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JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

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Page 1: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

J IM FAY AND DAVID FUNK

Teaching with Love and Logic

Page 2: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

3 Rules of Love and Logic

Use enforceable limits Don’t make threats

Provide choices within limits The easiest student to boss around is the one who

thinks the teacher is reasonable and takes control only when necessary.

Apply consequences with empathy Effective teachers apply consequences with empathy

and understanding as opposed to anger and lecture.

Page 3: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

Enforceable limits

The I- StatementDon’t tell them how to run their livesInstead tell them how you will run yours

Instead of “don’t you talk to me that way…”Try“I’ll be happy to listen to you when your voice sounds

like mine”

Page 4: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

Turn your Garbage into GoldGarbage Gold

Open your books to page 52 I’ll be working from page 52

I’m not going to line you up until everyone is quiet

I’ll be lining you up as soon as it’s quiet

Don’t sharpen your pencil when I’m talking

I allow people to sharpen pencils when I’m not

Turn your assignments in on time or you’ll be docked

I give full credit to assignments that are turned in on time

Page 5: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

Provide Choices Within Limits

Always give them choices that would make you happy whatever they choose.

Never give a choice unless you are willing to allow them to experience the consequences of that choice

Never give choices when a child is in dangerIf the child does not choose within ten seconds

make the choice for themDelivery is important. Try to start sentences with:

You’re welcome to _____ or _______ Feel free to _________ or _______ Would you rather _______ or ______? What would be best for you _____ or ________?

Page 6: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

Savings Account

The more choices you give them, the more likely they will let you lay down the law when needed.

Each choice you give them is a deposit into a control account

In order to make a withdrawal you must have made deposits

Even small choices countTo maintain a positive balance you need to

deposit more than you withdraw

Page 7: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

Apply Consequences with Empathy

Children learn from their mistakes when: They experience consequences for their mistakes and Adults in their environment provide empathy

Bad choices have natural consequencesWhen we scold and reprimand the student

they will respond with anger toward us rather than feel sorrow for the consequence

Consequence + empathy = learning

Page 8: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

Finding time for discipline

Meet with kids on your time, on your terms, with short, sweet interactions.

Ask brief questions that help share the thinkingGive them and you cool down and think time“in the mean time, try not to worry about it”Empathy, prompt, and leave.Let them own the problemKeep doing mini follow ups, giving them think

time between each until THEY come up with a solution.

Page 9: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

One sentence interventions

Make short neutral statements about the students. Steve I noticed you like baseball cards

Do this a few times a week for three weeksMake sure there are no value judgments even

positive ones “I like…”This helps them know that you care about

them and gets them on your side“can you… just for me?”

Page 10: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

One on one

Have a short heart to heart where you simply state the problem behavior and what it does to you as a teacher.

Then ask if there is something you can do to help the student correct the behavior.

Stay on topic. Acknowledge their blame comments and excuses then go straight back to the issue.

“that’s probably true, but what we’re discussing here is your behavior in class”

Page 11: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

4 Principles of Love and Logic

Maintain Self -ConceptShare the controlShare the thinkingBalance consequences with Empathy

Page 12: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

Maintain Self-Concept

Reinforce effort not ability.Separate performance from value of an

individual.Help students to recognize their strengths

and use those to overcome their weaknesses.Unconditional acceptance of the worthy

person, even while rejecting the questionable behavior.

Page 13: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

The three legged table of Self-Concept

I am loved by the “magic” people in my life. One of our strongest desires is to be loved for who we are not

how we perform The Magic people are those involved in our caretaking and

learning.

I know more about my strengths than my weaknesses.

Especially in education our weaknesses are pointed out to us so often that we may think that is all we have.

We do not want kids to ignore what they need to work on, but if they do not learn what their strengths are, their weaknesses become defeats.

I can handle the consequences of my own behavior. Learning from consequences is a struggle that can cause pain,

but surviving the struggle is a great self-concept builder. We learn that we are capable.

Page 14: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

Changing Self-Concepts

Use eye contact, smiles and appropriate touch. These are primary bonding mechanisms that have worked throughout

history.

Allow kids to own their feelings. We often rob them by saying “ I’m so proud/disappointed” when we say

“you can be proud of that” we allow the feeling to be theirs and not dependant on others

Let kids experience consequences of their behavior. Consequences produce internal pain which encourages an internal locus of

control

Find something unique about each child and share it with them. Be sure to use positive descriptive statements rather than value judgments

Page 15: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

Sharing ControlFrom coercion to manipulation to

cooperation.Provide genuine choices that effect the

person making the choices.Never offer a choice that you are not really

willing to give them.When we give them some control over

themselves they are less likely to try and exert it over others like the teacher and the class.

Page 16: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

Cycle of DefianceIntimidatio

n

Loss of Autonomy(Temporary Compliance)

Regain of Control

(Aggression or Passive-

Resistance)

Page 17: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

Sharing ControlWhen you catch yourself using this cycle,

own up and don’t keep whipping a dead horse.

“I think I may have just blown it. I just realized that I am trying to make you work, and you keep telling me I can’t make you. I’m not feeling good about what I’m doing now. Would you give me some time to think this through?”

Page 18: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

CONSEQUENCES WITH EMPATHY

Make the consequence as close to the time and place of the infraction as possible.

Give the child an opportunity to be involved in the solution/decision making.

Administer consequences with calm interest Give the students an opportunity to develop

a new plan of behavior. Let the students make their own value

judgments Demonstrate problem solving techniques Allow students to feel empowered

Page 19: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

CONSEQUENCES WITH EMPATHY

Three R’s Reasonable, Related, Respectful

Identify the problem Identify whose problem it is Show empathy Offer a positive relationship message

Page 20: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

CONSEQUENCES WITH EMPATHY

The difference between consequences and punishment is where we interpret the pain emanating from. Consequences result in pain coming from the inside; punishment results in pain coming from the outside.

Kids will respond positively to a penalty when they see a logical connection between their behavior and what happens to them as a result of that behavior.

Allows the teacher to be the “Good Guy” while the questionable behavior becomes the n”bad guy”

Page 21: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

Thinking is shared when other principles are used properly

Use of questions can encourage thinking in the proper direction.

We need to be aware of the way we question and the level of question that we ask.

It takes no more effort to ask a synthesis question than to ask a content question. But a synthesis question requires much more thinking on the learner’s part.

Shared Thinking

Page 22: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

What would you like to happen? Would you like my thinking on that? Is it possible that…? How do you feel about…? Is there any chance that…? How do you suppose that might work out? What do you think I think? On a scale of 1 to 10 how good a decision do

you think that is? Would you like to hear what others have tried?

Questions that work

Page 23: JIM FAY AND DAVID FUNK Teaching with Love and Logic

1. Give the student a chance to act responsibly. For example whether to bring homework on time.

2. Hope that the student makes a mistake. When the homework doesn’t come in, empathize but offer no alternatives.

3. Stand back and let the consequences, along with liberal doses of empathy, do the teaching. Students need to learn that their mistakes hurt them. Empathy reduces the chance that they’ll focus on anger toward the teacher rather than their choices

4. Give the same task again. This sends the message that they are capable of learning from their mistakes

4 step responsibility training