Whispering selves and reflective transformations in the internal dialogue of teachers and students.
Chohan, Sukhdeep Kaur
Introduction
If you hear a voice within you saying, "You are not a
painter," then by all means paint... and that voice will be
silenced.
Vincent Van Gogh
An individual's journey in life is interwoven with invaluable
learning experiences. The internal dialogue that takes place before,
during, and after the experiences influences, the perceptive filters,
interpretive paradigms, and the meanings that are abstracted from
conversations and events.
The manner in which these are understood is altered when the
internal dialogue is changed. By engaging in reflective practice, people
can delve deeper into the intricate aspects of their thought patterns
and become increasingly conscious of their values, beliefs, and
assumptions and how they in turn frame how they behave.
The thoughts of many philosophers, literary writers, and novelists
have been captivated by the phenomenon of the inner voice. According to Hikins (1989), in our everyday language, we use many phrases that relate
to the inner voice including: "I'll have to think about
it," "so I stopped and said to myself," "a penny for
your thoughts," and "listen to your conscience." The
inner voice is powerful and highly personal, with each individual's
private thoughts being unique. The nature and content of the inner
speech significantly and inevitably affects an individual's
emotions, behaviors, and moods. When our self-talk is "pessimistic,
negative and irrational, we tend to feel sad, anxious or depressed. On
the other hand, when we talk to ourselves in optimistic, hopeful, and
positive ways we tend to feel happy, positive, and hopeful" (Payne
& Manning, 1998, p. 199). Through self-reflection, "we possess
the power of choice and the ability to identify, challenge, and change
this counterproductive thinking" (p.199). An alteration in the
inner voice can empower an individual to transform the self in times of
change, partake in positive self-leadership, and persevere in a desired
direction.
It is the competent self that has the ability to look beyond
obstacles and see possibilities (Denmark, 1993). According to Saral
(1983), the "external structures that we perceive, cognize, and
communicate to others are mere reflections or manifestations of our
inner structures" (p. 55). To bring about changes in the external
structures, one needs to facilitate an ongoing process of intrapersonal
communication. As an individual begins to acknowledge and communicate
with different aspects of their self, "the external structure
begins to dissolve and reform into different patterns of relationship
reflecting the existing status of [their] internal structures" (p.
55). This calls attention to the paramount need and intrinsic value behind ongoing intrapersonal communication.
The Influential Role of a Self-communication System on
Self-perceptions
Ever since I was a little girl I can remember talking to myself.
Through the innocence of childhood, I engaged in rich conversations with
myself regarding friends, family members, and every day events. As I
grew older, I learned to silence personal conversations with myself to
those around me. As childhood innocence faded, I began to see the world
through the eyes of a maturing adult, and the nature of my self-talk
changed. Little did I understand how self-talk developed and the extent
of its influence on how I perceived my world. I was unaware of its
overpowering nature in being able to encourage and motivate me to
accomplish my goals or limit me through debilitating thoughts and
resulting behaviors. While my inner voice was gentle and self-nurturing
at times, it was demanding and self-demeaning at others. Through
increased self-awareness and reflection on the patterns of my self-talk,
I slowly came to believe that I was personally responsible for the way
that I had created my world and, as a result, became determined to
recreate it more positively. My lived experience, as both a student and
a teacher, has revealed the fruitful results of a healthy inner voice
and intrapersonal awareness to me and the detrimental effects of
negative internal conversations.
Transforming the Self Through an Inward Journey into the Nature of
Internal Dialogue
Current literature pertaining to the concept of inner voice does
not address the importance of monitoring and transforming the self and
how the relationship with the self is affected by the inner voice. It
does not focus upon how the inner voice is an instrumental guiding force
in self-awareness as a prerequisite to self-transformation and, in turn,
self-leadership. This form of leadership starts from within and is
influenced by the inner voice that can be perceived as an inner anchor
or inner guide. This relates to what Ambrose (1995) states: that
"to transform our organizations, our communities, or our lives, we
must first transform ourselves. Leadership development, then, becomes a
process of self-reflection aimed at personal growth: a journey
inward" (p. 25).
Invitational education emphasizes the importance of drawing
attention to the voices of children and their teachers in the classroom,
how they speak to themselves, and how their self-talk influences the
other through the decisions and actions that they take. Deeper insights
into the inner workings of the classroom can be gained by advancing our
understanding of children's and teachers' experiences
regarding their inner voice and subsequent interactions in the
classroom.
The purpose behind this paper is not merely to analyze or interpret
but rather to fill a void in the literature, extend invitational
thinking, and understand the influential role of the inner voice. It
raises the question: To what extent does self-talk play a role in
influencing, shaping, and interpreting the experiences of teachers and
students in schools? An articulate, provocative, and informed response
to this question involves an in-depth discussion of teacher self-talk,
teacher influence on student self-talk, and student self-talk. This
paper provides a portal to improve our understanding of the importance
behind teachers and children transforming their internal dialogue by
listening to their inner voices, becoming healthy-minded individuals,
inviting positive self-talk, and moving beyond challenges.
