DISCIPLINE AND
FOSTERING
COOPERATION
Subject: Guidance and Counseling
What is discipline?
Meaning of cooperation
CONTENTS How to discipline students?
Foster students
cooperation
What is it?
It is the practice
of training
people
to obey rules or
a code of
behavior, using
punishment to
correct
disobedience.
How to discipline your students.
1. Know school guidelines for discipline
procedures.
2. Be fair, positive and consistent.
3. Provide a list of standards and
consequences to parents and students.
4. Keep your classroom orderly.
5. Get to know your students.
Child Protection Policy or DepEd
order no.20 series of 2012
Pursuant to the 1987 Constitution, the State
shall defend the right of children to
assistance, including proper care and
nutrition, and special protection from all forms
of neglect, abuse, cruelty, exploitation and
other conditions prejudicial to their
development.
Proper Way to Discipline your
students.
• 1. Talk to him/her and give him a first • 3. Respect the outcome
warning.
• Whatever is decided on the
• If the student has made a mistake, he third offense must be
should be talked to thoroughly about respected by both parties.
what he did wrong, and give him a first Whether it is suspension or
warning.
school service.
• 2. Summon his parents
• When the student repeats what he/she
did, call his/her parents. and talk to
them about what he/she did and agree
on the third step if he/she does it again.
What does fostering cooperation
mean?
According to Macmillan Dictionary it is
to encourage something to develop.
relationship or links: collaboration, cooperation,
dialogue, friendship, interaction, links, partnership,
relations, relationship.
How to foster students cooperation?
Activities like playing games together in
teams, cleaning up together to beat a timer,
or simply building puzzles together enables
children to learn how to work together. Take
time to teach them how to problem solve.
Part of cooperation is learning how to
overcome challenges together.
Strategies in Fostering Cooperation
1. Actively listen to students
A teacher who actively listens to students is
listening for the meaning behind what
students are saying, then checks in with
them to make sure they’ve understood
properly.
2. Reflect on your own experience with
care.
Oftentimes, we unconsciously care for
others the way we have been cared for—for
better or worse. When one researcher
interviewed four different teachers at the
same school who all shared one particular
student, she found that each teacher cared
for the student in the way she had been
cared for as a child.
3. Ask students for feedback
Choose any topic—it doesn’t have to be
academic—and have students write down,
in a couple of sentences, what confuses or
concerns them most about the topic. By
considering their feedback, you are showing
students that you value their opinions and
experiences.
4. Get to know your students and the
lives they live
This is especially important if your students
are from a different cultural or socio-
economic background than you. Numerous
studies have shown that cultural
misunderstanding between teachers and
students can have a hugely negative impact
on students’ educational experience.
Using
the most
Appropriate Strategy
for specific situation
1. Teach your students how to listen to
one another
2. Model Ideal Behaviour
Make a habit of demonstrating behavior you
want to see, as many studies show that
modelling effectively teaches students how
to act in different situations.
* Use polite language
* Maintain eye contact
* Keep phones in your pockets
* Raise concerns about one another’s
statements in a respectful manner
3. Praise students for jobs well done
As doing so improves academic and
behavioral performance, according to a recent
research review and study.
When it is sincere and references specific
examples of effort or accomplishment, praise can:
* Inspire the class
* Improve a student’s self-esteem
*Reinforce rules and values you want to see
*Praising his or her use of specific tactics should
go a long way in ensuring he or she continues to
use these tactics.
4. The Secret Weapon:
Getting to Know Your Students
When you come across a student who seems to
have a chip on his or her shoulder, who
constantly baits you, or who goes out of the way
to make you miserable, that is the student you
need to consistently show you care. Ask after that
student each day. "How is your day today?"
Student: "What do you care?" Teacher: "How was
your day today?" Student: "Okay, I guess." No
matter what the response, continue to ask.
SOURCES:
• What's the Best Way to Discipline My Child? -
HealthyChildren.org
• Fostering Communication & Promoting Cooperation -
Team ...
• wikiHow
• https://www.wikihow.com › Discipli...
• 3 Ways to Discipline Children in the Classroom
• Macmillan Dictionary
• https://www.macmillandictionary.com › ...
• COOPERATION (noun) definition and synonyms
• Sources
https://guides.himmelfarb.gwu.edu/teamdynamic
s
https://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/
caring_teacher_student_relationship
https://gsehd.gwu.edu/articles/10-strategies-
build-student-collaboration-classroom
https://www.positivediscipline.com/sites/default/
files/what-is-positive-discipline.pdf
Thank you for
listening
Prepared by :
Carmina P. Arongayan
Leslie Joy M. Asuncion
Ramelyn Gueta