Make Me Laugh
Using Humor in the Classroom
Tired of spending time after school in
detention with students, a teacher decided to give "accordions" to
those who acted out in class. An accumulation of three "accordions"
would require the offending student to stay after school for a 10-minute
session of the teacher practicing "Lady of Spain" on—what else?—her
accordion.
"No one ever comes back after the first
accordion session," says humor therapist Elaine Lundberg, who offers this
anecdote in her workshops with educators.
One teacher was so inspired by the strategy
that for classroom infractions he started doling out "Franks"—in
which the student had to listen in silence to the teacher croon along with a
recording of Old Blue Eyes himself.
These stories illustrate how creative teachers
have used humor to deal with one of the more difficult chores they
face—maintaining discipline. In fact, humor in the classroom can be an
effective social tool that builds bridges with students and relieves stress,
say educators and experts alike.
Building Bridges
A 1991 study of how high school teachers use
humor showed that they most frequently employ it as a way of putting students
at ease, as an attention getter, and as a way to show students that the teacher
is human.
"Between student and teacher there's a
status differential in the classroom. Humor can help both the student and
teacher cross the bridge together," says James Neuliep, a professor of
communication at St. Norbert College in De Pere, Wisc., who conducted the study
of high school teachers.
Humor, used appropriately, can help reduce the
psychological distance between teachers and students, while inappropriate humor
increases distance, says Neuliep.
In other words, humor directed at a student in
the form of ridicule, sarcasm, and joking references to ethnic, racial, and
gender differences are out, say experts.
And the boundaries of humor are changeable, so
that something funny one day is not funny the next, suggests Robert Sylwester,
author of A Biological Brain in a Cultural Classroom: Applying Biological
Research to Classroom Management. Just as teachers need to know where their
students are intellectually and developmentally when deciding how far to push
their learning, they also need to be sensitive to how they use humor in the
classroom, says Sylwester.
By smiling, laughing, or using humor, a teacher
can signal to students that either she or the students are "approaching
the limits" of what is "culturally appropriate," suggests
Sylwester. The desire to push the limits is rooted in the human brain's attempt
to know limits, to seek what is biologically possible—as an Olympic athlete
does—or define what is culturally appropriate, he says. But, he warns,
"you can't push them two miles beyond the edge. There has to be a sense of
safety."
"Teachers have to be very, very conscious
of their audience," Neuliep adds. "The type of humor seen on
television shows like Friends, which many high school students watch regularly,
could be considered sexual harassment in the classroom."
What's Behind the Laughter?
Appropriate humor and laughter can also foster
social ties between people. Sylwester emphasizes that humans "have a
social brain" and that schools need to get serious about the collaborative
model of learning. In the collaborative setting, classroom management shifts
from an authoritarian approach—which Sylwester considers the most prevalent in
schools today—to one that requires more student self-regulation and
teacher-student cooperation. Humor can be an important element of that
collaborative environment, he says.
Not surprisingly, a teacher who allows a lot of
unrestrained laughter in the classroom runs the risk of losing control of the
class. After all, laughter is a "primitive, primate vocalization"
rooted in human evolution to the panting from exertion during rough-and-tumble
physical play, according to Robert Provine, author of Laughter: A Scientific
Investigation and professor of psychology and neuroscience at the University of
Maryland. Intellectual play—humor—is a later development.
Managing Humor
In the classroom, the social benefits of humor
and laughter are many, say experts. When students are acting out, humor can
help a teacher handle her anxiety, anger, and frustration.
In recent decades the adolescent psyche
typically has become "more fragile than in the past," contends
Provine, so punishment is an expensive strategy for social control that should
be used only in extreme cases. When the teacher punishes routinely, she loses
the power of praise in the future, he adds. "Who wants to get praise from
someone they don't like?" he says. "Humor allows 'punishment' but
without the social cost."
For example, if a student in Provine's
classroom abruptly leaves in the middle of the class without a word, he might
call out "Men's room is down the hall and to the left." The goal is
to lightheartedly let the student know the action was considered rude without
resorting to a confrontation.
"I think the most important thing a
teacher can do is be open to the humor of the kids," says Cheryl Miller
Thurston, who with Elaine Lundberg cowrote If They're Laughing . . ., a guide
for teachers who don't consider themselves funny.
When Thurston was teaching 9th grade English, a
new student came into her class—all six-foot five-inches of him—wearing black
leather and chains. "I gulped when he walked in," says Thurston. She
built a relationship with this student, however, and deflected potential
problems by allowing him to channel his dislike for cats—a direct challenge to
her love of them—into various poetry assignments. "He found out he was
funny, and the other kids would appreciate his humor, too," says Thurston.
Lundberg suggests that a teacher beginning to
use humor should try one thing with which he feels comfortable. It could be as
simple as a class "humor board" with various sayings and cartoons,
including student submissions. He might also give the "natural class
clowns" a way to contribute effectively and constructively, for example,
by having them reteach a lesson. This tactic provides an outlet for their desire
for the spotlight and gives the teacher an opportunity to assess these
students' understanding of the content, she adds.
Relaxing the Learning Environment
Many people believe there is a strong link
between laughter and good health. Although experts say that laughter cannot
increase immune function, fight disease, or make us more resistant to pain,
research does show that laughter increases adrenaline, oxygen flow, and pulse
rate. After these heightened responses, the body is more relaxed, and teachers can
use this calm feeling to promote sociability and better learning with their
students, say researchers.
