Managing Mistakes and Misbehavior: When Teaching and Reminding Aren’t Enough

Author(s):  
Marilyn Watson

By the second year, Laura realized she needed a stronger response to hurtful behavior. She often tried to help misbehaving children see and understand the harm they had caused, firmly requesting that the offending child find a way to repair the harm. She used empathy, restitution, and moral reflection when responding to hurtful misbehavior. However, most misbehaviors happened because the students lost focus momentarily or let their self-interest get the better of them. In such instances, a simple reminder to pay attention or quite fooling around was enough. For repeated misbehaviors, Laura had her students write a reflection on their behavior for later discussion with her. Some misbehaviors were so serious that Laura sent students to another classroom with a work folder or to the office. In such extreme cases, Laura followed up with renewed efforts to build trust and help the student reflect on the misbehavior.

2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 147-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon Creak

AbstractA paradox lies at the heart of the biennial Southeast Asian (SEA) Games. On the one hand, the region's premier sporting event has consistently celebrated themes of regional friendship and cooperation; on the other, the SEA Games are synonymous with controversy and poor sportsmanship, especially over the strategic selection of sports by host nations. Yet the Games go on – every second year – just as they have done since 1959. In introducing sport to existing debates on regional community in Southeast Asia, this article seeks to understand the key features of the sporting community of the Southeast Asian Games, particularly the emergence and development of the institutions and norms that help this event to thrive in the face of national self-interest. Through this analysis, the article argues for a distinctive approach to regional community in Southeast Asia, based not on notions of unity but principles of reciprocity and exchange.


1966 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 867-880 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kay H. Smith ◽  
Darhl M. Pedersen ◽  
Robert E. Lewis

First-year and second-year students enrolled in the Master of Business Administration program at Brigham Young University rated all pairs of persons in their group as to their relative similarity-dissimilarity on an 8-point scale. Multidimensional scaling procedures yielded three significant dimensions for the first-year group and two for the second-year group. Correlations were then computed between the dimensions and a series of sociometric choices by Ss, personal data obtained from student files, scores on the Guilford-Zimmerman Temperament Survey, and teacher ratings. The dimensions obtained for the first-year group were identified as “perceived competency,” “aggressive self-interest,” and “social interest and self-understanding,” and those for the second-year group were identified as “demonstrated competency” and “group maintenance.” Differences in the dimensions between the groups and relationships of the obtained dimensions with those found in other studies were discussed.


2004 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-40
Author(s):  
James Halteman ◽  

The idea that the pursuit of self-interest in economic life would lead to social harmony had a positive effect on production, but it led many to assume that virtue arui moral reflection were no longer essential in socializing human passions. As specialization and trade extended markets, workers followed the jobs, leaving their social and moral moorings behind. The fragmenting of social capital made it difficult to foster social trust and cooperation. Neoclassical market theory does not interface well with other disciplines given its scientific approach of rational choice analysis. Non-egoistic motivations like values and beliefs are usually excluded from economic thinking so moral reflection is relegated to economic applications only. These factors reduce the impact of moral reflection in economic life. Yet self-regard, market flexibility, and a scientific approach to markets all have positive qualities for integrating economic and moral life.


2007 ◽  
Vol 38 (6) ◽  
pp. 80
Author(s):  
MARY ELLEN SCHNEIDER
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Alexander Blaszczynski

Abstract. Background: Tensions exist with various stakeholders facing competing interests in providing legal land-based and online regulated gambling products. Threats to revenue/taxation occur in response to harm minimisation and responsible gambling policies. Setting aside the concept of total prohibition, the objectives of responsible gambling are to encourage and/or restrict an individual’s gambling expenditure in terms of money and time to personally affordable limits. Stakeholder responsibilities: Governments craft the gambling environment through legislation, monitor compliance with regulatory requirements, and receive taxation revenue as a proportion of expenditure. Industry operators on the other hand, compete across market sectors through marketing and advertising, and through the development of commercially innovative products, reaping substantial financial rewards. Concurrently, governments are driven to respond to community pressures to minimize the range of negative gambling-related social, personal and economic harms and costs. Industry operators are exposed to the same pressures but additionally overlaid with the self-interest of avoiding the imposition of more stringent restrictive policies. Cooperation of stakeholders: The resulting tension between taxation revenue and profit making, harm minimization, and social impacts creates a climate of conflict between all involved parties. Data-driven policies become compromised by unsubstantiated claims of, and counter claims against, the nature and extent of gambling-related harms, effectiveness of policy strategies, with allegations of bias and influence associated with researchers supported by industry and government research funding sources. Conclusion: To effectively advance policies, it is argued that it is imperative that all parties collaborate in a cooperative manner to achieve the objectives of responsible gambling and harm minimization. This extends to and includes more transparent funding for researchers from both government and industry. Continued reliance on data collected from analogue populations or volunteers participating in simulated gambling tasks will not provide data capable of valid and reliable extrapolation to real gamblers in real venues risking their own funds. Failure to adhere to principles of corporate responsibility and consumer protection by both governments and industry will challenge the social licence to offer gambling products. Appropriate and transparent safeguards learnt from the tobacco and alcohol field, it is argued, can guide the conduct of gambling research.


1994 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 283-292 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine S. Tamis-LeMonda ◽  
Marc H. Bornstein
Keyword(s):  

1998 ◽  
Vol 43 (7) ◽  
pp. 481-482
Author(s):  
Graham L. Staines
Keyword(s):  

2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heather Lau ◽  
Nazan Aksan ◽  
Hill H. Goldsmith
Keyword(s):  

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