Preventing violence in schools

Mar 14 05:47pm

Research suggests that we can alter and prevent negative patterns of violent behaviour in our children by understanding the difference in their learning styles - and matching an appropriate teaching style to them.

According to Dr Yvonne Walus from Creative Learning, the eight needs of disruptive and undisciplined students are:

  1. Mobility at frequent intervals
  2. A variety of instructional resources from which to learn (to match students' low auditory and low visual modalities and their strong preferences for tactile/kinesthetic learning - hands-on activities - and their strong need for variety rather than routines and patterns)
  3. Learning difficult content at other times, not in early morning classes
  4. Recognition of their high motivation despite their inability to learn through conventional methods; positive feedback instead of put-downs
  5. Collegial rather than authoritarian teachers
  6. Resources which introduce new and difficult information through multi-sensory methods (kinesthetic, tactile, visual, auditory) to make learning easier and more appealing
  7. Informal seating arrangements in classrooms to respond to their inability to sit on plastic or wooden chairs for more than 10-12 minutes and their strong need for mobility
  8. Soft illumination which means avoiding fluorescent lights in classrooms.

"If schools had their students' learning styles assessed, trained their teachers to become more aware of diversity in the classroom and teach with matched instruction methods, as well as educate parents in their children's true learning needs, fewer students would experience frustration and the inability to succeed in academic classes.  This could well be the cure for underachievement."

Walus has observed that the same features apply to underachievers around the globe.  They inevitably become at-risk students and drop-outs when their learning needs are not matched over longer periods of time.

Please feel free to share your thoughts below.

10 Comments Report Abuse
1. debbs1963 - Apr 05 12:22am
I totally agree but you will find there are a lot of teachers who will never in a million years adapt their own teaching style. They especially dont warm to children with behaviour issues so they are not likely to make special arrangements for them.
With such tight timetables there isnt a chance
2. barbara.saunders@sbcglobal.net - Apr 05 03:36am
I have a hard time wrapping my head around (flag - kinesthetic learner!) the idea that qualified professional teachers require this formalized testing-labeling approach to understand common sense generalities or make basic observations about the needs of individuals in front of them.
3. simonairo - Apr 05 03:51am
I think we leave that times which accord to our children too much attention. We try to make everything perfect for them. But their answers are not in the same way. I agree with the diversity of learning styles,but everybody knows that it is almost imposible to do our classes in this way.
4. iamthelittlestbee - Apr 05 09:31am
What a difference it made to my classroom teaching when I learned about Learning Styles and Teaching Styles! This tool plus valuing respect and kindness in my classroom meant enhanced learning and more "peace" for each of us. It's not "rocket science" that defusing frustration will make a diff!
5. bolaz126 - Apr 06 01:05am
I have been researching Learning Styles as part of my degree, looking at less able learners ( I am a teaching assistant in primary school). The girl on the window sill reminds me of one of our children who chooses strange places and positions to sit in. She can be a very disruptive element in class.
6. ymirjennypage - Apr 06 04:59am
Remember that "inclusion" is a relatively new thing. I'm 30, and when I was a kid there were special needs classrooms.
Exclusion. So anyhow, instead of being mad or hopeless about the teachers who won't change, let's realise that it's US who can and will change things for all learners. I'm a T.A.
7. ymirjennypage - Apr 06 05:03am
And, Barbra S, to assume that what is common sense to one is the same for all... I'm guessing that you are a person with many years experience, to whom it does come naturally. The way that training goes these days, we are taught about Learning styles, and I am a better person from my training;)
8. ymirjennypage - Apr 06 05:06am
And, Barbra S, to assume that what is common sense to one is the same for all... I'm guessing that you are a person with many years experience, to whom it does come naturally. The way that training goes these days, we are taught about Learning styles, and I am a better person from my training;)
9. kv_srivastava25 - Apr 09 01:11pm
Not more than 5% students show this kind of behavior.Instead of making them scapegoat, teachers should discusse with their parenrs and try to know the root cause of this behavior pattern. teachers shoild be able to handle the situation and report to parents as soon as they see any behavioral problem
10. petranilla14 - Apr 17 11:07am
I do not agree with number 3. I have a particularly disruptive class and I get my best work done in the first 3 periods of the day before they become reved up on softdrinks and sugar.
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