Sunday, May 13, 2012

0162: An insidious idea behind classroom management.

#education #discipline #SOSchat

I am not yet a classroom management historian, perhaps I’ll become one, but I am quite certain that there are certain insidious motives behind it. While many classroom management techniques are necessary, I submit that their genesis has roots in behaviorist techniques based in social control. This certainly should be an almost redundant statement as some might understand public schooling was born out of the intention of managing and separating certain populations. I hope to spend some of the summer organizing these suspicions into some proper research. And, I hope my research proves my speculations wrong beyond doubt. I hope to uncover the benevolence of our current system of education and behavioral management and be made an utter fool. But, until then, I’ll remain a fool in waiting with my somewhat conspiratorial and alarmist beliefs. I most certainly believe, because I’ve seen in numerous arenas, that children in poverty and, more saliently, children of color are treated more harshly. This may not be consistent across the entire nation, but it is in my experience and the extended experiences of colleagues. But that is not the point I am trying to make. Classroom management is successful only when the following is true in some form:

“The ideas of crime and punishment must be strongly linked and ‘follow one another without interruption… When you have thus formed the chain of ideas in the heads of your citizens, you will then be able to pride yourselves on guiding them and being their masters. A stupid despot may constrain his slaves with iron chains; but a true politician binds them even more strongly by the chain of their own ideas; it is at the stable point of reason that he secures the end of the chain; the link is all the stronger in that we do not know of what it is made and we believe it to be our own work; despair and time eat away the bonds of iron and steel, but they are powerless against the union of ideas, they can only tighten it still more; and on the soft fibres of the brain is founded the unshakable base of the soundest Empires’” (Foucault quoting Servan in Discipline and Punish)

Classroom management is a beginning. The roots spread into other realms of existence as the child grows. Is there another way? A better way? I’m not sure exactly what. But, surely there’s something more freeing than silently imprinting allegiance and respect to one’s masters through subtle and consistent enculturation practices. Please prove that my speculations are deeply incorrect. Please show me that my experiences have simply been rare exceptions, and have driven me down a path of cynicism. Please.

Notes

  1. sotospeak8 reblogged this from educatedtodeath
  2. nimue325 reblogged this from girlwithalessonplan
  3. misseducation reblogged this from shapefutures
  4. analuizatrindade answered: ?
  5. educatedtodeath reblogged this from positivelypersistentteach and added:
    positivelypersistentteach I very much agree with you about your definitions of classroom management. You speak of the...
  6. inexpensive-bridal-dresses reblogged this from positivelypersistentteach
  7. jekoh answered: I didn’t see this post before I wrote my response - and used discipline as an analogy. Hope it didn’t confuse anything, sorry!
  8. shapefutures reblogged this from teachinglearning and added:
    This isn’t necessarily an answer to the original question — I could write a thesis paper to answer it and I’ll do my...
  9. teachinglearning answered: ETD is not alone. I would equate, as my students do also, my school to prison, or at least akin to the behavioral control prisons beget.
  10. teachinglearning reblogged this from educatedtodeath
  11. theroundandthelovely reblogged this from girlwithalessonplan and added:
    Ok, just, what? The original poster has done almost no research...classroom management,...
  12. theroundandthelovely answered: That quote has nothing to do with classroom management unless you are doing it completely wrong. Get thee to the white book and change.
  13. world-shaker answered: Most effective classroom management techniques are based around respect and rapport with the students. What the hell are you talking about?
  14. girlwithalessonplan reblogged this from educatedtodeath and added:
    So your ideas about CLASSROOM...taken from a book about PRISONS? No wonder you’re a cynic....
  15. thecursedpencilsharpener reblogged this from positivelypersistentteach
  16. girlwithalessonplan answered: PREACH.
  17. clockwork-toi reblogged this from educatedtodeath and added:
    plead, though soon take heed...mindfully realizing...seniors...
  18. arviegomez answered: GoodAfternoon :]
  19. clockwork-toi answered: the kids will have their say, and seniors will walk beside their word, optimism much like wit go hand in hand, so will the coming generations
  20. adventuresinlearning reblogged this from educatedtodeath
  21. This was featured in #Education
  22. educatedtodeath posted this