BIBLIOGRAPHY
TOTALLY POSITIVE TEACHING
BENDER, William N., 20 Disciplinary Strategies for Working With Challenging Students, 2016, pb 246 pages, Learning Sciences International.
The author says, “Classroom discipline isn’t just about how strict or relaxed a teacher is.” In this book he provides three tiers of strategies; whole class and whole school preventive strategies; immediate strategies to deal with disciplinary problems that could otherwise lead to further disruptions; and individually-targeted strategies for serious behavior problems. His list of twenty strategies is practical and relevant to the changing times. He uses widely respected research to see what really works. Since the information can be applied at many grade levels, the author suggests using the book to individualize by dipping into the book for the specific situations relevant to your school/classroom culture. The publisher has provided a webinar for this book by the author. (Webinar 10: 102-482-907)
BENSON, Jeffrey. Hanging In: Strategies for Teaching the Students Who Challenge Us the Most, ASCD, 2014, paperback, 181 pages.
ISBN 978-4166-1955-6 The book illustrates the value of tenacity and building connections with the most needy students through detailed portraits based on actual students and how they eventually succeeded. Strategies for analyzing and developing individualized plans are given with examples of plans in action. Recommendations for teachers, support staff and administrators are shared. Inspiration and field-tested ideas for the most demanding cases are plentiful in this book.
CURWIN, Richard, MENDLER, Allen N., & MENDLER, Brian D. Discipline with Dignity: New Challenges, New Solutions, 3rd Ed, pb, 251 pages, ASCD, 2008.
The refreshing importance of this book on dealing with daily discipline decisions in the classroom, is that, for this 3rd edition, the authors have culled information that no longer seems relevant, and have added some focuses to deal with the changing realities of the American classroom culture. At the start of each chapter, there is a review of “What We Have Learned,” to anchor the information with current, realistic, and positive ways to address the needs of students in your learning community. There are helpful dialogues to show how to direct a conversation with a student who, for instance, isn’t doing assignments, or who needs consequence options. The book is full of directly useful examples of a whole range of typical everyday decisions about respectful discipline strategies to use. It ends with a School Discipline Survey with 9 factors to score by individual teaches, and then used, possibly in a group tally of these responses.
ERWIN, Jonathan C. The Classroom of Choice, Giving Students What They Need and Getting What You Want, Alexandria, VA. ASCD. 2004. 229 pages.
ISBN 0-87120-829-6. Based on Glasser’s beliefs that people have these motivators: fun, freedom, power and belonging. Give students choices, and they will pick what meets an unmet need. It is rich and wonderful, full of practical and engaging strategies to achieve important intellectual goals while helping students meet their developing social and intellectual needs. Erwin believes that while learning is hard work, it doesn’t have to be painful: Fun is both a prerequisite for and a byproduct of quality learning.
ERWIN, Jonathan, Inspiring the Best in Students, pb 210 pages, ASCD, 2010. When you wonder what would be the greatest gift you could give your students, it would probably be the skills of social and emotional development, and in a classroom, it would include helping students meet their most basic needs. Both are the focuses of this book. The intrinsic needs defined as Choice Theory by William Glasser include survival, love and belonging, power, freedom and fun. Erwin translates that information into specific lesson plans to teach students how to enjoy feeling good and emotionally safe, having friends and feeling accepted, feeling a sense of competence and importance, experiencing independence, and being able to laugh and play. The teaching strategies are specific and will guide you to the joy of teaching what really matters to students.
FERLAZZO, LARRY. Helping Students Motivate Themselves: Practical Answer to Classroom Challenges, 2nd. edition. Larchmont, CA. Eye on Education. 2013. 190 pages. ISBN 978-1-59667-181-2. Find a dozen categories of strategies to engage the thinking and processing of your course information. In this book by award-winning author Larry Ferlazzo, you will see: How to motivate students, help students to take personal responsibility, deal with disruptive students and classes, find best ways to maximize the chances that a lesson will be successful, and more. Each section of the book provides stimulating ideas and down-to-earth tools, including lesson plans, and even downloads of the handouts that save you hours.
SORNSON, BOB. Creating Classrooms Where Teachers Love to Teach and Students Love to Learn, pb, 180 pages, Love and Logic Institute, 2005. Bob Sornson is the warm-hearted author of this book (and many others, including children’s books about empathy and bullying.) In this book, he writes a narrative of a relationship between a teacher who is really discouraged and another teacher who is a warm and caring mentor. Mrs. Peterson, the frustrated teacher, in addition, faces the fact that her own son, Jimmy, is very difficult to handle when she comes home from her teaching job. When she gets called to a parent conference by Jimmy’s teacher, Mrs.Bjornstad, she fears the worst. But a great friendship results, and Mrs. Bjornstad provides step-by-step strategies that brought peacefulness and effectiveness to the professional and the personal life of Mrs. Peterson. This is a very helpful book to help learn the power of love and logic in the real world. It is a helpful guide, as well, to show the bridging between teacher and parent.