The Canter and Jones Models
This is an extention of "Developing a Discipline Plan for You"...which you will return to at the bottom of this page.
The Canter Model: Assertively Taking Charge and The Fred Jones Model: Body Language, Incentive Systems, and Providing Efficient Help.
These two sections spell out the Canter and Jones models in some detail. These are the two systems most in use in public schools.
THE CANTER MODEL
Marlene and Lee Canter have developed a discipline model based on
thousands of hours observing teachers in the classroom. What
they have included in their model is based on what the
successful teachers do. Assertive Discipline is a
direct and positive approach to make it possible for the teacher
to teach and the students to learn. It is based on several
principles:
- Teachers should insist on responsible behavior.
- When teachers fail, it is typically due to poor class
control. They can't teach and the kids are denied the
opportunity to learn.
- Many teachers believe that firm control is stifling and
inhumane. False. Firm control maintained humanely is
liberating.
- Teachers have basic rights as educators:
- The right to maintain an optimal setting for learning.
- The right to expect appropriate behavior.
- The right to expect help from administration and parents
when appropriate.
- Students have basic rights as learners:
- The right to have teachers who help them develop by helping them limit self-destructive and inappropriate behavior.
- The right to have appropriate support from their teachers
for their appropriate behavior.
- The right to choose how to behave with advance knowledge of the consequences that will logically and certainly follow.
- These needs/rights and conditions are met by a discipline
plan by which the teacher clearly states the expectations,
consistently applies the consequences, and never violates the
best interests of the pupils. Assertive discipline consists of:
- Stating and teaching expectations early.
- Persistence in stating expectations and wishes such as, "I
need you to ..." and "I like that." ["I messages don't interfere
with the pupil's positive self-esteem. "You are no good, why
won't you behave," does interfere.]
- Use of a clear, calm, firm voice and eye contact.
- Use of non-verbal gestures that support the verbal
statements.
- Influencing student behavior without threats or shouting.
- Practicing the broken record technique [calmly repeating
the message every time pupil tries to argue] rather than
escalating into an argument.
- The assertive teacher is more effective than the
nonassertive or the hostile teacher. It is hostility and
wishy-washiness of the teacher that causes confusion and
psychological trauma in students, not calm, firm, consistent
assertiveness. The assertive teacher is able to maintain a
positive, caring, and productive climate in the classroom. A
climate of care and support produces the climate for learning.
According to the Canters, the climate of positive support and
care is best provided by the careful application of assertive
discipline. It replaces teacher inertia and hostile behavior
with firm, positive insistence.
FIVE STEPS TO ASSERTIVE DISCIPLINE
- Recognize and remove roadblocks to assertive discipline.
Most of the roadblocks have to do with negative expectations
about students: they have poor health, home, personality, genes,
and/or environment and, therefor, they are expected to misbehave.
Problems or no problems, no child should be permitted to behave
in a manner that is self-destructive or violates the rights of
peers or of the teacher. Recognize that the teacher can
influence in a positive way the behavior of all students in the
class no matter what the problems. To do this, remember that:
- All students need limits, and teachers have the right to
set them. Teachers are admired who have high expectations, set
high standards, and stick to them.
- Teachers have the right to ask for and receive backŠup
help from parents, principals, and other school personnel.
- We can't always treat all students exactly alike. Some
students may have to be given special incentive programs or
behavior modification programs before they can live up to the
standards expected.
- Practice the use of assertive response styles. The
Canters differentiate among three response styles: nonassertive,
hostile, and assertive.
- Learning to set limits. No matter what the activity, in
order to be assertive, you need to be aware of what behaviors you
want and need from the students. Think in terms of what you want
students to do, e.g., take turns, not shouting out, starting to
work on time, listening to another who is speaking. Instruct the
students about what behavior is desired at the beginning of an
activity. Specify what is desired. "Be nice" and "work hard"
are not specific. The expectations should be so clear that any
student can instruct a newcomer as to how they are to behave
at any time.
- Be sure to praise good behavior more frequently than you apply negative consequences to bad behavior.
- Teacher responses need to be appropriate--for most students,
verbal acknowledgement is enough, for some situations tangible
rewards or special privileges may be necessary to motivate the
continuance of desired behavior. Secondary students usually
don't like to be singled out for praise--for them, the teacher
will need to find more appropriate ways such as knowing looks,
comments on papers, private conferences, etc.
- Teachers should not ignore inappropriate behavior. They
should stop it with a firm reminder of what is expected. They
should decide in advance how they will handle a given situation.
- Eye contact is essential if the message is to have full
impact--but don't insist that the student continue to meet your
eyes since that is contrary to custom in some cultures.
- Use of the student's name is effective--especially if the
message is being directed across the room.
- The broken record ploy is effective [when the student
makes excuses, argues, etc., calmly restate the original
direction as many times as necessary--used only when students
refuse to listen, persist in responding inappropriately, or
refuse to take responsibility for their own behavior. Preface
your repetitions with, "That's not the point...," or "I understand,
but ...." Use broken record a maximum of three times.
