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Understanding
Aggression:
Coping with Aggressive Behavior in the
Classroom
Instructor
Name: Dr. Michael Sedler
Phone: 509-891-7219
Office
Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. PST
Monday - Friday
Email: michaels@virtualeduc.com
Address: Virtual Education Software
Technical
Support: support@virtualeduc.com
* THE EXAMINATIONS FOR THIS COURSE CAN ONLY BE TAKEN ONE TIME*
This
course is about violence in
The
course will consider the many forms of aggression, both criminal and otherwise;
its costs and motivation; its perpetrators and targets; its likely and unlikely
locations; its impact on our schools, the children; and, most especially, its
several causes and promising solutions.
Topics
of interest will include violence and the challenge of raising and working with
children; aggression in our classrooms; American youth gangs and their
influence; past and future sports violence; “hot spot” locations of frequent
violence; and the aggression-promoting role of alcohol, temperature, driving,
television and other features of modern life. The course also will answer
questions such as: Is aggression always
bad? How do aggressive thoughts lead to aggressive actions? Is aggression, at
least for some people, an addiction? Does the victim contribute to being
attacked? Is dating a dangerous proposition? How are the acts of aggression
dealt with in other countries, and are there any lessons for
The
goal of this course is to help educators and adults in general better
understand how aggression affects our lives and the lives of children.
Hopefully such greater understanding and more skilled efforts at prevention
will substantially reduce the aggression and violence that has become all too
common in
_____________
Course
Materials
Software
Title: Understanding Aggression: Coping with Aggressive Behavior in the
Classroom
Author: Dr. Arnold P. Goldstein
Instructor: Dr. Michael Sedler
Publisher: Davies-Black Publishing
©1996
Software conversion: Virtual
Education Software, inc. 2002
Please
keep the CD. There is a $25 replacement
fee for CD-roms if you need to replace yours due to theft, damage,
misplacement, etc. Call 1-800-313-6744,
with your credit card information, if you need a replacement.
|
"Modified and reproduced
by special permission of the Publisher, Davies-Black Publishing, an imprint
of CPP, Inc., |
Academic
Work
Academic work submitted by the
individual (such as papers, assignments, reports, tests) shall be the student’s
own work or appropriately attributed, in part or in whole, to its correct
source. Submission of commercially prepared (or group prepared) materials as if
they are one’s own work is unacceptable.
Aiding
Honesty in Others
The individual will encourage honesty in
others by refraining from providing materials or information to another person
with knowledge that these materials or information will be used improperly.
Violations of these academic
standards may result in the assignment of a failing grade and subsequent loss
of credit for the course.
This
course is designed to be an informational course with application to work or work-related
settings. The intervention strategies
are designed to be used with students having high aggression and violent
tendencies, ranging in age from approximately three to eighteen years of age.
1)
To review the history of
aggression and how society came to be such an aggressive place
2)
To identify the causes of
aggressive behavior, both internal and external
3)
To explain how aggression is
expressed in various social settings such as schoolyards, classrooms, sports,
homes, etc.
4)
To identify perpetrators and
victims of aggression and violence
5)
To identify locations of high
aggression and violence
6)
To provide solutions for reducing
aggression and violence in classroom and other school settings
7)
To provide information on how
educators can help students/children reduce feelings of aggression and violent
tendencies
The
course, Understanding Aggression, has
been divided into four chapters and five to ten exercises within each chapter.
The first chapter reviews the history of aggression in
The
second chapter deals with how we have learned to be aggressive. It discusses
how aggressive thoughts many times become aggressive actions. The course
reviews the “us versus them” side of aggression and violence. Chapter 2 also
deals with how alcohol, temperature and driving can increase aggression and
violence. The chapter reviews the role of television and how TV may be a tutor
for violent behavior. Is high aggression often found in people who tend to have
low empathy? This chapter will discuss this issue. The chapter will also cover
how words and teasing can be expressions and forms of aggression.
