Warning: This post ended up a little angrier in tone than I intended. So let me start with this. I know that those who believe in "Relationships First" are well intended and loving. This post is meant to address the outcome of the belief, not the heart that causes you to believe it. Second, I had great relationships with thousands of students. I'm not saying that they don't matter. I'm making the case for why they are not first and cannot be built in isolation from doing your job of content teaching. With that out of the way, my rant:
Stay part of EduTwitter for longer than a few minutes, particularly at the start of a new semester, and you will eventually find the "relationships first" people.
- Kids bouncing off the walls? The answer certainly isn't to implement your school's discipline policy. Clearly, you didn't spend proper time building relationships.
- Student playing on their phone rather than paying attention? It isn't because billions of dollars have been spent making their phones addictive. It's because you would be more engaging for students
- A student isn't making a good grade. That's obviously not from lack of study time or ineffective study techniques (or even improper teaching techniques). They aren't learning because you didn't spend the first two weeks of the semester building relationships and "kids only learn from people they like."
There's never any practical advice about how to build a relationship or evidence offered for the notion that they can't learn from you if they don't like you (despite centuries of experience to the contrary). They sell the idea that relationships are the golden key that unlocks all doors, and you should spend all of your class time doing that before you do anything else. I actually read a tweet suggesting
This leads to weeks of time spent on games. Icebreakers, getting to know you activities, team building exercises, and lots of chatting - all in the assumption that the time spent doing this is an investment that will pay off later because they will learn better and behave better once they "know how much you care." When you visit their classrooms later in the year, it turns out that it just isn't true. There is a lot of relationshiping going on, but there is little learning and lots of poor behavior. There was a teacher across the hall from me years ago that playing hackysack with his students for 20 minutes 3-4 days a week well into the year. It was so loud that I had a hard time teaching. I asked him one day when he taught his content, and he said, "I usually get in 15 minutes, but I want to make sure they know I love them."
I'll talk next week about what I think the right way is, but I wanted to set up the problem with this approach first. The problem is that it does not actually communicate that you love them; it communicates that you don't value their time or learning. I know because:
- They come to my room and talk smack about you behind your back, using phrases like "thinks he's cool" and "tries too hard to be like us."
- They tell me about their lack of appreciation for you as a teacher and the non-academic atmosphere you have created because they call your class "a waste of time."
- If I need a student to make up a test, yours is the class they know it's okay to leave. They say, "Yeah, we never learn anything in there. We can do whatever we want."
Another problem: Substitute teachers don't have relationships with the students in front of them, and you have sent the message to your students that they don't have to behave properly with anyone they haven't bonded with.
The biggest problem. You have students who genuinely want to learn, and you spend a lot of time not teaching them. There are nerds like me, but there are also kids from low income backgrounds who know that education is their only way up. The students who can afford tutors usually end up okay because they pay someone to do the teaching you aren't doing while you build relationships, but the ones who can't afford that are left to fend for themselves. And the relationship you have with them does nothing but widen the opportunity gap.
I know your intent is loving when you say "Relationships First," but in reality, it just isn't helpful. For kids, it comes off a little creepy when they don't know you at all, and you are digging into their personal lives on day 1 of the school year. Next week, I'm going to suggest an alternative.
Credibility First
Establishing your credibility will give kids a reason to want a relationship with you, help them know you value their time and take your job seriously, and ultimately result in better behavior and more learning. I'll give you practical examples of how to build credibility from day 1. See you next week.