Who Am I? The Impact Of Messages Received From Significant Others
On Self-Concept
Re-examine all that you have been told ... dismiss that which
insults your soul.
Walt Whitman
Invitational theory is grounded in self-concept theory.
Self-concept is defined as a "complex, dynamic, and organized
system of learned beliefs that an individual holds to be true about his
or her personal existence" (Purkey, 2000, p. 14). Proponents of
invitational education believe that "respect for individual
uniqueness is essential for positive self-concept development, academic
achievement, and ultimately, success in life" (Reed as cited in
Novak, 1992, p. 48). This self is highly abstract and multifaceted. A
person knows his or her self through internal dialogue which is
influenced by the "experiences woven in everyday life, concealed in
everyday occurrences [and] hidden in deep communications of unspoken
feelings" (Purkey, 2000, p. 48). Messages given to a child can be
filtered through invitational propositions that "proclaim that the
child is able, valuable, and responsible or unable, worthless, and
irresponsible" (p. 54). The role of the teacher is of particular
significance in this enculturation process, since the child
progressively internalizes these messages. The self is a core dimension
of human experience and plays an instrumental role in an
individual's internal dialogue and personal self-awareness. It can
never be understood in its entirety because it is culturally bound and
primarily implicit (Purkey, 2000).
Invitational education, as a theory of practice, attempts to
"provide an integrative framework for constructing environments and
cultures that extend and evaluate intentional messages that affirm the
uniqueness, possibilities, and dignity of all involved in the educative process" (Novak, 1992; Stanley as cited in Novak, 1992, p. 3). It
provides a "positive lens from which to view student potential,
skills and abilities" (Reed as cited in Novak, 1992, p. 69).
According to "invitational education," schools should be
"the most inviting places in town" (Purkey & Novak, 1996,
p.3). Due to constant interaction between children and the educational
system, schools, next to the home, "probably exert the single
greatest influence on how students see themselves and their
abilities" (p. 27).
Personal experiences shape self-perceptions
There is no greater penance than patience, No greater happiness
than contentment, No greater evil than greed, No greater virtue than
mercy, And no more potent weapon than forgiveness.
Sri Guru Amar Das Ji
The early years of a child's life are critical in forming his
or her self-concept. A child's self-concept is shaped by the nature
of the invitations that are received through interactions with
significant others. Self-evaluations stem rather directly from the
evaluations made of the child by others. These evaluations are more than
words and are "embedded in body language, looks, touch, tone of
voice, and other nonverbal messages" (Purkey, 2000, p. 45).
"Asking a student to describe what significant others say about him
or her reveals much about what students say to themselves" (p. 26).
In the give and take of countless interactions, "children tend to
believe what the world believes about them" (p. 45). These beliefs
coupled with the treatment by significant others influence how students
define themselves. In turn, self-definitions influence internal dialogue
and ultimately academic success or failure (Purkey, 2000). Our
self-perceptions vary from situation to situation and from one phase of
our lives to another. Thus, the self-concept evolves through constant
self-evaluation in different situations and is influenced by various
experiences and events including performance in school and treatment by
teachers and peers. Teachers, as significant others in their
students' lives, have the potential to open new worlds for their
students and can either inhibit or enable them to grow as students and
people.
By listening to their inner voices, individuals can steer
themselves through challenges and transform their lives, or cave in to
self-debilitating thoughts and not persevere through hardships (Purkey,
2000). In order to see the complexities of the inner voice and how it
influences the self-concept of a child, a myriad of theories pertaining
to the inner voice and the self must be examined. The current knowledge
regarding human development is interdisciplinary. Numerous perspectives
put forth in the literature focus on the different domains of human
development and how the self is influenced. Among the many researchers
who have focused on the development of the self, three distinct
researchers have explicitly put forth theories that stress the
importance that influence plays in this development. Cooley's
(1902) looking glass theory, Festinger's (1954) social comparison
theory, and Bandura's social learning theory (1977) allow us to
understand how we define the self in relation to others and how we draw
meaning from our world. An individual's sense of self, feelings,
and behaviors are strongly influenced by his or her internal dialogue
(Butler, 1992). Thus, changes in this dialogue would result in changes
in overt behaviors. Various cognitive behavioral models including
rational-emotive therapy (Ellis, 1976), cognitive therapy (Beck, 1976),
and cognitive behavior modification (Meichenbaum, 1977) have
consistently documented the importance of the influential link between a
person's thoughts and inner speech, what they feel, and how they
behave.
What Are The Whispers Saying To The Self?
We are what we think. All that we
are arises with our thoughts.
With our thoughts we make the
world.