The
third chapter centers on aggression and violence as crimes. It explores arson,
assault and crimes of fear. The chapter also will discuss vigilante justice
and/or injustice. Along with criminal aggression the chapter takes a look at
guns and gangs in
Chapter
4 speaks to working with and raising children to resist violence. It gives
suggestions to educators and parents on how to deal with and counteract
aggressive or violent behavior. This chapter deals with dating, and how it can
be impacted by aggressive behavior and date violence. It speaks to how
television affects the aggressive behavior of our children. The chapter reviews
child tantrums, and what to do about them. Chapter 4 is summarized with several
exercises on win-win scenarios for remediation and effective problem solving
techniques.
The chapters and exercises are
sequential and, although it is not required, they should be completed in the
order in which they are presented in the program. After completing these four chapters you
should have a framework for understanding and working with aggressive behavior.
This also may help you understand why students with high aggression are a
challenge in a regular education setting.
After
you complete each chapter of the course, an examination will be used to
evaluate your knowledge and ability to apply what you’ve learned. An
explanation of the examinations will be given later in this syllabus.
As a student you will be expected to:
1)
Complete all information chapters
covering aggression, showing a competent understanding of the material
presented.
2)
Complete all examinations,
showing a competent understanding of the material presented.
3)
Complete a review of any chapter
on which your examination score was below 70%.
4)
Complete a course evaluation form
at the end of the course.
Chapter
1
·
Introduction
·
How Did We Get Here?
·
The Costs of Aggression
·
Is Aggression Always Bad?
·
Chapter
2
·
Learning to be Aggressive
·
Us Versus Them
·
Aggressive Thoughts and
Aggressive Actions
·
Low Empathy, High Aggression
·
Television as a Tutor: Aggression 101
·
Alcohol and Aggression: Courage in a Bottle
·
Does the Victim Help Cause
Violence?
·
Words that Hurt
·
Hot Days, Hot Tempers
·
Auto Aggression
·
Jump! Jump! The Suicide-Baiting
Crowd
Chapter
3
·
The Journey to Crime
·
Other Acts of Aggression
·
Vigilante Injustice
·
Fear of Crime
·
The Home and Family
·
Sports Violence: Past, Present and Future
·
Play Fighting and Real Fighting –
Is there a Connection?
·
The Ride to and Through
School: Safe or Scary?
·
Teaching Pro-social Behavior to
Antisocial Youth
·
A Short Course on Gangs
Chapter
4
·
Raising Children to Resist
Violence
·
Tantrums
·
Nonaggressive Children from
Aggressive Environments
·
Dating as a Dangerous Game
·
Let’s Both Calm Down, Then We’ll
Talk
·
Take my Wife, Please
·
Why is Aggression so Hard to
Change?
·
Downsizing Deviance
·
Complex Problems Demand Complex
Solutions
·
A Look to the Future
At the end of each course
chapter, you will be expected to complete an examination designed to assess
your knowledge. Your final grade for this course will be determined by
calculating an average score of all exams. This score will be printed on your
final certificate. As this is a self-paced computerized instruction program,
you may review course information as often as necessary. You will not be able
to exit any examinations until you have answered all questions. If you try to
exit the exam before you complete all questions, your information will be lost.
You are expected to complete the entire exam in one sitting.
_____________
Arnold P. Goldstein, Ph.D., had
over 30 years of experience in the study of aggression and violence in children
and adolescents. He was the Director of the Center for Research on Aggression
at
Instructor
Description
Understanding
Aggression was
written by Dr. Arnold P. Goldstein, the former head of the Aggression Institute
in
You may
contact the instructor by emailing michaels@virtualeduc.com or by calling (509)
891-7219 Monday through Thursday. When calling during office hours messages
will be answered within 24 hours. Phone conferences will be limited to ten
minutes per student, per day, given that this is a self-paced instructional
program. Please do not contact the instructor about technical problems, course
glitches or other issues that involve the operation of the course.
If you have questions or problems related to the
operation of this course CD, please try everything twice. If the problem
persists please check our support pages for FAQs and known issues at
www.virtualeduc.com and also the Help section on your course disk.
