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Teaching Tips & Tricks   |   Feb 16, 2013

Should the toughest kids be assigned to the best teachers?

By Angela Watson

Founder and Writer

Should the toughest kids be assigned to the best teachers?

By Angela Watson

You know exactly which kids I’m talking about here–their faces appeared in your mind’s eye as soon as you read the blog post title.  These are the kids who are violent and relentlessly disruptive in class, the ones who have a reputation throughout the school as being incredibly difficult to handle.

Each spring, the teacher’s lounge is filled with speculation over who will get each of those kids the following year…and in many schools, it’s a highly predictable pattern. The teachers with the best classroom management skills get the toughest kids. And every year, those teachers say, “I don’t know if I can take another class like this one. I need a break. I can’t keep doing this year after year.”

Sometimes the principals listen and spread out the toughest kids among multiple classrooms in a grade level, but many times, they don’t, and the teachers who used to be amazing become mediocre because they have nothing left to give. They stop researching new activities in the evenings because all they have the energy to do at night is sleep. They show up at school early to plan meaningful learning experiences, and then get so disgusted with breaking up student fights all morning long that they put on a movie in the afternoon and call it a day. They don’t have the energy for the hands-on activities they used to do, so they pass out worksheets.

Should the toughest kids be assigned to the best teachers?

I’m not saying that response is right. What I’m saying is that it’s happening, in thousands of classrooms all across the country. Our best teachers are burning out from bearing too much of the burden. I understand the need to place students with the best possible teacher for them. The problem is that teachers with strong classroom management skills often feel like they are being punished by getting the most challenging students year after year after year. It doesn’t matter that it’s not intended as a punishment. It feels that way when your job is knowingly made 100 times harder than the job of your colleagues simply because “you can handle it.”

What happens when you can’t handle it anymore? And what happens when the grouping of students interferes with the entire class’ education? I can think of two years in particular during my teaching career when I considered it a miracle that the rest of the class learned anything because my attention was so focused on the third of the class who had constant meltdowns. It absolutely broke my heart to see some of my sweet, hard working kids get less attention and assistance because I had to spend every spare second heading off their peers’ violent outbursts. No child should go to school each day in fear of being harmed by other kids in the class, or be unable to get the individualized learning they need because the teacher is constantly attending to severe behavior problems.

I don’t know of any clear cut solutions. I’m wary of principals burdening brand new teachers with students they know will be challenging–the teacher attrition rate is already astronomical. Some of these kids are so challenging that a new teacher would probably leave the profession before the year is out.

I also don’t want to see high needs students suffer under the leadership of a teacher who is unable to handle them. Maybe schools need to provide more professional development to teachers so they are equipped to handle a wide range of student needs and behavioral issues. It’s rare that a district acknowledges how much classroom management issues interfere with student learning: PD in most schools is centered around improving test scores and implementing curriculum. I did work in one district that allowed principals to identify teachers who struggle classroom management skills and provided extra training through CHAMPS, which is an excellent program, but the change in those teachers’ classrooms was negligible. Without ongoing, individualized support, the results are not going to be transformative. And some kids are just so disruptive that all the PD in the world is not going to prevent the average teacher from being exhausted by 9 a.m. on a daily basis.

Is the solution to get rid of teachers who aren’t able to handle their students? How would we identify those teachers in a fair way? Many of them are not “bad” teachers and are perfectly capable of educating the majority of the student population, they just aren’t prepared to manage the type of kids who throw desks when they’re frustrated and threaten to stab any adult who dares to correct them. Let’s be real: some of these students have no business being thrown into a general education classroom with little to no support. I don’t think it’s fair to blame the teacher for not being able to handle such extreme behaviors in addition to, you know, actually teaching the other 29 kids in the class.

So maybe this brings us to the heart of the issue: schools need to figure out how to meet  these tough kids’ needs, instead of tossing them in the classroom with teachers who are expected to manage on their own. These students deserve small class sizes, psychological counseling, ongoing social skills/coping strategies support through small group sessions with the school guidance counselor, and so on. Some of these students even need individual one-on-one behavioral aides. But these resources take money, and schools just don’t have it.