Buddha
As social beings, we develop a diverse array of assumptions and
beliefs about ourselves and others and, in turn, use them as a frame of
reference for understanding the world. Our psychological reality
consists of a reciprocal relationship between our experiences, beliefs,
and internal dialogue. Self-talk, also referred to as internal dialogue,
inner conversations, inner voices, and the whispering self, enables
students, teachers, and others to organize their interpretations of the
world and "speak to themselves about who they are and how they fit
in their world" (Purkey, 2000, p. 1). The language they use to
articulate their thoughts impacts their internal dialogue, shapes their
perceptual world, and influences their behavior.
Self-talk, a unique and ongoing personal voice, constitutes a
substantial part of an individual's thought process and, as a
constant companion, influences behaviors and allows him or her to draw
meaning from the world. A self-communication system enables individuals
to reflect upon the experiences and events that they encounter every
day. Intrapersonal communication is "all of the physiological and
psychological processing of messages that happens within individuals at
conscious and non-conscious levels as they attempt to understand
themselves and their environment" (Roberts, Edwards, & Barker,
1987, p. 2). This process is best understood when it is related to
interpersonal communication. Barker and Wiseman (1966) believe that
"intrapersonal communication is the foundation upon which
interpersonal communication is based, but intrapersonal communication
may also occur independently" (p. 173). Research on the concept of
intrapersonal communication comes not only from the field of
communication but crosses into other disciplines including business,
education, and sociology. In these disciplines, it is understood that
our inner voice shapes our world (Fodor, Bever, & Garrett, 1974;
Manz, 1983; Manz & Neck, 1999; Roberts et al., 1987). Since our
inner voice shapes our thoughts and feelings, it plays a major role in
self-regulation, problem solving, and planning (Payne & Manning,
1998). Many of the inner voice's major activities involve the
process of internal problem solving, resolution of internal conflict,
planning for the future, emotional catharsis, evaluations of ourselves
and others, and the relationships between ourselves and others.
Intrapersonal communication involves only the self, and it must be
clearly understood by the self because it constitutes the basis for all
other communication. (Pearson & Nelson, 1985, p. 12)
Transformative learning theory (Mezirow, 2000) puts forth the idea
that an individual can become aware of holding a limiting or distorted
view. If the individual critically examines this view, opens up to
alternatives, and consequently changes perception, a transformation in
some part of how they make meaning out of the world takes place.
According to Mezirow (1997), "transformative learning develops
autonomous thinking" (p. 5). It takes place when the process of
questioning and discussing previously uncritically assimilated
assumptions, beliefs, values, and perspectives leads "us to open up
our frame of reference, discard a habit of mind, see alternatives, and
thereby act differently in the world" (Mezirow and Associates,
2000, as cited in Cranton & King, 2003, p. 32). Schools must
intentionally invite students and teachers to engage in positive
internal conversations. By transforming inner speech, these individuals
can alter their outer behavior and promote healthy school environments
in which these transformative invitations are extended to all those
involved in the educational sphere.
Teacher Self-reflections on Internal Dialogue
You yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe deserve
your love and affection.
Buddha
Classrooms today are "characterized by student diversity in
all its facets--racial, gender, and socio-economic as well as by wide
differences in ability, educational readiness, motivation and age"
(Brookfield, 2002, p. 31). To address such diversity, teachers must
engage in a practice where they are conscious of their values, beliefs,
and assumptions, because inevitably, they influence their teaching
practice. The craft of teaching involves teachers understanding
themselves, others, and the norms of the educative system, community,
and society in which they live (Cranton & King, 2003).
Through the lens of transformative learning theory, knowledge about
teaching can be regarded as being primarily communicative in nature
(Cranton & Carusetta, 2002). This knowledge is "acquired and
revised through discourse, interpretation, and reflection on
experience" (p. 167). At the heart of transformative learning, this
knowledge is about teachers questioning and reflecting upon what they do
and why they believe it is important. By critically examining their
teaching practices, teachers may transform how they derive meaning from
the world, acquire alternative ways of understanding what they do, and
consequently alter their teaching practice.
Self-reflection and self-discovery are ongoing and necessary
processes. They enable teachers to acquire the tools to develop,
articulate, and then defend their teaching philosophy, practices, and
beliefs. Invitational theory accentuates the significance of continual
connection of ideas and beliefs to practice, encourages ongoing dialogue
concerning the complexities and effectiveness behind teaching from an
inviting stance, and highlights the transformative possibilities of
invitational thinking. Through enhanced self-awareness, educators open
the possibilities of allowing their personal experiences to become the
vehicle for understanding their students. Transformation in thinking can
manifest when teachers are faced with new teaching contexts and forced
to partake in critical reflection on their philosophy and practice of
teaching. Such reflection has the potential to "lead to revised
assumptions, beliefs, and perspectives" (p. 167). Although being a
teacher can be intrinsically rewarding when seeing children grasp
complicated concepts, strengthen their skills, and extend newly learned
knowledge into their daily lives, it can also be an extremely demanding,
challenging, and sometimes stressful profession. Teachers can choose how
they speak to themselves and can frequently regulate the level of stress
in their lives by choosing inviting language that counteracts stress
(Payne & Manning, 1998). For example, "I can handle this,"
"it does not matter if I make a mistake," "this is a
learning experience."
