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THE GINOTT MODEL: ADDRESSING THE SITUATION WITH SANE MESSAGES Guru Presentation By: Melody Manley
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HAIM GINOTT (1922-1973) Born in Tel Aviv, Israel PhD in 1952 Professor of Psychology UNESCO consultant Resident Psychologist Columnist Best known for 3 books: 1.Between Parent and Child (1965) 2.Between Parent and Teenager (1969) 3.Teacher and Child (1971)
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THE GINOTT MODEL OF DISCIPLINE Congruent Communication Harmonious and authentic way of talking in which teacher messages to students match the student’s feelings about situations and themselves. Crucial factor in classroom climate
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TEACHERS AT THEIR BEST Send Sane Messages Express Anger Appropriately Invite Cooperation Accept and Acknowledge Student Feelings Avoid Labeling Students Correct Students By Directing Them Appropriately Avoid The Perils Of Praise Are Brief When Correcting Students Are Models of Humane Behavior
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TEACHERS AT THEIR WORST Are Caustic and Sarcastic Attack Students’ Characters Demand, rather than invite, Cooperation Deny Students’ Feelings Label Students as Lazy, Stupid Give Long and Unnecessary Lectures Lose Temper and Self Control Use Praise to Manipulate Students Poor Models of Humane Behavior
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GINOTT’S SUGGESTIONS FOR HELPING TEACHERS FUNCTION AT THEIR BEST Sane Messages Expressing Anger Inviting Cooperation Accepting and Acknowledging Feelings Labeling is Disabling Correction is Direction Sarcasm The Perils of Praise
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SANE MESSAGES Accept and acknowledge how students feel Address situations
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EXPRESSING ANGER Express anger without damaging the student’s character Use I-messages instead of You-messages Express anger in eloquent terms to enrich vocabulary
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INVITING COOPERATION Invite cooperation rather than demand it Avoid direct commands Promote self-choice and foster responsibility
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ACCEPTING AND ACKNOWLEDGING FEELINGS Help students sort out feelings Minimize student confusion Act as a sounding board for students Should not argue with students’ perceptions Strive to acknowledge and understand students’ feelings
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LABELING IS DISABLING No place in the classroom for labels, diagnoses, or prognoses of students’ character. Only limits visions of the self and the future
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CORRECTION IS DIRECTION Use directing as the method of correcting Avoid attacking a student’s character Suggest acceptable alternative behavior
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SARCASM Avoid sarcasm Can cause hurt feelings and damaged self-esteem with students Students do not understand sarcasm
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THE PERILS OF PRAISE Dangers of praise Can have detrimental effects on forming a positive self image Concentrate on applauding specific acts Using praise inappropriately Express appreciation without words that evaluate behavior
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GINOTT’S SPECIAL VIEWS ON DISCIPLINE A series of little victories Brings about student self- direction, responsibility, and concern for others Influence behavior through compassion and understanding Teacher’s own self discipline Handle conflict calmly and reasonably
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INAPPROPRIATE DISCIPLINE Lose temper Call students names Insult students’ character Behave rudely Overreact Show cruelty Punish all for the sins of one Threaten Deliver long lectures Back students into a corner Make arbitrary rules
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APPROPRIATE BEHAVIOR Are brief Recognize feelings Describe the situation Invite cooperation De-escalate conflicts Do not argue Model appropriate behavior Discourage physical violence Students help set standards Are helpful Do not criticize, call names, or insult Focus on solutions Allow face saving exits
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