Proactive Vs. Reactive Approach

Proactive Vs. Reactive Approach thumbnail
There are numerous approaches to managing a classroom and engaging students.

Proactive and reactive approaches to classroom management address discipline styles. Every teacher uses one of the two approaches to deal with discipline issues and must find a way to effectively discipline his classroom in order for it to run smoothly.

  1. Theories

    • A proactive approach is when the teacher tries to eliminate a problem behavior before it becomes a problem. A reactive approach is when the teacher deals with a behavior when it becomes a problem in the classroom. Both approaches are used by teachers in addressing misbehavior in their classroom. Teachers must deal with problem behavior so as to not interrupt the education process.

    Why Students Misbehave

    • Carol Cummings, author of the book "Managing to Teach," writes that there are four types of behavior that lead students to misbehave. The attention seeker strives for attention so his behaviors will allow him to be the focus of the classroom. The power seeker refuse to follow direction and must have the last word. The revenge seeker will verbally abuse others. Some misbehavior because they wish to avoid failure. These are the students who don't do their work and sleep in class in order to avoid further failure.

    Proactive Approach

    • In the proactive approach to classroom management, the teacher uses different behaviors to lessen the likelihood that a student will act out. The student will achieve the desired behavior. A teacher can use a proactive approach by establishing rules in the classroom and praising students who behave according to behavior expectations. If students are aware of the rules and know the consequences of violating them, this will eliminate some misbehavior. If the teacher praises students for appropriate behavior, they will continue to behave this way in order to seek additional praise.

    Reactive Approach

    • The reactive approach to classroom management is a teacher's response following a student's misbehavior in the classroom. The teacher imposes punishment that is fair and consistent when dealing with a student's inappropriate actions. An example of this would be a student being excessively late to class. This student may be punished by having to serve detention after school. These actions may deter the behavior in the future, but it also has a chance of being unsuccessful.

    Effectiveness

    • The difference between the two theories is that in the proactive approach the teacher tries to avoid future conflict before it happens, whereas the reactive approach only temporarily addresses the issue. It is easy to address an issue as it comes up, but it is more fruitful to address the issue before it becomes a problem. A teacher who uses a proactive approach will be less stressed when dealing with issues and every student will know what is expected of them. It will also help address each of the four issues that cause students to misbehave.

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