How we solve the behaviour crisis
Every week Tom Bennett will be shouting at the laptop about some damn fool idea in education, or else he’ll be writing about classrooms, students, or why teaching is the most important job in the world. This week, Tom’s 20-point guide to solving the behaviour crisis Here’s how schools can beat bad behaviour. It can be remixed in a thousand different ways to suit the ethos of the school the demographic, the catchment, the culture, but this is the skeleton of a well-run school, where order is the default not the exception: And that’s it. Nothing I can sell, or market as the Tom Bennett Technique. It’s as traditional as sardines, and as sexy as a bowl of custard. It takes nothing more than a pair of balls in the abstract, a fine spine, and the courage to remain on course when times are tough. But it works. I’ve seen many schools that do only some of these, or do some badly, because they’re tired, or they’re scared of confrontation, or lazy. I’ve seen schools placate children, or plead with them, or bully them, then retreat, antagonising them more, guaranteeing perpetual war. This works. Tom is a full-time teacher in an inner-city school and he’ll be blogging for us weekly on pedagogy and classroom management. Tom offers regular behaviour advice on the TES website and runs the TES behaviour forum. He also writes for the TES magazine, trains teachers across the UK and is the author of The Behaviour Guru, Not Quite a Teacher and Teacher.
Read Tom’s previous blogs;Who is Tom Bennett
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