And at a time when educators have to deal with
standards, testing, school violence, and waning public support, the need for
humor is greater than ever, say some.
As part of the Kishwaukee Intermediate Delivery
System, which provides staff development for educators in northern Illinois,
Mary Kay Morrison started a humor improvement plan for school administrators.
Morrison, a veteran classroom teacher, worries that education has been under
such close political scrutiny lately that even teacher lounges have become
workrooms, and educators fear that humor or laughter in the classroom will be
viewed by administrators as "not working and therefore not learning."
"I think that our work ethic inhibits the
ability for educators to relax enough to even think about using humor as a tool
to create a positive environment," says Morrison.
School leaders could benefit by using
self-deprecating humor to create a more positive school climate, she asserts.
"Self-deprecating humor is a very high form of humor because it requires
self-confidence to laugh at yourself and your mistakes," says Morrison.
If administrators and teachers can laugh at
themselves, they'll be better able to get students to acknowledge their own
shortcomings—and open the doors to more creative problem solving, she suggests.
Humor Across Cultures and Ages
U.S. classrooms can be home to many different
cultures, which may have different understandings of humor, especially humor
from a teacher. Neuliep says teacher "immediacy behaviors"—any verbal
and nonverbal communication, such as humor, eye contact, or gestures, that
reduces psychological or physical distance between teachers and students—differ
considerably across cultures. For example, in Japan, students generally find
teacher humor inappropriate, he adds.
Although Neuliep uses humor in his college
classroom, it doesn't always connect with his international students. When he
jokingly suggested that the class should have a late Saturday night study
session in the library to prepare for a Monday exam, most of the class laughed,
but several Japanese students asked for time and room details after class.
"I explained to them that I was joking—it
was just American teacher humor," Neuliep recalls.
Ed Dunkelblau, director of the Institute for
Emotionally Intelligent Learning, says that using humor with words—such as puns
or reversals—poses challenges in a classroom with second language learners or
students from other cultures. But this kind of word play is less likely to
offend students, he says. He does advise teachers to watch for signs of
confusion and follow up with students to make sure they understand. "It
can also be an opportunity to let students talk about what humor is like in
their own countries."
Humor in the classroom must also be tailored to
the age of the class. With young kids, a high "silly quotient" is
good, says Dunkelblau. A teacher can use a clown nose or a fright wig to get
attention. For a grammar lesson on "debugging sentences," one
elementary school teacher brought in a fly swatter and a can of bug spray and
slinked around the room in search of "bugs" for comic relief, he
recalls.
By junior high and high school, students may
groan but still appreciate a teacher's silly joke. Older students respond to
more cognitive humor and unpredictable situations, which teachers can use to
reinforce a point or grab student attention. Teachers also should be ready to
model and help students recognize what kind of humor is appropriate in class,
says Dunkelblau.
Teacher Strategies
The kinds of humor teachers use should differ
according to the age as well as the personalities of their students, say experts.
The kinds of humor teachers use should differ
according to the age as well as the personalities of their students, say
experts.
Humor in the classroom is much more than jokes,
emphasizes Dunkelblau. It involves the teacher being playful, using exaggeration,
telling stories and amusing anecdotes—anything that they've heard, read, or
experienced. These actions, according to Dunkelblau, show students that the
teacher is human, even vulnerable.
For teachers who want to increase their humor
potential, Dunkelblau suggests the following:
Keep
a humor file with items related to your subject area or to education in
general.
Keep
track of funny things that students say from year to year and bring these up in
an appropriate context.
Don't
be afraid to use props, toys, buttons, and so on, to get students' attention.
Dunkelblau provides a few vivid examples of the
last point. He has observed one teacher who captures students' attention by
slamming a large plastic hammer on her desk to activate a recording of
shattering glass. Another teacher uses a clown horn to keep students on task.
And Dunkelblau recalls one of his own high
school English teachers who wore themed earrings (such as little ships for
teaching the Odyssey) and brightly colored clothing. "She was fun to
listen to and fun to look at," and she invited students to contribute to
the amusing atmosphere—for example, by having them concoct puns and other word
play with new vocabulary.
There are also low-key uses of humor that can
be effective ways to manage a classroom, says Marilyn Gootman, author of The
Caring Teacher's Guide to Discipline: Helping Young Students Learn
Responsibility, Control, and Respect. If a child has a certain annoying habit,
such as tapping on the desk, the teacher can approach him and suggest they
agree on a signal the teacher can use to alert the student to the behavior and
get him to stop. For example, for a student who talks a lot, a teacher Gootman
knows arranged a "zip your lip" signal, given with a hand motion across
the lips and a smile.
"It's like a secret message between the
student and the teacher," says Gootman. Using the signal is a positive
action because the child is getting individual attention and the teacher
discreetly removes a distraction.
"Teachers shouldn't have to put on a dog
and pony show," Gootman notes. "Not everyone can be Charlie Chaplin
in the classroom."
The most important rule, she says, "is to
develop a relationship with your students while being yourself and upholding
standards that students can see."
Nonetheless, Dunkelblau likes to remind
teachers: "If we're having a good time, we'll remember more."
FROM ASCD learn teach lead
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