Praise for Challenging Behavior in Young Children
“What you’ll learn from reading this book will have a significant positive effect on you as a teacher and on the hundreds of children you will eventually touch.”
–From the preface by Sue Bredekamp, author of Developmentally Appropriate Practice in Early Childhood Programs
“Full of good sense and good ideas. This book is clear, practical, sympathetic, and wise.”
–Lawrence Hartmann, M.D., Past President, American Psychiatric Association
“A powerful resource for understanding and working in a caring and respectful way with the neediest children.”
–Diane Levin, Wheelock College, author of Teaching Young Children in Violent Times
“I’m very enthusiastic about this book. It’s interesting, reader friendly, and has a solid research foundation. Best of all, the information is extremely useful!”
–Janet Gonzalez-Mena,author of The Young Child in the Family and the Community
Challenging Behavior in Young Children presents in-depth background information and strategies to help preservice and practicing teachers understand, prevent, and address the behavior problems found so often in today’s primary schools and child care centers. The evidence-based techniques provided here–brought to life in vignettes drawn from Barbara Kaiser’s 30 years in the field–work with the most difficult behaviors and benefit every child in the classroom.
In this second edition, the authors of the best-selling book Meeting the Challenge offer new chapters on inclusion and relationships, as well as a totally revised chapter on positive behavior support and functional assessment, strong chapters on resilience, culture, and working with families, and updated material on the brain and bullying. The result is a comprehensive and indispensable resource for everyone who works with young children, from child care through grade 3.
"Making full use of Barbara Kaiser's 25 years of experience as a child care director and teacher, this book presents information and strategies to deal with the challenging behavior that teachers find more and more often in their classrooms. Vignettes throughout the text featuring real children make these strategies come alive. Based on the 40-page NAEYC on the same topic, Meeting the Challenge, effective Strategies for Challenging Behavior in Early Childhood Environments, 1999 This new book explores the subject matter and strategies in greater depth with more up-to-date information. Additional chapters on resilience, culture, the brain, self-reflection, working with families, and bullying make this book a more comprehensive and useful resource. Early childhood educators, child care directors.
Foreword by Sue Bredekamp.
Preface.
Introduction.
CHAPTER 1: What Is Challenging Behavior?.
Isn’t challenging behavior sometimes appropriate for very young children?
Do children outgrow challenging behavior?
What is aggression?
Does culture play a role in aggressive behavior?
What do you think?
Suggested reading.
CHAPTER 2: Risk Factors.
What causes challenging behavior?
Biological Risk Factors.
Genes.
Temperament.
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
Complications of pregnancy and birth.
Substance abuse during pregnancy.
Malnutrition.
Language and cognition disorders.
Gender.
Environmental Risk Factors.
Family factors and parenting style.
Poverty and the conditions surroundings it.
Exposure to violence.
Turbulent times.
Violent media.
Child care.
What do you think?
Suggested reading.
CHAPTER 3: Protective Factors.
Who is the resilient child?
What makes a resilient child bounce back?
How does the family contribute to resilience?
What is the community’s role in resilience?
What do you think?
Suggested reading.
CHAPTER 4: Behavior and the Brain.
How do babies’ brains develop?
How does experience spur nerve cells to connect?
Is there a critical period for social or emotional behavior?
What does caregiving have to do with it?
What about neurotransmitters?
What role do genes play?
Which parts of the brain are involved in aggressive behavior?
What does all this mean?
What do you think?
Suggested reading.
CHAPTER 5: Relationship, Relationship, Relationship.
The caring connection. Understanding Yourself “Who are you?” said the caterpillar.
What influences the way you relate to a child with challenging behavior?
What is self-reflection?
How do you reflect?
What do you reflect about?
Are there any techniques to help you reflect?
Understanding the Child.
What is the role of attachment?
Establishing a Relationship.
How does being securely attached to a teacher protect a child?
How can you develop a secure attachment to a child with challenging behavior?
Back to the beginning.
What do you think?
Suggested reading.
