Among students who are (compared to their peers) inactive in the
classroom, many are well adjusted academically and socially but
relatively quiet and content to work independently. Some are
problematically shy or withdrawn in varying degrees, and a few may
be headed toward schizophrenia. This digest focuses on the middle
range of such students, who are commonly described as
SHY (inhibited, lacking in confidence, socially anxious) or
WITHDRAWN (unresponsive, uncommunicative, or daydreaming). A degree
of shyness is normal whenever social expectations are new or
ambiguous. Shyness begins to emerge as a problem if it becomes not
merely situational but dispositional, so that the child is LABELED
as shy. Especially if the child internalizes this label, a
generalized pattern of shyness may become established and begin to
include such additional symptoms as diffidence about entering social
situations, discomfort and inhibition in the presence of others,
exaggerated self-concern, and increasingly negative social
self-concepts (Honig, 1987; Thompson & Rudolph, 1992).
VARIETIES
AND CAUSES OF SHYNESS AND WITHDRAWAL IN THE CLASSROOM
Symptoms
of shyness or withdrawal may appear as part of the student's overall
personality or as a situation-specific response to a particular
stress factor. Children are especially susceptible to
self-consciousness in social situations that make them feel
conspicuous and psychologically unprotected. Other types of social
unresponsiveness may result from specific experiences or
environmental causes. Some children have not developed effective
conversational skills because their parents seldom converse with
them or respond positively to their verbal initiations, and they
have not had much opportunity to interact with peers. This
circumstance may explain some of the shyness seen in kindergarten
and first grade. Children starting school for the first time may
exhibit SCHOOL PHOBIA (usually fear of the unknown or unwillingness
to be separated from the parent, rather than a specific negative
reaction to the teacher or the school). Social anxiety can also
develop as an ongoing reaction to repeated failure, mistreatment, or
rejection from adults or peers. Some students may show good peer
group adjustment and ability to interact socially with the teacher,
but they may display communication apprehension when asked to answer
academic questions, perform in public, or engage in an activity that
they know will be evaluated. Finally, many students experience at
least temporary social adjustment problems when they change schools
or classes
SUGGESTED STRATEGIES FOR COPING WITH SHY OR
WITHDRAWN STUDENTS
Strategies for coping with shy or withdrawn
students include peer involvement, teacher interventions, and other
kinds of psychological interventions.
PEER INVOLVEMENT. Several
authors have suggested treating shyness and withdrawal through peer
involvement (see Rosenberg et al., 1992, for a review). Such efforts
might include involving shy students in cross-age tutoring programs,
creating opportunities for them to play in pairs with younger
children, enlisting peers as confederates to draw out withdrawn
children, and involving them in small group, cooperative classroom
activities.
TEACHER INTERVENTIONS. Brophy (1995) surveyed effective
teachers to find out how they responded to shy students. The most
commonly mentioned responses included (1) changing the social
environment (e.g., seating them among friendly classmates or
assigning them to a partner or small group), (2) encouraging or
shaping increased responsiveness, (3) minimizing stress or
embarrassment, (4) engaging shy students in special activities,
and (5) involving them in frequent private talks. Conspicuously
absent from these teachers' responses was emphasis on threat or
punishment.
OTHER INTERVENTIONS. Blanco and Bogacki's (1988)
recommendations from school psychologists for coping with general
student shyness or withdrawal echo many of these same themes. They
suggested encouraging children to join volunteer groups or
recreational organizations outside of school; involving them
frequently in small-group, cooperative interaction with peers; using
them as peer tutors; determining their peer preferences and seating
them near preferred peers; leading but not forcing them to
communicate; avoiding putting them in situations that would be
embarrassing or frightening; and assigning them to messenger roles
or other tasks that require communication. For students whose
withdrawal symptoms include excessive daydreaming, researchers
suggest calling on them frequently, standing near them to ensure
attention, making sure that they get started successfully on their
assignment at the beginning of work time rather than scolding them
for daydreaming, stressing the need for attention and participation,
and assigning partners to work with them and keep them involved. The
following specific teacher strategies for coping with shy or
withdrawn students are suggested by the work of several researchers
over the last two decades (Honig, 1987; McIntyre, 1989; Thompson &
Rudolph, 1992; Brophy, 1995):
Try These Ideas
use interest inventories to
determine interests of shy students, then follow up by using these
interests as bases for conversations or learning
activities
display their artwork or assignments for others
to see in the classroom
assign them as a partner to, or promote
their friendship with, a classmate who is popular and engages in
frequent contact with peers
check with these students frequently
if they are prone to daydreaming
help shy children to set social
development goals and assist them by providing training in
assertiveness, initiating interactions with peers, or other social
skills
provide them with information needed to develop
social insight (e.g., explaining that new students often
have trouble making friends at first, or that teasing does
not necessarily mean that peers do not like you), suggesting ways
for them to initiate productive peer contacts or to respond more
effectively to peer initiations
provide them with a designated
role that will give them something to do and cause them to interact
with others in social situations in which they might otherwise
become shy and retreat to the fringes of the group
teach them
social "door openers" for greeting others and speaking to them in
person or on the telephone, especially assertive requests ("Can I
play, too?")
