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Balance of Power |
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| Examples | |
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Teacher
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Student
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| Yelling or shouting Punishing Bawling student out |
Not listening Talking during instruction Making faces or mimicking |
Many defense mechanisms protect the need to feel in control.
Click here to do a self survey on self control.
When upset, anxious or angry, we tend to become defensive. The following chart provides examples of common defenses.
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Defenses
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accusing |
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rationalizing
judging explaining being smug withdrawing laughing pouting sarcasm |
projecting
moralizing quibbling minimizing silence grinning threatening flattering |
blaming
analyzing interrogating evading shouting staring joking manipulating |
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This list is amusing since these behaviors are present in nearly every interaction. You may want to print out this list and monitor the next gathering of adults to see how frequently these defenses occur. Your findings may suggest that feeling in control is an important and pervasive feeling.
It can be enlightening to ask someone to monitor an hour of interactions in the classroom, observing the number of times defenses are used, the defenses of specific students and which students elicit defensive maneuvers in the teacher.
Gain Control of Control Issues
Emotions trigger defenses. When we feel anxious, we engage in controlling behaviors. Anger also triggers these feelings and thus, the behaviors or reactions. This is called the "fight-flight" response.
Click on the rage button to find out your hostility quotient.
This next illustration provides a guide to gaining control of our fight and flight reactions.
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Glasser, W. (1984) Control theory: a new explanation on how we control our lives. New York: Harper & Row.