03 March 2015 / by Elena Riches

Dealing with disruptive or difficult students

Whatever kind of teacher you are, be it a maths teacher, an art teacher or a teacher of karate, there will come a time when you will have problems managing your class/group of students and if you cannot find a way to do it effectively your students can become uninterested, unmotivated or quiet, and will seldom reach your desired goal. By using rules, teachers can create a more motivating and rewarding classroom environment.


Set rules from day one so that the students know where they stand and won't be surprised if you have to discipline them at a later date. The rules need to be reasonable, culturally sensitive and promote a positive learning environment. If you set rules that are too severe or too lax and therefore easily broken, the students won't even try to follow them. The teacher must also abide by the rules. Rules are caught, not taught which means if some students stick to them, the other students will follow.



Students tend to imitate their teacher so if the teacher is hardworking, softly-spoken, and polite, the class will act in a similar manner. If you are loud and bossy and do not give your students a chance to speak they will react the same way, both towards you and their classmates. If you want a quiet class, demonstrate this by speaking quietly so that the students will strain to hear you and be more attentive. Shouting at a disruptive class or student will make them more unruly.



At the beginning of the class, wait for all the students to be quiet and focused on you before you start speaking in order to ensure you have their attention. If students are still talking or not paying attention when you start, they will think that what they have to say is more important than what you're saying. Do not compete with them for attention though because they outnumber you and will more than likely shout louder. It is important for the whole class to be focused on the teacher before the teacher begins so, if your students are being noisy, don't speak. Inexperienced teachers tend to get louder when the class gets louder but all this serves to do is to make the students louder with nobody listening. Every student deserves the chance to learn and if one or more students are talking, they are spoiling it for the others.



Learning to control difficult or disruptive students before their behaviour  spreads to their classmates is quite important and, as with setting rules, this needs to be done at the offset so that the students learn they cannot simply do what they want.

So, how do you grab the attention of students who are doing everything except listening to you and how do you make sure that your students get the most out of your class?



If your lessons are dull or monotonous your students will lose interest pretty quickly and that can make them troublesome. Planing an engaging lesson which all the students can participate in will make certain everyone pays attention and make them less likely to be disruptive. It could be a good idea to elicit ideas for lesson plans from the students as, that way, you're teaching them what they want to be taught and have less reason to be uninterested. Having said this, it won't be possible to keep all of your students interested all of the time since you will have learners in your class that really don't want to be there - they're learning because they have to, not because they want to.



One thing to remember in every class is that if it isn't going how you want it to, don’t get angry. Keep calm, be rational and don’t shout. If the students think you've lost control you won't be able to get them back on track. So, if you feel you're losing their attention get it back by changing the activity to a more engaging one. If you have a student who is acting up, try to get to the root of why they are doing it and deal with them before your next class so that they're not being continually disruptive.

As I stated at the start of this post, the above applies to any kind of teaching (when teaching groups as opposed to one-on-one) but leans towards teaching kids and teenagers since adults aren't really inclined to exhibit bad behaviour. At Oxbridge TEFL, the majority of students are adults, therefore, you wouldn't have too much of a problem controlling them. If this appeals to you, click here for a no obligation interview.
 

03

February 2015
Teaching English in Spain
by Elena Riches
I previously wrote an explanation of the various ‘TEFL’ terms (you can read about it here), for those who were confused over what ...

01

February 2015
Chunking information & the power it unlocks
by Vincent Chieppa
...

27

January 2015
Paperless Lessons Are The Future - Join The Paper-free ESL Community!
by Elena Riches
Ready-to-use paperless lessons are now a reality for the OxbridgeTEFL ...

23

January 2015
Traveling and teaching: the perfect match. Interview with Marie Nancy Vernet
by Radmila Gurkova
My name is Marie Na...

19

January 2015
TESL, TEFL, ESL, EFL, TESOL and CELTA. Confused? Read on...
by Elena Riches
Whether teaching English is a career path that you want to follow, or you just want an excuse to live the good life in another country for a while, a TEFL certificate will get you off on the right foot because, the days when being a native speaker of English was enough to get you a teaching job are now long gone. Nowadays you almost always ne...

13

January 2015
Collaborative learning: "Working together is success"
by Vincent Chieppa
“Coming together is a beginning; keeping together is progress; working together is success.” Who would have thought that this quote by Henry Ford also applies to teaching!?  It sure stands true for collaborative learning where students are responsible for one another's learning as we...

09

January 2015
The Art of Teaching English
by Elena Riches
Just like writing and art, teaching English comes naturally to some whereas others have to be taught. Before I did the OxbridgeTEFL course and became a teacher I can safely say that I had no idea whether I would want to take up teaching as a profession, n...

07

January 2015
From Russia with love! Dina Tkach on English language teaching.
by Radmila Gurkova
My name is Dina Tkach, I’m 25 and I’m from ...

02

January 2015
Always look ahead, look at the future of English teaching education! Happy 2015!
by Radmila Gurkova
A new year has just begun, bringing us 365 possibilities for our brand new resolutions to come true! New wishes, new dreams! Looking back at what we’ve achieved in our “teenage” organization (12 years now from our foundations!), we cannot feel more mature, more certain about the route we’ve chosen. We started with a few but firm conviction...

26

December 2014
Hola Barcelona!
by Elena Riches
Having lived in Cyprus for 16 years and getting fed up with it (particularly since the launch of the euro!) I started toying with the idea of moving and began thinking long and hard about where I would move to. After much deliberation (and encouragement from people who have been there) I decided on ...