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Students Who Drive You Crazy - Book Cover
Updated Edition of Bestseller

Students Who Drive You Crazy

Succeeding With Resistant, Unmotivated, and Otherwise Difficult Young People
Second Edition
By: Jeffrey A. Kottler, Ellen Kottler

Discover more strategies for managing difficult students, with new information on aggressive/violent behavior, tips for establishing positive relationships with parents, and more.

Full description


Students Who Drive You Crazy - Book Cover
Product Details
  • Grade Level: PreK-12, Elementary, Secondary
  • ISBN: 9781412965293
  • Published By: Corwin
  • Year: 2008
  • Page Count: 168
  • Publication date: August 22, 2008

Price: $31.95

Price: $31.95
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Description

Description

"An absolutely necessary read for educators. The commonsense model assesses and outlines how to respond to challenging students, parents, and colleagues. This work is making a difference in my school."
—Bonnie Tryon, Principal
Golding Elementary School, Cobleskill, NY

Take a proactive approach with your most challenging students!

This second edition of a bestseller gives teachers a model to assess, understand, and respond to challenging students. The book also provides strategies for handling relationships with difficult parents and colleagues.

This fully updated survival guide offers additional strategies to help teachers manage difficult students, including those who break rules and those who are withdrawn, plus new tables and charts and questions for reflection. With real-life scenarios from interviews with teachers, counselors, and school administrators, this volume provides:

  • More tips for developing active listening skills that improve communication with students and their parents
  • Suggestions for creating caring communities in the classroom
  • A new section on dealing with aggressive and violent behavior
  • Information on understanding parent behavior and suggestions for building positive connections with parents and families
  • Research from the related disciplines of nursing, social work, psychology, counseling, and family therapy

Use this authoritative handbook to establish healthy, positive relationships with students and maintain a supportive learning environment in the classroom.


Key features

  • Includes strategies that can help you change your own internal framework when facing students who drive you crazy.
  • Contains a comprehensive catalog of things that you can do differently to improve your most difficult relationships.
  • Based on research and literature in education, as well as current practices in the related dis­ciplines of nursing, social work, psychology, counseling, and family therapy.
Author(s)

Author(s)

Jeffrey A. Kottler photo

Jeffrey A. Kottler

Jeffrey A. Kottler is one of the most prolific authors in the fields of counseling, psychotherapy, and education, having written more than 90 books about a wide range of subjects. He has authored a dozen texts for counselors and therapists that are used in universities around the world and a dozen books each for practicing therapists and educators. Some of his most highly regarded works include Creative Breakthroughs in Therapy, The Mummy at the Dining Room Table: Eminent Therapists Reveal Their Most Unusual Cases and What They Teach Us About Human Behavior, Bad Therapy, The Client Who Changed Me, Divine Madness, Change: What Leads to Personal Transformation, Stories We’ve Heard, Stories We’ve Told: Life-Changing Narratives in Therapy and Everyday Life, and Therapy Over 50. He has been an educator for 40 years, having worked as a teacher, counselor, and therapist in preschool, middle school, mental health center, crisis center, nongovernmental organization, university, community college, private practice, and disaster relief settings. He has served as a Fulbright scholar and senior lecturer in Peru and Iceland, as well as worked as a visiting professor in New Zealand, Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Nepal. He is professor of counseling at California State University, Fullerton.

Ellen Kottler photo

Ellen Kottler

Ellen Kottler, Ed.S., has been a teacher for over 30 years in public and private schools, alternative schools, adult education programs, and universities. She has worked in inner-city schools as well as in suburban and rural set­tings. She was a curriculum specialist in charge of secondary social studies and law-related education for one of the country’s largest school districts. Ellen is the author or coauthor of several books for educators, including Secrets for Secondary School Teachers: How to Succeed in Your First Year, On Being a Teacher, Secrets for Beginning Elementary School Teachers, Counseling Skills for Teachers, English Language Learners in Your Classroom: Strategies That Work, Secrets to Success for Science Teachers, and Students Who Drive You Crazy: Succeeding with Resistant, Unmotivated, and Otherwise Difficult Young People.

She teaches secondary education and supervises intern teachers at California State University, Fullerton.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Preface

Acknowledgments

About the Authors

1. Why Do Some Students Drive You Crazy?

At a Loss About What to Do

Eye of the Beholder

So, Who Gets to You?

2. Which Students Challenge You Most?

Students From Hell

Profiles of Students Who Are Difficult

Placing Actions in Context

3. Understanding Students' Challenging Behavior

They Are Doing the Best They Can

Additional Functions of Conflict

When Biology Has Its Say

Creating Difficult Students

Multiple Viewpoints

4. What Students Do to Make You Crazy

Separating Students and Behavior

Protecting Yourself

Pushing Our Buttons

How Failure Helps

Engaging the Challenging Student

Recognizing Your Limitations

Don't Take the Conflict Personally

It Comes With the Territory

5. Changing Your Own Behavior

Detachment Without Withdrawal

Talking to Yourself

Processing Disappointments Internally

Stop Complaining

Keeping Your Sense of Humor

Recognizing Accomplishments and Strengths

Reframing Problems

Being Flexible

Seeking Support

Help Yourself First

6. Strategies for Changing Students' Behavior

Some Rules of Engagement

Develop a Sense of Community

Use Counseling Skills

Collaborate With Others

Brief Interventions

Develop Alternate Perspectives

7. Parents and Colleagues Who Drive You Crazy

The Least of Our Problems

Teachers Who Don't Understand

Administrators Who Handcuff Us

Parents Who Fight Us

What About You?

Those Who Abuse You

8. Preventing Future Problems

Proactive Versus Reactive Strategies

Paying Attention to Feedback

Teacher Strategies That Maintain Momentum

Conflict Resolution

In Summary

References and Suggested Readings

Index

Reviews

Reviews

Price: $31.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

For Instructors

Request Review Copy

When you select 'request review copy', you will be redirected to Sage Publishing (our parent site) to process your request.