CHAPTER 6: Understanding the Child’s Family and Culture.
Collaborating with Families.
Getting to know you.
Opening the Culture Door.
What is culture?
What does culture have to do with identity?
Are cultures really so different?
How can you see your culture?
The culture of child care and school.
What happens when children move from one culture to another?
How does culture influence behavior?
What happens when a child speaks a different language?
Does each culture have its own special characteristics?
Why all this matters.
What do you think?
Suggested reading.
CHAPTER 7: Preventing Challenging Behavior with the Right Physical Space and Program.
How does prevention work?
We’re all the same, yet we’re all different.
The Physical Space.
Wide open spaces.
What will go inside each area?
What about the people?
Does the level of stimulation make a difference?
Consider the results.
The Program.
Offering choices.
Choosing materials.
Are some activities harder for children with challenging behavior?
How do you get from A to B?
When circumstances change.
What do you think?
Suggested reading.
CHAPTER 8: Preventing Challenging Behavior with the Right Social Context.
Creating the Social Context.
What kind of social context fosters prosocial behavior and discourages aggressive behavior?
What is the teacher’s role in the social context?
How can you create a cooperative and inclusive community?
Teaching Social Skills.
Why are social skills important?
How do children learn social skills?
Why should we include children with challenging behaviors?
How do you teach social skills?
What skills do children need to learn?
What do you think?
Suggested reading and resources.
CHAPTER 9: Guidance and Punishment.
What information will you need?
How useful is positive reinforcement?
Which is better: Praise or encouragement?
What if positive reinforcement provokes challenging behavior?
What about natural and logical consequences?
Is it good practice to use time-out?
What’s wrong with using punishment?
What do you think?
Suggested reading.
CHAPTER 10: The WEVAS Strategy.
Calibration: Zeroing in on the child’s state of mind.
The anxious state: The early warning system.
The agitated state: Reactions intensify.
The aggressive state: The fire inside.
The assaultive state: Involving the community.
What about using restraint?
The open state: A time to debrief and learn.
Returning to the group.
What do you think?
Suggested reading.
CHAPTER 11: Positive Behavior Support and Functional Assessment.
How do you figure out the function of a behavior?
What functions can behavior serve?
What about appropriate behavior?
Why do you need to work as a team?
How do you get the information you need for a functional assessment?
How do you develop a hypothesis?
How do you create a positive behavior support plan?
How does the plan look?
How do you evaluate the plan?
What do you think?
Suggested reading.
CHAPTER 12: The Inclusive Classroom.
About Inclusion.
Why is inclusion important? How does IDEA work?
What’s happening on the front lines?
How is a child who needs special education identified?
What services does IDEA offer young children?
Preventing and Addressing Challenging Behavior in Children with Disabilities. What is the connection between disability and challenging behavior?
How can you organize the physical space to prevent challenging behavior? How can the program and schedule prevent challenging behavior?
How can an inclusive social context prevent challenging behavior?
How can you respond effectively to challenging behavior?
What do you think?
Suggested reading.
CHAPTER 13: Working with Families and Other Experts.
How do families react to news of challenging behavior?
How do you feel?
How can colleagues help?
How do you arrange a meeting?
What should happen in a meeting with the family?
How do you close a meeting?
What if you and the family disagree?
How do you handle challenging behavior when the parent is present?
What should you say to the parents of the other children?
What about getting expert advice?
What if the child needs more help?
What about asking a child with challenging behavior to leave?
What do you think?
Suggested reading.
CHAPTER 14: Bullying.
What is bullying?
How common is bullying?
Who are the children who bully others?
Who are the targets of bullying?
Who are the bystanders?
How can you prevent bullying?
What helps children cope with bullying?
How do you respond to bullying?
What do you do if you don’t see the bullying?
How can you work with the parents of children involved in bullying?
What do you think?
Suggested reading and resources.
APPENDIX A: The Functional Assessment Observation Form.
APPENDIX B: The Functional Assessment A-B-C Chart.
References.
Index.