After the third time, follow through with an appropriate consequence
if necessary].
- Learning to follow through on limits. Limits are the
positive demands you have made on students. Take the appropriate
action when students either refuse to meet the demands or
act in compliance with the demands. Either response
requires follow-through. In the first case, the natural,
undesirable consequences would be invoked. In the second, the
natural desirable consequences should be invoked. Make promises,
not threats. Establish the criteria for consequences in advance.
Select appropriate consequences in advance. Practice verbal
responses.
- Implementing a system of positive assertions. Much of
what has gone before is negative. Rules and limits. This is
only one side of the discipline picture. The other side is the
positive one. When systematic attention is given to pupils who
behave appropriately,
- Your influence with students increases.
- The amount of problem behavior decreases.
- The classroom environment becomes more positive.
What are some of the positive consequences that so motivate
students?
- Personal attention from the teacher--greetings, short
talks, compliments, acknowledgements, smiles, and friendly eye
contact.
- Positive notes/phone calls to parents.
- Special awards--from comments on papers to certificates.
- Special privileges--five extra minutes of a desired
activity for the whole class, choosing a friend with whom to
work.
- Material rewards--posters, school pencils, popcorn.
- Home rewards--in collaboration with parents, privileges
can be extended at home. Completing homework can earn extra TV
time. Reading a book can earn a favorite meal.
- Group rewards--Preferred Activity Time.
SUMMARY.
The Canter model emphasizes
- stating rules/expectations clearly,
- applying positive consequences when expectations are met and
negative consequences when they are not met, and
- being assertive rather than passive or hostile.
THE FRED JONES MODEL
Frederick H. Jones is director of the Classroom Management
Training Program which develops and promotes procedures for
improving teacher effectiveness. The emphasis is on learner
motivation and classroom behavior. His model is based on extensive
observation of classroom teachers and student behavior.
Teachers find the model is easy to understand because it is a
refinement of the practices of effective teachers into a system.
- About 50% of classroom time is lost due to student
misbehavior and being off task.
80% of lost time is due to talking without permission.
19% is lost to daydreaming, out of seat, making noises, etc.
1% is lost to more serious misbehavior.
- Most of lost time can be avoided by systematically employing
effective body language, incentive systems, and
efficient individual help.
- Effective body language [limit setting acts] causes
students to stop misbehavior without being costly in teacher
time: eye contact, facial expression [calm, no nonsense look],
posture [first step in "moving in"], signals and gestures, and
physical proximity. Effective nonverbal acts typically stop
misbehavior and avoid verbal confrontation.
[An appropriate gesture,e.g., pointing at the rule on the board,
(or briefly calling the miscreant by name) may stop the
disturbing behavior, with little more than a pause in
instruction, while failing to act "until I have time to deal with
him" may allow the situation to deteriorate until significant
time and emotional expenditure will be required.]
- Incentive systems motivate students to start doing the
right thing, maintain on-task behavior, and behave properly. An
incentive is something the teacher can provide that students like
so much that in order to get it they will work throughout the
period/week/month. Incentives like stars, being dismissed first,
having work displayed, grades, etc. motivate only the
achievers...the also rans have no realistic expectation and so,
no motivation. Preferred activity time [PAT] can provide
incentives for the entire class.
[Incentive systems are designed to build student cooperation so
efficiently that almost any student will do as requested with a
minimum of teacher effort.]
- Positive instructional support. Students are motivated
to complete work when teachers are able to move quickly from pupil
to pupil [praise, prompt, and leave] and provide help efficiently
[Visual Instruction Plans (VIPs)].
- Back-up Systems. A series of responses the teacher
can call upon after the above fails. If some students continue
to misbehave after being presented with appropriate instruction,
well-planned and delivered, with immediate response to off-task
behavior with limit setting acts, an incentive system, and
positive instructional support, then what to do? It is important
that the teacher plan...and be prepared to use...in increasingly
severe order--a sequence of consequences administered within the
classroom and a backŠup system outside the classroom. The
implementation of the plan sequentially to the point at which
students are back on task insures minimum loss of instructional
time. The knowledge of what to do next...if what you are doing
doesn't work...instills confidence that you can gain control
without getting upset.
- Setting the stage. There a number of things that the
teacher should do to manage a classroom effectively. These
include:
- Set up the room to facilitate learning and movement.
- Talk to parents to gain their support at the start of the
semester.
- Be aware of the nature of classroom disruptions so that
responses are appropriate.
- General rules tell what behavior the teacher
expects. Rules for rules: Must be simple and clear.
There should be very few rules and they should be
posted.
Don't make a rule unless it will be enforced
every time it is broken.
- Operational rules describe the nuts and bolts and
must be specified to provide for smooth operations [however are
typically not part of the "discipline plan" general rules].
What materials to use, e.g., paper size, pencil or pen.