It is crucial for teachers to value themselves in the educative
process and not perceive themselves as working in a structured
organization where they are just functionaries. The process by which a
teacher perceives prominence in classrooms and becomes a beneficial
presence in the lives of students rests on two vital factors: "(a)
the whispering self of the teacher and (b) what the teacher does"
(Purkey, 2000, p. 56). Ideally, the task of teachers is to
"purposefully monitor negative self-talk, formulate productive
internal dialogue, and then practice it until it becomes an automatic
part of consciousness" (p. 56). By achieving mastery over their
self-talk, which leads to mastery of consciousness itself, a teacher
becomes a beneficial presence in the lives of students. To ameliorate the learning environments in today's schools, what teachers say to
themselves about their situations and purposes must be refined. Their
internal dialogue can hinder both their personal and professional
development and colour their daily experiences with a negative
paintbrush. Burns (1980), Butler (1992), Helmstetter (1991), and
Meichenbaum (1977) put forth the idea that the language utilized in
private speech inhibits, initiates, and reinforces behaviour. According
to these cognitive semanticists, behaviour is self-regulated through
self-talk.
How people feel about themselves rests upon how their minds filter
and interpret everyday experiences (Csikszentmihaly, 1990).
Teachers' inner conversations relate to both their professional and
personal lives. Their internal dialogue influences their happiness in
the classroom and in life (Purkey, 2000). Only when "teachers
possess an inner voice that speaks positively and realistically about
themselves and their abilities can they hope to give full attention to
the needs of students" (p. 58). Beliefs and thoughts possessed by
teachers influence and shape the decisions they make as educators. These
"beliefs create a total school climate and when shared, shape
school culture" (p. 78). Curtis and Altmann (1977) argue that a
relationship exists between what teachers say to themselves about
themselves and what they say to themselves about students. Teachers who
think good thoughts about themselves tend to evaluate their students
more positively. The "reverse is true of teachers who rate
themselves low on self-concept" (Purkey, 2000, p. 58). According to
Secretan (2001), "it is not what we say that makes a difference and
changes the world, or even how we say it, but why we say it and who we
are while we are saying it" (p. 19).
The Process of Perspective Transformation
Declare the truth of your own beauty to yourself and be free from
the dungeons both of pleasures and pains that you have made for yourself
Puran Singh
One may not be fully ready to explore the full range of emotions
that may be unearthed as a result of delving into a reflective process.
There are internal barriers which one has to confront and overcome in
order to enable transformative learning to transpire. When taking steps
towards perspective transformation, the need for change and empowerment
must be recognized. At the same time, one must be ready for the change.
The provision of support from one's environment can facilitate this
process. When feeling the frustrations of one's limiting patterns
and the empowering effects that evolve from an awareness of new
possibilities, the reflective process is made more effective. To
understand ourselves, we must ground ourselves in our own rich histories
of teaching and learning. According to Fenwick and Parsons (1998),
"autobiographical reflection is a powerful learning process"
(p. 3). Critical reflection entails understanding one's own
patterns of behaviour and thinking in one's own history. Through
such analysis, we can discern "how our present envelops our past,
and shapes future choices" (p. 3).
Reflecting on daily teaching experiences, whether individually or
with colleagues, provides teachers with an avenue to improve their
teaching. To start the reflective process, they are encouraged not to
leap into an interpretive mode. A teacher must attempt to understand why
an event happened the way it did and "search the context within
which the event occurred for explanations" (Hole & McEntee,
1999, p. 35). However, to become a reflective practitioner, a teacher
must go beyond just the simple answer to why an event happened. Deeper
meanings of the episodes must be unearthed (Hole & McEntee, 1999).
As discussed by Hole and McEntee, it is helpful for teachers to hold
their practice to the light of new understandings that may emerge during
the cultivation of deep reflection and consider the implications for
their practice. Reflection on experience can be perceived as a
springboard for action and in turn transformation (Dyke, 2006).
Reflection can be enhanced through open engagement with different
worldviews, perceptions, and interpretations of experiences by others.
Self-reflection, discussed by Boud (1993, as cited in Dyke, 2006),
emphasizes the value of learning from the experiences of others and
sharing one's own experiences. By doing so, individuals expose
their ideas to the critical gaze of others, prevent possessing a closed,
localized view, and allow themselves to be placed in positions where
their own assumptions are challenged. He argues that individuals need to
be challenged so that they do not fool themselves with personally
distorted assumptions or fail to consider new information which may
reside outside their current realm of experience.
Within the context of teaching lies "a paradox between
adapting to and becoming a conforming member of society and becoming an
individual in that society" (Cranton & Carusetta, 2004, p. 21).
