When Students Won’t Stop Talking (2024)

When Students Won’t Stop Talking (1)

Listen to my interview with Michael Linsin (transcript):

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In my first few years of teaching, student talking was like popcorn.

I gave the class instructions for some kind of work; let’s say journal writing. And for a few seconds, they did it. Things were quiet. Then, like that first kernel of popcorn, one student said she didn’t know what to write, so I walked over to her desk to help her. While we talked, two more raised their hands—two more pops—and said they were stuck, too. I signaled to them that I’d be over in a minute, but in the meantime, someone else was closing his journal, finished already. Another pop. The two who were stuck asked him what he wrote about.

The room needs to stay quiet so we can concentrate, I told them.

Someone else had a question. Another pop. I squatted by her desk, and behind me, a conversation started between two others. Pop pop. Another journal closed while a different hand went up.

Okay people, I said, this time louder. Let’s keep it down. And with rascally smiles, they turned back to their journals to pretend to write some more. At this point, it had turned into a game.

Someone needed to sharpen their pencil. Pop. Someone else decided to race them over to the sharpener. Pop. In a matter of seconds, the whole room had erupted, a huge hysterical bowl of popcorn, exploding all around me, and I couldn’t find my way out.

And then I yelled.

If this sounds anything like you, you’re not alone. I hear it from teachers all the time. One of the things they don’t teach us in our education courses is just how freaking much students talk, and how hard it can be to quiet them down in order to get anything accomplished.

To find solutions to this problem, I went to Michael Linsin, the creator of Smart Classroom Management and my go-to person for all classroom management needs. Last year, he taught us how to set up a clear, simple classroom management plan. Now he’s going to help us understand the causes of excessive talking, what you should be able to realistically expect from students, and how you can fix the problem.

When Students Won’t Stop Talking (2)

Michael Linsin of Smart Classroom Management

First, two quick caveats.

One: I believe students need to talk. People need to talk. So if you’re shooting for a classroom environment where students sit silently and do rote seat work all day long, where they never have an opportunity to talk to their peers, where they never get out of their seats, and where the work is not engaging, you are going to have problems.

Two: A big part of good classroom management is building good relationships with your students. If you haven’t taken the time to get to know them as individuals, if you mispronounce their names, if you regularly use sarcasmor make them feel stupid for asking questions, then they aren’t going to want to behave well for you. And that’s a different problem.

So this post is based on the assumption that you’re planning engaging lessons and you have a decent relationship with your students. Without those two, these solutions might kind of work, but you’re still probably not going to love your job.

Why It’s Happening

Before you can solve this problem, you have to understand its cause. According to Linsin, excessive talking—talking that occurs during independent work time or direct instruction—happens for two reasons.

Reason 1: They don’t believe you mean it.

Despite the fact that you specifically tell students not to talk, deep down they don’t believe you mean it. “Or they don’t care,” Linsin says.

“At some point,” he explains, “Your authority has faded. If you’re able to teach to a quiet classroom in the beginning of the year and now you’re not able to, or if it happened right off the bat, then somehow at some point, the students’ respect for you and for the process, for the classroom, and your authority has faded.”

So even if they hear you, even if they understand that you want quiet at a certain time, they don’t believe anything negative will happen if they ignore your request. If they come to you with this behavior, it’s likely that it has just been part of their conditioning.

“Because so many teachers struggle with this problem,” Linsin explains, “many after a while kind of throw up their hands and just decide they’re going to talk over students, they’re going to do their best to keep things as quiet as possible during independent work time, so the students come to you (from) classrooms where the teacher asked them to be quiet but doesn’t really follow up on it.”

Reason 2: They don’t understand what “no talking” means.

This one is going to be harder for teachers to believe, but bear with us here: “No talking” may not mean exactly the same thing in different contexts, and if your students are talking more than you want them to, there’s a good chance you’re working with different definitions.

“When they come to your classroom,” Linsin explains, “and they’ve had teacher after teacher say the same thing, yet continue to allow it to happen in the classroom, then students think, Well, he or she just means we need to kind of keep our voices down, or We’re mostly quiet, but if we have important things to say to a neighbor, then we’re allowed to do that. And so they’re confused as to what the definition of ‘quiet’ really is.”