Where does that leave us? If all outside factors–teacher training, special services, class sizes, and so on–stay exactly the same, what should principals do? Should all the toughest kids go to the teachers with the best classroom management skills? How does this work in your school?

Angela Watson

Founder and Writer

Angela is a National Board Certified educator with 11 years of teaching experience and more than a decade of experience as an instructional coach. She started this website in 2003, and now serves as Editor-in-Chief of the Truth for Teachers...
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Discussion


  1. I wonder how others feel about looping? Do you think the “difficult” children would benefit from being with the same teacher for multiple years? Would this opportunity allow the children to continue to develop and learn more appropriately because they have a relationship with a strong teacher they know loves/cares for them? Would the chils behave in a more cooperative way because they know what is expected and they know what the rules/consequences are? Would a teacher feel less frustrated because they aren’t spending so much time at the beginning of the year getting to know the children in their class and learning what makes them tick- positively and negatively? Does anyone here work in a school where looping is practiced? Thoughts?

    1. I have looped. I took a few ADHD with me and I have to say it is definitely easier the second year because I don’t lose a month of evaluating and getting acquainted. I deliberately kept a child who was generally not enjoyed by others because of his impulsivity leading to trouble. With me, because I knew him so well, I had almost zero problems. He knew I liked him and I have strong management skills on my class. From day 1 I got to say, “you know what to do, do it.” to the whole class. That included about 6 new kids to the ones I’d already had, and they were pretty instantly absorbed by the “old” ones. I looped 3 times a few years apart each time. I did K-1, 1-2, and 2-3. I enjoyed it at lot.

  2. I went through this last year only I was the new teacher. We had an extremely difficult 3rd grade class across all 4 rooms but I had the 2 worst by far. The most physical and the most extreme case. My extreme would swear, steal, throw things, hurt others, bully, any and everything you can think of he did. It didn’t matter what I tried, where I sent him nothing worked. My principal didn’t even know what to do with him. My physical student actually made improvements during the year, except when the other one was around him, and I was so proud of him. I left that school after sticking out the year and I am now looking for another teaching job. The administration knows these kids and there has to be a better answer to this problem!

  3. Give me all those kids. Give them to me all day long. had them in school as a “Teaching Law To High School Students” class in 1985. I got the “bottom teir” High School. My students had limited reading skills and the curriculum was not geared to their abilities or needs. I spoke w/the Professsor and had her come to my class and speak w/my students. She agreed v/my asessment and allowed me to teach them about the legal implications of everyday decisions, “I want to search your car/house”, my girlfriend is pregnant, checking/savings accounts, rental agreements, creditcards etc. the stuff that you need to know when you get out of High School but nobody tells you! Now, in order to teach the same highly successful curriculum I need to go back to a 4 yr college and take two years of undergraduate classes in Education. My Students congratulated me with a t-Shirt that could not be bought but only earned, it said: ALBUQUERQUE HIGH IS NUNMBER ONE! The fact that many individuals like myself can teach in colleges but not below and that half of a teachers four years in college is devoted to education classes not the core subject they are going bto be teaching in is why our education system is in decline. Use your resources, Let us old Doctorates teach the young!

    1. The kids I have today are not the kids from 1985. They are needier, lower functioning, have far less parent involvement, and the behavior problems are much more extreme and more frequent. Low functioning kids are not the biggest problem. I don’t have a lot of frustration with my bottom tier of students. Larger classes + more behavior problems + lower academics with higher expectations, does not equal success, but puts increased stress on even the best teachers.

  4. Your article cheered me up. At least I’m not alone to have this problem. After 25 years of teaching, I feel like quitting because any effort I made seems useless. Unfortunately no one cares!

  5. This is an article that really hits close to home for me. I feel like, however, my job is to love the unlovable. I DO feel for the “good” kids, BUT I notice that the “bad” kids are the “needy” kids. Their home lives are not like what my children experience and I just cannot bring myself to label them. Am I tired at night? YES. Did I get a rough combination? YES. Was it an unfair distribution? YES, but complaining about it will not change things as far as I’m concerned. Of course, there are days when I feel like I just cannot go back, but then I look up! The second part of this is when do we make the parents accountable?

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