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Developing teachers' personal effectiveness
Tags: Continuing Professional Development | CPD Coordinator | CPD provision | Emotional Literacy | Raising Achievement | SEAL - Social Emotional Aspects of Learning | SEAL Coordinator | Teaching Skills
Susannah Temple uses concepts from transactional analysis to highlight an important psychological issue for teachers in developing their own identity as effective practitioners
Student teachers’ own classroom history Since most people have school experiences as children, student teachers will be drawing on their experience of being a child in school (child ego state), and of what their teachers modelled as parent-type figures (parent ego state). For some people, both of these types of experience will have been mainly positive and are therefore easy to integrate into their professional self (adult ego state). Where the experiences were more negative and traumatic, they are likely to continue exerting an influence in the present until they have been recognised, worked through and learned from. People who enter teacher training, particularly when they are in their late teens, will probably be doing so with many of these parent and child ego states as yet unintegrated, and therefore likely to be activated in moments of stress. Until they achieve the necessary adult integration, they will be liable in the professional situation to be triggered out of adult into replaying material from parent or child. Teachers Mrs X, a secondary maths teacher, was constantly disorganised and ineffective in her classroom. In a transactional analysis discussion group, she slowly realised that she largely replayed an ineffectual teacher from her school days. It seemed to her somehow ‘disloyal’ to act powerfully and assertively in the classroom. As she made the connections, she was motivated to set expectations and limits for her pupils and to become increasingly ‘functionally fluent’, by using more structuring and accounting behaviours. By contrast, Mr Y had a punitive attitude towards children who made mistakes. He used ridicule and sarcasm as tools for correction. Even his colleagues cringed at his interventions. It was clear that he was re-enacting the trauma of his childhood as a perpetrator. Mr Y resisted the encouragement to adopt new ways. After some time he took an early retirement on grounds of ill health. Increasing awareness Ideally the ongoing process of increasing awareness should take place in a supportive, collaborative training group, using experiential exercises and time for reflection and discussion. The educators involved in this process need to track the development of their own beliefs about education and their role in it as an adult by examining their personal journey through childhood, schooling, college and professional situations. Questions about the past, and awareness of the reasons for the decisions made, throw light on the range of both positive and negative motivations for becoming a teacher. Questions about the future illuminate the personal rationale for professional decision making in the present. An exercise
John identified his reluctance to apply for promotion and thus acquire management status as his way of “staying with” his hero, who, John realised, had had a strong anti-authority attitude. This was the start for John of reassessing himself and his career as a teacher, and as a result opening up new possibilities for himself. Awareness and self-understanding are the keys to the sort of teacher development that promotes emotional literacy and professional effectiveness. Further information Barrow, G Bradshaw, E and Newton, T (2001) Improving Behaviour and Raising Self-Esteem in the Classroom, London, David Fulton Publishers. Tudor, K Ed (2008) The Adult is Parent to the Child, Lyme Regis, Russell House Publishing. This article first appeared in Raising Achievement Update - Dec 2007 What is this? What is this? These icons allow you to do one of the following: You can 'socially bookmark' this page. If you like this article and think others will be interested in it, you can add it to one of the sites on which web users share links. These are Digg, del.icio.us, Reddit, ma.gnolia, Newsvine or Furl. Add a link to your Google homepage or 'My Yahoo!' page. Search Technorati, Ice Rocket or PubSub to see if any bloggers have linked to this article. | | | | | | | | | |
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