As opposed to looking for standardized principles of effective practice,
it is important for educators to "examine how they as social human
beings and individuals can develop their own way in the world of
teaching" (p. 21). As a part of developing authenticity, teachers
must differentiate their "own thoughts and values from those of the
community within which they work" (p. 7). This process entails
teachers being aware of their thoughts and genuinely being able to
express themselves within the social context of their work. In essence,
authenticity entails teachers knowing who they are and what they
believe, bringing themselves into their classrooms, developing their
personal teaching styles, and thereby communicating and relating to their students in a genuine way (Cranton & Carusetta, 2004).
Critical reflection allows for open questioning and consideration of how
teachers think about themselves and their teaching. The context within
which they work, including the norms and expectations in the school and
those in the broader community, "influences their perceptions of
themselves, their students, and their relationships with students"
(p. 17). A teacher who has a good understanding of herself or himself,
both personally and professionally, "is more likely to articulate
values, demonstrate congruence between values and actions, and be
genuine and open" (p. 19).
In order to be a leader of others in life, one must be a leader of
himself or herself first (Manz, 1983). Thus, teachers must learn how to
be leaders of themselves in order to be able to effectively lead the
students in their classrooms. Self-leadership is a process of
self-influence that begins by listening to one's inner voice. The
connection between inner voice and the true essence of teacher
self-leadership allows teachers to move through change and beyond
obstacles placed before them. According to Payne and Manning (1998), new
ways for teachers to think about their inner speech have the potential
"to impact either positively or negatively their feelings,
self-esteem, health, and behavior" (p. 195). Leadership is not
solely an outward process. Rather, it is an inward process that is
influenced by past events that have played a major role in shaping
one's life (Manz, 1983). All teachers talk to themselves, and their
inner voices are capable of influencing and determining the direction
and the quality of their daily personal and professional lives. In
teacher education, research indicates that: the use of self-talk with
in-service and pre-service teachers has merit, especially when teachers
are stressed, when circumstances lead to a disruption of previously
acquired skills, when they are first learning to teach, or when they are
attempting a new skill (Gallimore et al., 1986, as cited in Payne &
Manning, 1998, p.197).
Transforming Negative Teacher Self-Talk Through Changing Beliefs
Your task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek and find all
the barriers within yourself that you have built against it.
Rumi
There are a number of powerful, irrational, and illogical beliefs
that prohibit many people from leading an unperturbed life (Ellis &
Harper, 1975). These beliefs result in maladaptive, unhealthy, and
nonfacilitative self-talk. By changing irrational beliefs into rational
ones, teachers positively affect and transform the nature of their
self-talk (Payne & Manning, 1998). Rational, healthy self-talk
promotes rational, healthy teacher behaviour. Thus, it is beneficial for
teachers to place themselves in positions whereby they recognize
unhealthy internal conversations and, in turn, substitute healthy ways
to guide themselves while functioning in educational settings and in
their personal lives.
Steps For Improving Teacher Self-Talk
Payne and Manning (1998) put forth five steps for improving teacher
self-talk:
1. Change irrational beliefs to rational ones. When beliefs are
changed to rational, healthy ones, self-talk is affected positively and
changes. Rational self-talk promotes productive teacher behavior and may
reduce teacher stress.
2. Record and examine the self-talk that takes place both out aloud
and silently within the mind. Awareness is the first step for breaking
out of an unhelpful self-talk cycle.
3. Become aware of cues that may signal unhelpful self-talk
including feeling anxious or depressed, sudden shifts in emotions, and
avoidance thoughts or behaviours. Physical symptoms may include uneasy
stomach, sweaty palms and tension headaches. External events often
instigate unhelpful self-talk. When its presence is noticed, interrupt
the self-critical onslaught with the firm statement --"STOP! It is
not helpful to talk to myself this way. Would I talk to a good friend
this way" By realizing that critical self-talk is not helpful, an
individual can begin to disengage from it with the realization that it
is no longer acceptable.
4. Identify and change negative self-talk statements to more
positive, self-supportive, and constructive ones. For example, as
opposed to saying, "Oh no, what will the parents think when their
children go home and tell them about my mistake?" say, "Even
teachers are entitled to human error. I can make mistakes and still be a
good teacher." While the negative self-talk originates from the
erroneous belief that mistakes are not acceptable, the more constructive
self-statement arises from the rational belief that although it is
marvelous to do something without error, some mistakes are unfortunate.
If they are made, it is not the end of the world.
5. Encourage small improvements and be careful not to impose the
'Be Perfect' voice as improvements to self-talk are being
tried. The goal is to reduce unhelpful self-talk and increase helpful
self-talk. It takes considerable time, practice, and determination to
change self-talk.
In discussing these five steps, Payne and Manning (1998) found it
important to specify a set of self-questions that may be asked by
teachers as identified by Maultsby (1975): (a) Is my self-talk helping
me to solve problems? (b) Is my self-talk based on objective reality?
(c) Is my self-talk optimistic? (d) Is my self-talk being a good friend
to me? (e) Is my self-talk helping me to reach my short- and long-term
goals, personally and professionally? Interventions in teacher self-talk
have been shown to be beneficial in reducing self-reported anxiety about
teaching (Payne & Manning, 1990), improving lesson planning and
teaching performance (Neely, 1986), and reducing stress in teaching
(Forman, 1982).
