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Glassers Reality Therapy Model

Our Five Basic Needs


In Reality Therapy (post1985), needs are classified under five headings: Love and Belonging (this includes groups as well as families or loved ones). Power (which includes achievement and feeling worthwhile, as well as winning).
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Our Five Basic Needs


Freedom (includes independence, autonomy, your own space). Fun (includes pleasure and enjoyment). Survival (includes nourishment, shelter, sex).
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Theory - Reality Therapy


In Reality pre-1985: Behavior is a matter of choice. Good behavior results from good choices and bad behavior results from bad choices Psychologists and educators often look into students backgrounds for underlying causes of misbehavior Glasser does not deny that such conditions exist or that they influence behavior Yet, he claims that humans have rational minds and can make rational choices. They can understand what acceptable school behavior is and can choose to behave in acceptable ways.
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Theory - Reality Therapy


In order to make good choices students must come to see the results of those choices as desirable Teachers must help students see that they are choosing to act in the ways they do Teachers must force students to acknowledge their behavior and make value judgments about it Teachers must refuse to accept excuses for bad behavior, always directing attention instead to what would be more acceptable The essence of discipline is in helping students make good choices.
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Principles of Reality Therapy


Students are rational beings. They can control their behavior. They choose to act the way they do. Good choices produce good behavior. Bad choices produce bad behavior. Teachers must always try to help students make good choices. Teachers who truly care about their students accept no excuses for bad behavior.
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Principles of Reality Therapy


Reasonable consequences should always follow student behavior, good or bad Class rules are essential, and they must be enforced. Classroom meetings are effective vehicles for attending to matters of class rules, behavior, and discipline.
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Seven Steps to Effective Discipline


Step 1: Be warm and personal and willing to become emotionally involved
I am glad youre here, and I care about you as a person and a learner.

Step 2: Deal with the present behavior


What did you do?
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Seven Steps to Effective Discipline


Step 3: Make a value judgment
Is it helping you? Is it helping others? Is it against a rule?

Step 4: Work out a plan


What can you do differently? What do you need me to do to help? Do you need any assistance from others?
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Seven Steps to Effective Discipline


Step 5: Make a commitment
Are you going to do this?

Step 6: Follow up
Lets check later and see how the plan worked.

Step 7: No put downs but do not accept excuses


Its O.K. Lets keep trying. I trust that you can develop a plan that will work. I know things happen, but you made a plan. Do we need a new plan?
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Educational Applications of Reality Therapy


What Teachers Should Do Stress Student Responsibility Establish Rules that Lead to Success Accept No Excuses Call for Value Judgments Suggest Alternatives Invoke Reasonable Consequences Be Persistent Carry Out Continual Review
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Strengths or Reality Therapy


The problem solving can be accomplished in a short time. Because the model employs a step-by-step procedure, it is easy to learn

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Strengths or Reality Therapy


By actively involving the student in the problem-solving process, the model responds to a variety of students needs. Because the model focuses on specific, observable behavior, data can be collected and the student is accountable for the results

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