Pratica di Shadowing: How I Respond to Escalating Behaviors - Impara a parlare inglese con YouTube

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When a child escalates, stop talking. There's a novel idea.
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When a child escalates, stop talking. There's a novel idea.
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This is management. When they start escalating, shut it down.
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The more you talk, the more they're coming back at you.
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The more that you respond to their, "Yeah, well." I love this one.
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Child who you tell him to sit down. This is a perfect example. I've seen this happen.
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"Sit in this chair." Kid goes like this.
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And then you explode, right?
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Cuz you wanted them to sit over there.
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You ever get that chippy kid who says, "Well, you said sit in this chair. You didn't say where." And you just want to strangle him. At that point, what would you do?
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He's playing me. He's playing. Oh, he's playing me like, yeah, he's playing me like the entire band.
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At that point, I'm not gonna say anything.
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It's gonna sound really weird but I'm not gonna say anything. Because he's sitting there and he's doing this, going.
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I'm gonna do my best to pick myself up by the bootstraps, say nothing, and I'm going to walk over here, and I'm gonna help you, and I'm gonna help you, and I'm gonna help you.
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Oh, I'm gonna get to him, hands down.
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But it's all about timing.
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If I say something at that moment like, "I meant over there. Move the chair over there." "Oh! Move the chair over there. Okay. Hey everybody!" And then they take the chair and do this.
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Boom! And now you're on fire.
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Sometimes we got to remember that we light ourselves up when we don't necessarily have to.
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So at this point I'm gonna let them keep that upper hand until I have the opportunity to reel them in.
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So with the bell rings, if it's an older child, or it's a normal transition, we're going to art, whatever, that's when I'm reeling you in.
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It's all about timing.
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So they're on their way out the door, I'm like, "Whoa, hold on. You and I need to chat." And I always find that when I pull that kid aside one-on-one and chat with them, I actually get a lot better response then if I started the argument in the middle of the class.
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Sometimes I'll say to him on the way out the door, I'll say, "Hey, you know what, Michael?
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That was not okay what you did. We really do need to talk about this. And we'll talk about that tomorrow at this time." Which is sometimes 2:15, which is sometimes during their free time, which is sometimes whatever.
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I'll take away their time. I find that whenever I want to address a child, I want to address them on their time because that's a consequence.
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If the behavior escalates, then I walk over and I have a script in my mind. Now if I manage this kid by not saying anything, chances are they're gonna be like, they don't like that.
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They don't like that at all. Cuz their sole purpose is to disrupt that class.
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So they escalated on me. At that point I will turn around and I'll say two words, "Stop immediately." If they stop, I'm good.
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If they don't, that's when I have to utilize resources.
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But kids need to know at every moment, when I'm gonna utilize a resource, they know the resource is going to happen, they know that they're going to go wherever, the person is going to show up.
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Whatever it might be, it has to happen every single time.
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I had a little one who trashed the classroom for a while.
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And teacher was really good about if the kid took all their books and threw them on the floor.
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Teacher was really good about saying, you know, managing it.
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And just kind of going and pulling all the other kids together.
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But then the kid would escalate it and start pulling books off the shelf, pulling the bulletin board apart.
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And at that point it was a stop immediately.
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And if the child continued, a call was made, a very quick call was made that said, you know, "We got a twenty two and a five whatever." And someone came, escorted the child out, and they sat in a desk with no entertainment.
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With no coloring books, no materials, no nothing.
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And they spent a good amount of the rest of that time on that day sitting there.
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Because they had to realize that was not okay.
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And then, when we put the classroom together, picked everything up, we left a section of that for that child to clean up.
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When the child came back to the class the next day, that was their job.
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"Before you go out to recess, this is the stuff that has to be cleaned up." Or later that day depending upon the schedule and if it's elementary, middle, high school, whatever.
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But we always, always, always want to hold the child accountable in some way, not dismiss it. Like don't clean up the room for them.
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And if we have to clean up the room because we have to go on to another class, make sure the consequence is is that they have to do a task somewhere in that building.
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Your job is to give back to the community. Bring it back to your values.
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If a child violates community, they have to give back to community.
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If they disrupt my classroom to the point where they have to be removed, they go to a social isolation, which is your ISI, but the consequence is still going to come from me.
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That's important to me.
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If the consequence continues to come from the administration or somebody else, it makes no connection to me.
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However, if a kid hits the high note behaviors, the Tier 3 behaviors, those are no-brainers.
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You get into a fight, you bite, you spit, you trash a room, administration's going to get involved.
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However, the consequence is going to come right back to our having a connection.
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That's important to make that connection.
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Thanks for watching and I hope you found this video helpful!
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If you did, make sure to like and subscribe so you never miss another video.
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I speak and consult on school behavior and I love to help districts solve some of these problems.
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See you next time.