So How Do Teachers Influence Student Self-Talk And Self-Perceptions
In Classrooms?
I've come to a frightening conclusion that I am the decisive
element in the classroom. It's my personal approach that creates
the climate. It's my daily mood that makes the weather. As a
teacher, I possess a tremendous power to make a child's life
miserable or joyous. I can be a tool of torture or an instrument of
inspiration. I can humiliate or humor, hurt or heal. In all situations,
it is my response that decides whether a crisis will be escalated or
de-escalated and a child humanized or dehumanized.
Hiam Ginott (1972)
Many factors affect teacher-student experiences in a classroom on a
day-to-day and moment-by-moment basis. Students spend a sizeable portion
of their lives in school, and their teachers determine the nature of its
impact (Combs, 1982). Teachers who consciously are aware of
teacher-student relationships are more likely to foster the growth of
their students, care for them, and engage in dialogue with them (Cranton
& Carusetta, 2004). This dialogue is critical to the learning
process, and teachers define its nature. Teachers possess immense
influential power over their students' self-concepts, self-talk,
level of success within the classroom, and attitudes toward school.
Thus, they are encouraged to extend efforts to understand the
perspectives of their students and keep their emotional well-being,
diverse needs, and academic abilities in mind when interacting with
them. Their perceptions influence the world of students, "who tend
to see themselves as the teacher sees them" (Purkey, 2000, p. 57).
The essence of effective teaching must entwine a personal dimension
and focus upon the fostering and strengthening of "inviting"
relationships in the classroom. Research identifies good teachers as
"task-oriented, organized, structured and in control" (Payne
& Manning, 1998, p. 195). However, attention must be awarded to the
social and psychological factors related to teaching and learning.
Teachers are prime agents in setting the emotional climate in the
classroom. Through a heightened sense of emotional well-being, they
place themselves in a better position to be able to create optimal
learning environments in which students feel physically and
psychologically safe (Maslow, 1970). Teachers must understand how their
own beliefs and feelings affect their work with their students (Aspy
& Roebuck, 1982). They are encouraged to actively monitor and
reflect on their attitudes, personal values, and experiences, since they
shape their teaching practice and treatment of students. Teachers
constantly establish distinct relationships with their students,
communicate their inner thoughts in their overt behavior, reveal their
beliefs in their actions, and summon students to respond accordingly.
Thus, their beliefs about students are the critical ingredients in
student success or failure in school. By sending out powerful
invitations to students to share in positive experiences in the
classroom, a teacher encourages students to believe in the intrinsic
value of learning and foster positive internal dialogue. Teachers can
either help promote a child's self-esteem or hinder a child's
growth by constantly sending the child disinviting messages. When
teachers "think well of their students and their abilities,
students are likely to respond in positive ways" (Purkey, 2000, p.
60). Conversely, when they tell themselves that their students cannot
achieve, "then student performance is influenced negatively"
(p. 59). The teacher's internal dialogue about students has the
power to influence how students view themselves and how well they learn
in school.
The writings of Vygotsky are important to consider when discussing
how teachers influence student self-talk and their behaviors.
Accentuating the regulatory effect of inner speech upon behavior,
Vygotsky (1962) postulated the theory of verbal self-regulation. He
considered thought as internal self-talk, and language the substance of
thought which directs action. According to this developmental
psychologist, when children engage in private speech, they utilize the
same words that adults once used to regulate their behaviors for the
purposes of self-regulation. In relation to the educational sphere, he
described self-regulation as an "inner-speech" function
students internalize from the language that teachers use to mediate
student learning in the classroom. Thus, a student's self-talk
serves to direct and guide their progress through difficult and
unfamiliar materials, as adults, including teachers, have previously
guided them. Vygotsky proposed that instruction in and mastery of
subject-matter knowledge are primary forces underlying cognitive growth
and that high level cognitive processes emerge through teacher-student
interactions.
Self-talk has been studied as a means of enhancing self-awareness,
self-regulation, and problem-solving. Vygotsky (as cited in Depape,
Hakim, Voelkar, Page & Jackson, 2006) maintained that "overt
self-talk served an adaptive function in children by regulating their
actions during difficult problem solving, and that it eventually became
internalized as self-regulatory thoughts or covert private speech by the
early school-age years" (p. 2). Research has found developmental
differences in student self-talk when they are faced with
problem-solving situations. In their research on private speech with
preschool children, Duncan and Pratt (1997) found that the preschoolers
were more likely to use private speech when a task was difficult or
novel than when it was easy or familiar. Furthermore, Winsler, DeLeon,
Wallace, Carlton, and Willson-Quayle (2003) found evidence for
consistency in children's private speech across problem-solving
tasks in their research with children aged three to five years. Their
study revealed that older children used more partially internalized
forms of private speech such as whispering or muttering to themselves.
