Posts Tagged ‘Classroom Behavior’

Why You’ve Stopped Believing Classroom Management Advice Can Help You

July 14, 2026

If you’ve quietly stopped clicking on classroom management videos, stopped reading the PD slides, stopped hoping the next staff training will actually change anything, this post is for you. Not because you’ve given up on getting better. Because the advice has given up on you first.

The pattern you’ve probably noticed

Search “classroom management” and you’ll find two kinds of content.

The first kind makes you feel understood. It tells you that difficult students had a rough morning, that behaviour isn’t personal, that you’re not failing, you’re human. It’s warm, and it’s not wrong. But watch until the end and count how many actual, repeatable actions you were given. Usually one or two, and they’re often the same ones you already knew: stay calm, build relationships, don’t take it personally.

The second kind gives you a technique with no explanation underneath it. Lower your voice. Pause before responding. Address it privately. All genuinely useful. But try one of these in a real classroom, with thirty teenagers watching and one of them testing exactly how far they can push you, and it often falls apart, because you were handed the move without ever being told why it works, or what to do the moment it doesn’t.

Neither of these is dishonest. But neither of them is enough. And after a few years of trying both, a lot of teachers quietly conclude the same thing: maybe this just isn’t fixable through advice.

Why that conclusion is wrong, but understandable

Here’s the distinction that matters. You haven’t stopped wanting to get better at this. You’ve stopped trusting that the next piece of advice will actually hold up under pressure. Those are two very different things, and mixing them up matters, because one leads to giving up, and the other leads to being more selective about what you’re willing to try.

The strategies that actually work under pressure aren’t secret. They’re grounded in something specific: an understanding of what’s happening in a dysregulated nervous system, yours and the student’s, in the moment things start to go sideways. Without that grounding, a technique is just a script, and scripts break the second a student doesn’t follow them.

With it, you’re not memorising a line to say. You understand why silence works better than a snap response, why lowering your voice when a student raises theirs changes the physiology of the room, why the goal in a heated moment isn’t to win the exchange but to end it without anyone needing to save face in front of an audience. Once you understand the mechanism, you can adapt on the spot, which is the one thing a script can never do for you.

What’s actually missing from most advice

Three things, consistently.

The psychology underneath the technique. Most classroom management content tells you what to do. Almost none of it tells you what’s happening physiologically, in you and in the student, that makes one response work and another backfire. Without that, you’re following instructions. With it, you’re making judgment calls, which is what the job actually requires.

A next step, not just a feeling. Validation matters. Feeling understood after a brutal day matters. But validation without a testable next action leaves you exactly where you started tomorrow morning, just a little more comforted about it.

Proof that this is learnable, not innate. A lot of advice implicitly suggests that calm, controlled teachers were simply born that way, and the rest of us are trying to fake it. That’s not true, and it’s worth saying plainly: the ability to stay regulated under pressure, to de-escalate instead of escalate, is a skill that gets built the same way any skill gets built, through understanding, small deliberate practice, and enough early wins to start believing it’s possible.

Where that leaves you

If you’ve been feeling like the problem is too big for advice to touch, that’s not a personal failing, and it’s not really about you at all. It’s a reasonable response to years of content that diagnoses well and solves poorly.

The actual fix isn’t more validation, and it isn’t a longer list of tips. It’s strategies that are explained, not just issued, tried once in a low-stakes moment, and allowed to become evidence. Not evidence for a video or a PD session. Evidence for you, that tomorrow’s lesson really can go differently than today’s.

That belief doesn’t come from being told it’s possible. It comes from trying one thing, on purpose, and watching it work.

If you’re ready to test that for yourself, the CALM Method is where I’d start. It’s not another list of tips, it’s the framework underneath the ones that actually work, free to download, built to be tried tomorrow, not just read tonight.

School Builds Prison Block for Troublemaking Students

September 11, 2012

 

At least this school doesn’t pretend it’s not a prison:

Furious parents and local councillors today blasted a school after it unveiled plans to build a ‘prison-style’ block for 12 of its most notorious troublemakers.

Tudor Grange Academy in Worcester, West Midlands – which has the second highest expulsion rate in England – has applied to convert a disused office block into an ‘alternative education’ facility.

Anyone else think we have all but given up?

Click on the link to read Being a Teacher Makes Me Regret the Way I Treated My Teachers

Click on the link to read Problem Kids, Suspensions and Revolving Doors

Click on the link to read Useful Resources to Assist in Behavioural Management

Click on the link to read When Something Doesn’t Work – Try Again Until it Does