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Informazioni su questa lezione

In questa lezione, gli studenti di inglese possono praticare le loro capacità di conversazione imparando come gestire comportamenti in escalation, come quelli che si presentano nei contesti scolastici. Le situazioni descritte nel video offrono opportunità per esercitarsi nel linguaggio e nelle frasi utili, così come nella comprensione del contesto comunicativo. Gli apprendenti possono sviluppare la loro fiducia nel parlare in inglese, utilizzando tecniche di shadowspeak per migliorare la loro pronuncia e intonazione.

Vocabolario e frasi chiave

  • Escalation – Situazione in cui un comportamento diventa più intenso o problematico.
  • Stop immediately – Frase importante per fermare un comportamento indesiderato.
  • Timing – La scelta del momento giusto per intervenire.
  • Accountability – Responsabilità del bambino per il proprio comportamento.
  • Community values – I principi che guidano le interazioni all'interno di un gruppo.
  • One-on-one chat – Conversazione individuale per affrontare problemi specifici.
  • Social isolation – Conseguenza per comportamenti inadeguati.
  • Resource utilization – Uso delle risorse disponibili per gestire il comportamento.

Consigli per la pratica

Quando pratichi il shadowing in inglese, cerca di audio-riprodurre le frasi del video con attenzione alla velocità e al tono del parlante. Inizia con una riproduzione lenta e ripeti le frasi, cercando di imitare la pronuncia e il ritmo. Una volta che ti senti sicuro, aumenta la velocità per abituarti a conversazioni più naturali. Usa shadow speak per ripetere le frasi subito dopo averle ascoltate; questo ti aiuterà a migliorare la fluidità e la comprensione. Concentrati sulle espressioni emotive e sull'intonazione del parlante, in modo da rendere la tua pratica più realistica.

Infine, prova a registrare te stesso mentre pratichi e riascolta la registrazione. Questo ti permetterà di notare le aree in cui puoi migliorare e, allo stesso tempo, di applicare il tuo nuovo vocabolario in situazioni simulate. Imparare l'inglese con YouTube non è solo utile per acquisire nuovi termini, ma anche per affinare le tue capacità di conversazione in un ambiente pratico e coinvolgente.

Cos'è la tecnica dello Shadowing?

Shadowing è una tecnica di apprendimento delle lingue supportata da studi scientifici, originariamente sviluppata per la formazione dei traduttori professionisti e resa popolare dal poliglotta Dr. Alexander Arguelles. Il metodo è semplice ma potente: ascolti un audio in inglese di madrelingua e lo ripeti immediatamente ad alta voce — come un'ombra che segue il parlante con un ritardo di solo 1–2 secondi. A differenza dell'ascolto passivo o degli esercizi di grammatica, lo shadowing costringe il tuo cervello e i muscoli della bocca a elaborare e riprodurre simultaneamente i modelli di discorso reale. La ricerca dimostra che migliora significativamente la precisione della pronuncia, l'intonazione, il ritmo, il discorso connesso, la comprensione dell'ascolto e la fluidità del parlato — rendendolo uno dei metodi più efficaci per la preparazione alla prova di speaking dell'IELTS e per la comunicazione reale in inglese.

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