In tune with Vygotsky's theory, their findings suggested a
connection between children's internalization of speech and
behavioral self-regulation.
It is a "teacher's professional responsibility to be
inviting in a deliberate and consistent manner" and to engage in
positive self-talk about students by viewing them as able, valuable, and
responsible (Beardsley & Jacobs as cited in Novak, 1992, p. 26). By
doing so, teachers intentionally invite positive and realistic self-talk
in their students. Each instructional move has an effect on the
development of the child's sense of self.
What Is The Nature Of The Internal Conversations That Students Have
With Themselves?
The self is not something readymade, but something in continuous
formation through choice of action.
John Dewey
The early years of a child's life are critical in forming his
or her self-concept. This self is formed from the experiences interwoven
in everyday life. The educational institution is an important agent in a
child's development. The prevailing nature of messages they receive
in school affects their perceptions about themselves and their internal
dialogue, which in turn affects their attitudes toward school, the
relationships they form in school, and their school achievements.
Teachers play a significant role in the messages that are filtered to
children and their formulation of productive internal conversations.
Many of the successes and failures encountered and experienced by
students "throughout their educational careers are closely
connected with their inner voices" (Purkey, 2000, p. 10). Students
who experience continued honest success in school over time are likely
"to develop self-talk that encourages them to put forth the effort,
energy, and resources to learn what is being presented in the
classroom" (p. 75). On the other hand, students who "encounter
consistent failure and disapproval will move from negative self-talk
('I'm so stupid') to learned helplessness" (p. 75).
Learned helplessness is the giving-up reaction whereby the student tells
himself or herself that there is nothing that he or she can do to
change. This lapse into total apathy "is often mistaken by
educators as lack of motivation" (p. 75). While the inner voice in
healthy personalities speaks of success, fulfillment, and assurance,
individuals with negative internal dialogue establish limits to their
performances and possess an inner voice that "speaks of fear,
anxiety, and defeat" (p. 8). These individuals "tell
themselves that they cannot learn, succeed, or assert, even when such
things are not objectively true" (p. 10).
According to Seligman (1991), individuals can choose the way they
think. The language they use to speak to themselves impacts their
choices--choice of feelings and choice of behaviors. While healthy and
appropriate self-talk leads to more productive affective, cognitive and
behavior responses, unhealthy and inappropriate self-talk leads to more
maladaptive responses. Humans are susceptible to negative self-talk.
Approximately 75% (Helmstetter, 1986) of everything we say to ourselves
is counterproductive. The ability to speak to oneself about oneself in
positive and realistic ways is an important aspect of invitational
education.
Teaching individuals to alter their thoughts and internal
conversations in an effort to bring forth constructive and productive
emotions and behaviours is supported through numerous studies (Manning,
1991). In the educational sphere, self-talk strategies have resulted in
improvements in student performance in the areas of academic performance
of behaviour-problem students (Lovitt & Curtis, 1968), mathematics
(Leon & Pepe, 1983), reading comprehension (Elliott-Faust &
Pressley, 1986), and creative writing (Trimbur, 1987). By monitoring
counterproductive and negative self-talk in the classroom, teachers can
create a climate of optimism and respect, encouraging the growth of
productive self-talk and the perceptions of their abilities in a
propitious light. It is vital that educators have "respect, trust,
and confidence in their children before their children can develop
self-respect, self-trust, and self-confidence" (Purkey, 2000, p.
49). By giving students permission to attend to their internal
dialogues, teachers encourage students to modify their inner
conversations. Through core reflection, profound and fundamental changes
can be made by reaching into deep-rooted beliefs and underlying issues
that lie behind certain choices of actions. Core reflection "aims
at building on people's strengths, and on the positive feelings
often triggered when people feel in touch with positive meanings, and
with their strengths" (Korthagen & Vasalos, 2005, p. 64). By
assisting students in delving deeper into the richness of their inner
potential, teachers encourage their students to enter into an adventure
of learning about their "self" and transforming their inner
voices.
Conclusions
Do not utter even a single harsh
word; your True Lord abides in all.
Do not break anyone's heart; these
are all priceless jewels.
The minds of all are like precious
jewels; to harm them is not good at
all.
Bhagat Sheikh Fareed Ji
Together, teachers and students can create learning environments
that intentionally summon productive internal dialogue. Only through a
deeper understanding and awareness of the beliefs that students and
teachers hold about themselves, can the transformation in internal
dialogue be initiated. People's beliefs, affective reactions, and
assumptions play a prominent role in structuring realities. Reviewing
teaching and learning practices through various lenses helps to surface
the assumptions teachers hold about pedagogic methods alongside the
assumptions educators make concerning the "conditions that best
foster student learning" (Brookfield, 2002, p. 32). By cultivating
deep reflections, teachers are able to get to the heart of their
teaching practices, acquire new insights, and make necessary changes.
