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The role of the influence of the context on building teacher-student relationship



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3 The role of the influence of the context on building teacher-student relationship
The current focus on building positive teacher-student relationships has come about, in part, as a result of educators becoming dissatisfied with the results of the obedience-oriented approaches that became fashionable in the 1960s and 1970s, the most famous example being the Canters’ (Canter & Canter, 1976) assertive discipline approach, although in a more recent work, Lee Canter (1996) has made it clear that the success of assertive discipline depends on first establishing rapport with students.
One of the most frequent criticisms of obedience-oriented approaches has been that while they foster obedience, they do not foster the self-regulation we ultimately want from responsible students (Weinstein, 1999). A less frequent criticism has been that obedience-oriented approaches may become addictive. That is, if they are used early and often, teachers may come to depend on obedience-oriented approaches to keep order. In Ronald Butchart’s (1998a) words, While more research is needed, it appears that elementary schools have increasingly adopted behaviorist modes of control, with the result that secondary schools have been forced by students to move more and more toward defensive teaching. . . . Behaviorist modes of control lose their effectiveness through overuse . . . leaving secondary teachers little recourse but to teach defensively.
Perhaps the most convincing argument against obedience-oriented approaches is that they create a negative climate not conducive to motivating students to learn and contribute. Obedience-oriented approaches make teachers into what William Glasser (1986) called boss managers. Here is an example of on teacher teaching defensively and being a boss manager, from Sue Cowley’s (2001) book on methods for managing behavior problems:
The teacher noticed that a few students in his ninth-grade class were chewing gum, which was not allowed. On one occasion, he noticed that one boy was chewing gum, so he went to the front of the classroom, picked up a wastepaper basket and held it under the boy’s mouth, directing the boy to put the gum in the basket. The boy said he swallowed the gum, so the teacher warned him of what would happen if he were caught again.
Not long afterward, the same situation arose. Instead of reacting as before, the teacher got the boy to come to him, and then leaned toward him and whispered while pointing to the basket: “Put the gum in there NOW, and don’t give me ‘I’m not chewing,’ because I saw you. Stay behind for five minutes after the lesson to clean up my room. Any more rubbish from you, you’ll be in a half-hour detention.”
Cowley (2001) commends the teacher in this example for exerting control and authority when control and authority were being openly challenged. Nevertheless, though the teacher did, indeed, need to exert control and authority, the exchange between the student and the teacher is not the kind of exchange that does much to build a positive teacher-student relationship. And while every instance of exerting control and authority need not also build positive relationships, one would hope that there would be plenty of occasions that do both. Furthermore, it is not too far-fetched to assume that if most of a teacher’s interactions with students are of the type illustrated in this example, the result will be a classroom that fails to motivate students to learn and cooperate. This last point is the central point of approaches defined by their emphasis on establishing positive teacher-student relationships. These approaches have in common the assumption that everything starts with the teacher-student relationship.
If that relationship is good, then there are possibilities for learning and cooperation.
If it is not good, then subsequent methods, however thoughtful, are apt to fail. A good deal of recent research backs up this assumption (for a review, see Pianta, 2006), and even Lee Canter (1996) has agreed that teachers should first work to establish rapport with students before implementing assertive discipline. One of the clearest explanations of why it makes good sense to think of the teacher-student relationship as the starting point and linchpin for successful behavior and classroom management was provided decades ago by Larry Brendtro (1969) in his essay “Establishing Relationship Beachheads,” an essay originally intended for those working with relationship-resistant older children and adolescents in residential treatment centers. Brendtro distinguished between three kinds of learning processes: learning through social reinforcers (e.g., praise/encouragement), learning through insight, and learning through imitating or identifying with another. His essay explains that for those processes to be activated, the teacher must become, in the eyes of students, a source of social reinforcers, a source of insight, and a desirable model to imitate, and these three together define what we should mean by a good teacher-student relationship.
Brendtro (1969) went on to show how those working with even relationship resistant students can make building positive relationships between teachers and students into a full-fledged approach to behavior and classroom management by developing good communication with students, by overcoming barriers that students may put between themselves and teachers, and by making teachers more attractive models for students to imitate. The key, for him, was communication.
Brendtro’s (1969) most practical suggestions included showing how occasional “small talk” with students can open lines of communication needed to develop a positive relationship and showing how educators can use humor and non threatening reactions to defuse charged situations when students challenge authority. However, Brendtro gave no specific methods for educators to employ, implying that much depends on educators being sensitive, exercising good judgment, and having good communication skills.
Today’s educators and researchers want more specifics, or so it seems. Today, the assumption seems to be that we can, at least in principle, measure what it takes to build positive teacher-student relationships. In addition, today’s educators put far more stress than did Brendtro on how the meaning of building positive teacher-student relationships changes with changes in age and context (Pianta, 2006).
In some schools, it can mean being somewhat relaxed and informal. In other schools, it can mean just the opposite. Each school is apt, then, to have a preferred style, which inevitably influences how both teachers and students come to define their relationships with one another. The culture of the adolescents in the previous example demanded a tough but caring, no-nonsense approach, not the approach adopted by many middle-class teachers in suburban schools. In the following example, we see something similar. Cynthia Ballenger (1998), a sociolinguist (someone who explains group behavior by explaining how groups use language), spent years teaching in a predominantly school. She found that when she adopted a progressive, constructivist approach to teaching that used conflicts between children to promote negotiation and verbal self-expression, her Haitian- American students reacted as if she were giving them license to misbehave, and so they misbehaved.
While observing teachers’ classrooms, Ballenger (1998) noticed that these classrooms were orderly, and the children were well-behaved. It was at that moment that Ballenger realized that the overriding problem was not with the children but with the mismatch between her approach to discipline and what the children were used to.
In discussions with teachers and with parents, Ballenger (1998) learned that they are concerned that American teachers are not controlling children adequately. This was especially evident when one teacher arrived at her school and watched a teacher telling a Haitian- American child that she needed to go to her classroom. The child refused and kicked the teacher. The teacher had had enough. She asked the school’s director to bring her all the Haitian-American children right away. The director and she gathered all the children into one large common room. The following is the text of what she said to the children:

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