What Did Disruptive Students Say They Wanted From Their Classes? A Survey of Student Voices

This paper draws on data from over 60 students in order to find out how disruptive students viewed disrupted classes. The purpose of this research was to prepare training for tutors who were finding disruptive classes difficult to teach. Classes were identified as ‘disruptive’ by their tutors and th...

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Main Author: Lebor, Merv
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Huddersfield Press 2015-01-01
Series:Teaching in Lifelong Learning: A Journal to Inform and Improve Practice
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.5920/till.2015.6216
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spelling doaj-e7aef13f741944d68ce214c08f28bb2a2020-11-25T01:11:46ZengUniversity of Huddersfield PressTeaching in Lifelong Learning: A Journal to Inform and Improve Practice2049-41812040-09932015-01-0162162410.5920/till.2015.6216What Did Disruptive Students Say They Wanted From Their Classes? A Survey of Student VoicesLebor, MervThis paper draws on data from over 60 students in order to find out how disruptive students viewed disrupted classes. The purpose of this research was to prepare training for tutors who were finding disruptive classes difficult to teach. Classes were identified as ‘disruptive’ by their tutors and then the researcher was asked by managers to give some training to the relevant tutors. The scope of this small-scale research was to report on the findings of what students said about disruptive classes. The rationale behind the research was that if we could find out what disruptive students said they wanted, teachers might be in a better position to teach them. The problem then was how to frame questions so that they would be understandable by the students and yet produce meaningful, authentic data. The findings showed that several students from these classes said that they had been involved in physical and verbal violence in class and that learning was compromised. From this research it emerged that the sample of students from classes identified as disruptive by their teachers said that their preferred sessions would be supportive, respectful, one-to-one; they would learn more, be involved in discussions and enjoyed practical work. In other words all the features that would be associated with normative good practice in teaching and learning. The consequent challenge implicit in this research is how to help teachers communicate these strategies, attitudes and values in a disruptive and challenging environment.http://dx.doi.org/10.5920/till.2015.6216
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lebor, Merv
spellingShingle Lebor, Merv
What Did Disruptive Students Say They Wanted From Their Classes? A Survey of Student Voices
Teaching in Lifelong Learning: A Journal to Inform and Improve Practice
author_facet Lebor, Merv
author_sort Lebor, Merv
title What Did Disruptive Students Say They Wanted From Their Classes? A Survey of Student Voices
title_short What Did Disruptive Students Say They Wanted From Their Classes? A Survey of Student Voices
title_full What Did Disruptive Students Say They Wanted From Their Classes? A Survey of Student Voices
title_fullStr What Did Disruptive Students Say They Wanted From Their Classes? A Survey of Student Voices
title_full_unstemmed What Did Disruptive Students Say They Wanted From Their Classes? A Survey of Student Voices
title_sort what did disruptive students say they wanted from their classes? a survey of student voices
publisher University of Huddersfield Press
series Teaching in Lifelong Learning: A Journal to Inform and Improve Practice
issn 2049-4181
2040-0993
publishDate 2015-01-01
description This paper draws on data from over 60 students in order to find out how disruptive students viewed disrupted classes. The purpose of this research was to prepare training for tutors who were finding disruptive classes difficult to teach. Classes were identified as ‘disruptive’ by their tutors and then the researcher was asked by managers to give some training to the relevant tutors. The scope of this small-scale research was to report on the findings of what students said about disruptive classes. The rationale behind the research was that if we could find out what disruptive students said they wanted, teachers might be in a better position to teach them. The problem then was how to frame questions so that they would be understandable by the students and yet produce meaningful, authentic data. The findings showed that several students from these classes said that they had been involved in physical and verbal violence in class and that learning was compromised. From this research it emerged that the sample of students from classes identified as disruptive by their teachers said that their preferred sessions would be supportive, respectful, one-to-one; they would learn more, be involved in discussions and enjoyed practical work. In other words all the features that would be associated with normative good practice in teaching and learning. The consequent challenge implicit in this research is how to help teachers communicate these strategies, attitudes and values in a disruptive and challenging environment.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.5920/till.2015.6216
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