Educators today are tasked with managing a range of student behaviors within the classroom setting. Although a majority of students are equipped with the skills to fully participate within the general education setting, some students exhibit challenging behaviors. These behaviors make it extremely difficulty for them to make academic or social gains within the school setting.
As a special education resource teacher, I work with many students who present a range of behavioral issues during the school day. Oftentimes these behavioral issues make it very difficult for them to access their learning and make sufficient progress. This week's assignment has reinforced the idea that it is extremely important to look beyond the surface level when a child is exhibiting challenging behaviors. Asking "why" behaviors are occurring shifts from reacting to the behavior to truly understanding the student and their needs. This weeks assignment has reinforced the idea that behaviors often stem from academic frustration, social-skill gaps, emotional needs, or outside stressors—not simply “misbehavior.” This is something that I am going to keep in mind when I am working with children who are exhibiting challenging behavior.
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