If you need personal assistance then email support@virtualeduc.com
or call (509) 891-7219. When contacting
technical support, please know your course version number, it is printed on the
CD label, your operating system and be seated in front of the computer at the
time of your call.
Minimum Requirements
Macintosh Operating Systems
Mac
OS 9.x or OS 10.x, 256MB of RAM and 5MB of free hard disk space, 15" or
larger color monitor with a minimum resolution of 800x600, CD
driver 4x minimum speed and a printer connected to your computer.
Windows Operating Systems
Windows 2000, XP Home, Professional or newer, 256MB of RAM and 5MB of
free hard disk space; 15" or larger color monitor with a minimum
resolution of 800x600, CD driver 4x minimum speed and a printer connected
to your computer.
Please
contact VESi if you have any questions about the compatibility of these
systems.
Refer
to the addendum included with your software package regarding Grading Criteria,
Course Completion Information, Items to be Submitted, and where to send your
completed information.
Bibliography (Suggested
Carr,
Tom. (2005). 141 creative strategies for
reaching adolescents. YouthLight,
Inc. Intervention approaches for teens
(grades 5-12). www.youthlight.com 1-800-365-9774.
Carr,
Tom. (2003). When all else fails.
YouthLight, Inc. Helping professionals
with disruptive students (grades K-12). www.youthlight.com 1-800-365-9774.
Carter, Les.
(2004). The anger trap.
Jossey-Bass. A book to help
people understand the cycle of anger (Adult).
www.josseybass.com 1-800-225-5945.
Fitzell, Susan
Gringas. (2007). Transforming anger to
personal power. Research Press.
Teaching anger management (grades 6-12).
www.researchpress.com 1-800-519-2707.
Glasser,
William. (1999). Choice theory. HarperCollins Publishers. Evaluating one’s life and outlook (Adults) www.harpercollins.com 1-800-242-7737.
Goldstein,
Arnold. (1998). Aggression replacement
training. Research Press. Social
skills manual for working with aggressive youth (grades 7-12). www.researchpress.com 1-800-519-2707.
Greene, Ross. (2005). The
explosive child. Boys Town Press. Ideas for understanding and working with
inflexible children and explosive situations (K-8). www.boystownpress.org 1-800-282-6657.
Karns, Michelle.
(1994). How to create positive
relationships with students. Research Press. Activities to enhance
relationships in school (grades 3-9). www.researchpress.com 1-800-519-2707.
Maxym, Carol. (2001). Teens in turmoil. Boys Town Press. Helps parents and teachers turn fear and
desperation into hope for the out of control child (K-12). www.boystownpress.org 1-800-282-6657.
McFadden, Anna.
(2004). Leave no angry child behind. Courage to Change. 160 proactive tips and strategies for
reducing anger in students (grades K-12).
www.couragetochange.com 1-800-440-4003.
McGinnis, Ellen,
& Goldstein, Arnold. (1997). Skillstreaming
series. Research Press. Series of
books to help with individual skills (grades K-12). www.researchpress.com. 1-800-519-2707.
Nelson, Jane,
Lott, J., & Glenn, H. (2006). Positive
Discipline Series. Empowering People
Inc. Create cooperation and self-discipline in students (grades K-12,
series). www.empoweringpeople.com 1-800-456-7770.
Verdick,
Elizabeth. (2002). How to take the grrr
out of anger. Free Spirit
Publishing. Helping children to work
through anger (grades 2-6). www.freespirit.com 1-800-724-6527.
Vernon, Ann.
(2006). Thinking, feeling, behaving. Research Press. Helping children address
thoughts and consequences (grades K-12, series). www.researchpress.com 1-800-519-2707.
WEBSITES:
http://pathwayscourses.samhsa.gov/bully/pdfs_bully/bully_fs_admin.pdf
http://actagainstviolence.apa.org/specialtopics/earlyrisers.html
http://www.keepschoolssafe.org/school/violence-aggression-1.htm
http://www.bullyonline.org/schoolbully/school.htm
Updated
1/8/08