This year I have been volunteering two days
a week at a local primary school, all of the children I have worked with have
been great. In fact, it’s what convinced me that that’s what I want to do, (before
I started volunteering I was very much pretending that any big career decisions
were years into the future and university was just going to last forever).
Working with children is the most rewarding thing I’ve ever done, the children are
always so excited to see me, they learn and improve so fast, and they say the
funniest things:
“I’ve never seen a green and purple alien before, this alien must be wearing face
paint,” explained a child who evidently sees normally coloured aliens daily.
Then when the topic of ‘pets’ came up:
“I
have a Jack Russell dog.”
“What’s his name?”
“Jack Russell,” (from this little boy’s own name and therefore his parents’
terrible naming preferences, I wouldn’t be surprised if this was true. I’m
pretty sure hearing some of the terrible names people inflict on their children
is one of the perks of teaching).
A favourite of mine was a 6 year old who
was telling me about her niece and finished with “I’m a bit young to be an
Auntie, but what can you do?” These
are great kids, and I really enjoying helping them, but they aren’t little angels
all the time. The kids I work with are all 6 and 7 years olds, the age where
they absorb pretty much everything, and lately they’ve picked up on ‘naughty
words’ and pretty much every week lately a child has been in trouble for saying
something they shouldn’t, it’s always quite amusing in itself just the way
children are so affronted by it.
“Miss, he said a naughty word!”
“What word was it?”
-Refusal to repeat the word because it’s THAT bad-
“Write down exactly what he said.”
“I can’t write it either, it’s the S, O, C, word!”
For the life of me, I still can’t work out
what word this was.
Anyway, as many funny stories as it
generates, small children can’t really be allowed to go around swearing all of
the time (even if these swear words are possibly non-existent) and Applied
Behaviour Analysis (ABA) could be used to tackle this.
As soon as a child swears, all of the
surrounding children’s attention is immediately on that child (as they clamber
to see who can ‘tell’ first) then they have the teacher’s attention. The whole
swearing behaviour is likely to be reinforced by this attention (Maag, 2001)
however negative the attention, it’s reinforcement. The swearing behaviour may
even promote positive attention if it provokes admiration from their peers. ABA
suggests a shift in the balance of reinforcement is needed so that positive
behaviours (such as raising a hand instead of shouting out, getting a question
right, helping another student) are reinforced more than negative behaviours so
that the frequency of positive behaviours increases, the teacher should try to
catch the children performing positively in order to give him/her positive
attention. This should increase the frequency of positive behaviours.
This has been successfully applied in the
classroom, Trice & Parker (1983) effectively reduced swearing using
positive social reinforcement when adolescents did not swear, and using negative
social reinforcement for swearing, both of these methods were effective in
reducing swearing. If this worked successfully for adolescents I see no reason
that it would not also work for younger children, especially as the latter are normally
more susceptible to reinforcement than older children. Only showing children
attention for positive behaviours and ignoring all undesired behaviour has also
been found to decrease the frequency of undesired behaviour (Allen et al.,
1964).
So as hard as it may be to ignore children who
you know are adorable when they want to be, that may be the way to ensure they turn
out to be as great in adolescence/adulthood as they are as kids!
Jasmine Smith- Blog 4.
References
- Allen, K. E., Hart, B., Buell, J. S., Harris, F. T., & Wolf, M. M. (1964). Effects of social reinforcement on isolate behavior of a nursery school child. Child Development, 35(2), 511-518.
- Maag, J. W. (2001). Rewarded by punishment: Reflections on the disuse of positive reinforcement in schools. Exceptional Children, 67, 173-186.
- Trice, A. D., & Parker, F. C. (1983). Decreasing adolescent swearing in an instructional setting. Education & Treatment of Children, 6, 29-35.
Where can I find the Trice & Parker journal article?
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