The art of teaching is "a deeply human, social activity"
(Combs, 1982, p. 162). The interactions that take place within the
educational ecosystem communicate messages of personal adequacy or
inadequacy to teachers and children, having an impact on what they say
to themselves and how they perceive their abilities. Invitations are at
the heart of invitational education and "are messages which
communicate to people that they are valuable, able, responsible and
worthy of respect" (Russell as cited in Novak, 1992, p. 160).
Through enhanced self-awareness and healthy inner conversations, an
individual can be empowered to invite positive experiences into daily
life and deal with stresses in productive ways. A major benefit of
self-supportive self-talk is that "it allows us to develop a
protective barrier or buffer against the unpleasant situations in which
we may find ourselves" (Payne & Manning, 1998, p. 200).
Environmental unpredictability, sudden changes in schedules and lesson
plans, unforeseen problems, and individual stress characterize the
teaching profession. Circumstances of "teacher accountability and
close public scrutiny necessitate the teacher's need for positive,
self-supportive speech" (Payne & Manning, 1998, p. 200). By
regularly monitoring their inner conversations, teachers can choose and
regulate many of their emotional and resulting behavioral reactions.
Educators play an instrumental role in guiding children on their
personal journey and empowering them with positive beliefs in themselves
as learners. To keep themselves grounded, teachers must "never
forget what it's like to be a child" (Purkey, 1992). By
assisting students in visualizing their roles as active, productive, and
successful members of their community, teachers can foster positive
internal dialogue and a self-monitoring process of thoughts. By being
inviting, both personally and professionally, invitational educators can
engage in practices that encourage positive and realistic self-talk in
their students. This is a form of teaching that "involves
commitment to the notion of the ability, value, and self-directing
powers of every student" (Purkey, 2000, p. 61).
When an individual shares their private speech, it allows an
observer a window into the mind. There is no tool that can measure the
extent to which self-talk shapes an individual's life experiences
and interpretations of them. However, the contributions teachers
"make to the growth of students often do not show until long after
students have left" them (Combs, 1982, p. 175). The effect of a
teacher's actions or words upon a student's internal dialogue
may never be known to the teacher or even the student. The messages may
have a great impact upon the whispering self and slowly send the student
either into a cycle of negative self-talk or towards a strong sense of
self-confidence. Students must be encouraged to monitor their internal
dialogue on a regular basis and ensure that they choose beneficial steps
towards self-fulfillment.
According to Payne and Manning (1998): The daily running dialogue
or commentary inside our heads has the potential to impact, either
positively or negatively, our feelings, level of stress, self-esteem,
health, behavior, and interpersonal relationships. If we become aware of
what we are telling ourselves ('What am I saying to scare myself?
Panic myself? Worry myself?') then we have taken the first steps to
assuring a positive, rather than a negative impact. Once we become
cognizant of the fact that the unhelpful things we are saying to
ourselves are hurting us, then we can make a conscious choice to talk to
ourselves in more helpful ways. (p. 197)
The greatest challenge is to weaken the power of self-defeating
inner conversations and to empower oneself with positive beliefs by
monitoring and altering the conversations. The question put forth in
this paper, to what extent does self-talk play a role in influencing,
shaping, and interpreting the experiences of teachers and students in
schools? does not have a definitive answer. Instead, it results in a
tentative answer that leads to further questions including, "how
can the positive self-talk cycle be instigated?" This process would
entail all individuals to start altering their thought processes and
sending positive messages to others both verbally and nonverbally. This
leads one to start pondering the role of "significant others"
in an individual's life. How does one build resilience to the
negative messages received from significant others and not allow them to
interfere with one's own thought processes? Can the effects of
negative self-talk be reversed, minimized, or even eliminated at a later
stage in one's life? Much research has been conducted on teacher
influence on student self-talk. Future research inquiries must delve
into understanding student influence on teacher self-talk. By doing so,
further insights would be gained into the inner working of today's
classrooms and the impact on teacher-student interactions.
Final Thoughts
Reflecting upon myself, and conquering my mind, I have seen there
is no other friend like You.
Sri Guru Nanak Dev Ji
We are a product of extensive qualities of experiences that frame
our perceptual worlds and define how we view ourselves. Our beliefs,
affective reactions, and assumptions play a prominent role in
structuring our realities. Our lives are knitted into the fabric that we
refer to as "reality." This fabric forms a veil over our
ability to understand ourselves, and when slowly shattered, may reveal
further layers of distorted perceptions concealed deep within the mind.
The reflective process enables one to dismantle the veil and restructure
the thought processes that guide one's actions. The ramification of
the transformative experience rests in the hands of the individual.
Acknowledgments Special thanks to Dr. John Novak and Dr. Daniel
Shaw for consultation, advice and suggestions on revisions to earlier
drafts of the paper. A heartfelt thank you to Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji
and Vaheguru Ji for ongoing guidance and support
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Sukhdeep Kaur Chohan, M.Ed., is a certified elementary school educator in Ontario, Canada. She has taught in sub-urban outer city
schools in London, England and village schools in Punjab, India. sukhi
05@gmail. com