider? Also it is true we teach people how to treat us, therefore teachers are capable of getting students to behave, participate and be pro-education even if they would behave differently at home. Children must learn to behave in society, maybe teachers can have a hand in the betterment of our great country after all.
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