The Hong twins are so
different from each other, which makes tutoring them together a worthwhile
challenge. One of the twins is
compliant and participates without complaint, while the other may simply refuse
to do the activity. The most
memorable moment of this tutoring session was when David put his shirt over his
head, and said he will not participate.
I practiced the "ignoring" technique taught in the Behavior Modification
class at the School of Music. It
worked, and with only a small amount of correction and redirection David found his way back
into participation. Additionally, by
ignoring a misbehaving child they are not reinforced with the attention they
may be seeking. Alternately, by
giving positive feedback to Matthew for participating and behaving-- while ignoring David--
the boys are learning what kinds of behaviors will be rewarded with attention
and praise.
The
successful “rewarding” techniques used during this session included making one
or two folds on paper airplanes after correctly answering grammar questions,
taking a turn in tic-tac-toe after correctly identifying the subject in a given
sentence, and a point system (that will be carried throughout the entirety of
the tutoring sessions) resulting in a materialistic reward.
Next
week, I must be more prepared for this dynamic duo of twins with prepared
worksheets and an engaging teaching game.
Without adequate teacher preparation, the boys will misbehave, resulting
in a tutoring session focused on behavior rather than academics.
Hi Chan
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't blame yourself too hard for all of the issues you experienced. As we discovered it seems that your session was right after I had got done with the twins, and they were ready to quit before I started, so I think you did well under the circumstances.
I totally understand what the "ignoring" technique means. =) Good luck, Chan! No pain, no gain. ;)
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