make time to talk with them each day, even if just
for a few minutes, and listen carefully and respond specifically
to what they tell you
use bibliotherapy materials such
as "The Shy Little Girl," a story by P. Krasilovsky about a sad and
shy girl who becomes more outgoing.
Shy children may need direct
instruction in social skills, such as those included in various
social skills training programs intended for elementary school
students. For more information on such programs, including a
description of a program that included collaboration between
teachers and parents, see Sheridan, Kratochwill, and
Elliott (1990).
CONCLUSION Teachers may be able to help shy and
withdrawn students considerably by using strategies that are
relatively easy to implement and well matched to the teacher's basic
role as a helpful instructor to students. These strategies include
providing self-concept support, encouragement, and opportunities to
develop confidence and comfort in the classroom to shy and inhibited
students, as well as closer monitoring, improved nonverbal
communication, environmental engineering, and instructive
suggestions or demands for improved concentration designed to
maintain the attention of students prone to withdrawal or
daydreaming. Most teachers seem to develop an intuitive
understanding of some of the needs of shy or withdrawn students, but
many could meet these needs more effectively by systematically
applying the principles and strategies highlighted
here.
-----
This digest was adapted from: Brophy, Jere. (1996).
Teaching Problem Students. New York, Guilford. Adapted with
permission of the author.
REFERENCES
Blanco, R., and D.
Bogacki. (1988). PRESCRIPTIONS FOR CHILDREN WITH LEARNING AND
ADJUSTMENT PROBLEMS: A CONSULTANT'S DESK REFERENCE (3rd ed.).
Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas. Brophy, J. (1995). ELEMENTARY
TEACHERS' PERCEPTIONS OF AND REPORTED STRATEGIES FOR COPING WITH
TWELVE TYPES OF PROBLEM STUDENTS. East Lansing, MI: Institute
for Research on Teaching, Michigan State University. ED 389
390. Honig, A. (1987). The Shy Child. YOUNG CHILDREN 42(4): 54-64.
EJ 358 395. Kemple, Kristen M. (1995). Shyness and Self-Esteem in
Early Childhood. JOURNAL OF HUMANISTIC EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT
33(4): 173-82. EJ 509 552. McIntyre, T. (1989). A RESOURCE BOOK FOR
REMEDIATING COMMON BEHAVIOR AND LEARNING PROBLEMS. Boston: Allyn &
Bacon. Rosenberg, M., R. Wilson, L. Maheady, and P.
Sindelar.(1992). EDUCATING STUDENTS WITH BEHAVIOR DISORDERS. Boston:
Allyn & Bacon. Sheridan, S., T. Kratochwill, and S.
Elliott. (1990). Behavioral Consultation with Parents and Teachers:
Delivering Treatment for Socially Withdrawn Children at Home and
School. SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW 19(1): 33-52. Thompson, C., and L.
Rudolph. (1992). COUNSELING CHILDREN (3rd ed.). Pacific Grove, CA:
Brooks/Cole.
This publication was prepared
with funding from the Office of Educational Research and
Improvement, U.S. Department of Education, under OERI contract no.
RR93002007. The opinions expressed in this report do not necessarily
reflect the positions or policies of OERI or the Department of
Education. ERIC digests are in the public domain and may be freely
reproduced and disseminated.
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