In many cases, Linsin notes, the problem is likely being caused by a combination of both of these reasons. But notice that neither reason is a blanket statement about students being disrespectful. This is why I like Linsin’s approach: He puts control for classroom management in the teacher’s hands, rather than placing blame on the student. That’s not to say that you won’t have disrespectful students, but shifting the blame to them means you have no power over the situation. Blaming the students simply isn’t a useful way to address the problem.

“When students are not doing something that you’ve previously taught them how to do,” Linsin says, “whether it’s talking or entering the classroom, and they don’t do it well, even though the students are responsible for their behavior, when most of the class is not doing what you ask, it’s on you. It’s about you. There’s some disconnect there, there’s something they’re not understanding.”

When Students Won’t Stop Talking (3)

What You Should Be Able to Expect

Some teachers might wonder whether it’s reasonable to expect students to be quiet at all, especially if they are younger. Linsin says yes without hesitation. “You should absolutely expect, no matter where you’re teaching or what grade level, that the students are able to sit quietly while you’re giving instruction or directions, and they should be able to sit quietly and work during independent work times.”

Should there also be times when talking is permitted? “Absolutely,” Linsin says. “It’s really important to give students an opportunity to express themselves, to get up and move around, to work in groups and pairs and discuss. Classrooms should be vibrant and interesting, exciting places, and so I’m all for getting students up and moving and having fun. Those things just make classroom management stronger, and they free you to ask anything of your students, including silence.”

The Solution

If you came here looking for a few tricks to end excessive talking, the bad news is that you won’t find anything clever or earth-shattering. The good news is that the solution is pretty simple, and it requires no behavior charts, tokens, or Jolly Ranchers.

Step 1: Define expectations in explicit detail.

“The fix,” Linsin says, “is to define, in detail, exactly what you want during independent work time and when you’re teaching a directed lesson.”

If you believe you’ve already done this, and it hasn’t worked, the issue is probably lack of detail in your explanation. Linsin says you need to go far deeper than what most teachers probably do.

“So you may bring a desk or a table up in front of your classroom, sit down, and pretend to be a student. You may have other students acting as models also. Show students how you expect them to behave while you’re giving instruction, and then how you expect them to behave when they’re doing independent work.”

“It’s also important to include what not to do,” he adds. “So you’ll model those exact behaviors that you’re seeing, those exact talking behaviors, whether it’s side-talking or standing up and whispering to someone, or whatever your classroom looks like. Even if it’s chaotic, whatever that chaos looks like exactly, you want the students to be able to see themselves in your modeling and what isn’t okay.”

Step 2: Have students practice.

Once you’ve modeled the desired behavior, have students practice it, just like you’d have them practice any skill you’re teaching.

Linsin gives an example of what this might look like. You’d start by saying, “‘I’m going to give you 60 seconds, and I want you to show me what good listening looks like, and no talking. So let’s pretend I’m standing and giving you a lesson. I want to know what that looks like.’ And then you’ll stand and maybe you’ll cross your arms and put your hand under your chin, and you’ll watch them.”

Keep this instruction light, he says. Keep it fun. “You’ll stare at them and you’ll walk around the room, and you’ll watch one of them, and you’ll nod your head and say, ‘Mmhmm, okay, that looks good. Mmhmm. Chin up a little higher!’It’s okay to have fun with it. None of this is a punishment. It’s just good teaching. Whether you’re teaching how to find a topic sentence or how you want your students to line up before recess, it’s all teaching. So it’s okay to have fun with it. It’s okay for them to laugh at some of the things you say or to see themselves in the behaviors, which they love, by the way, especially if you exaggerate it and have some fun with it.”

The Sign Strategy:Students are often put in an awkward position when a classmate tries to talk to them during these quiet times. They want to follow your guidelines, but they also don’t want to be rude to a classmate. Agree on some kind of physical sign they can give each other at these times. “It can be a scissors or peace sign or whatever’s culturally acceptable wherever you teach. And all they do is just hold the sign up, and the sign means, ‘I’m really sorry, but I have to listen to the lesson,’ or ‘I’m really sorry, but I have to do my work.’ And you can tell them that if they give the sign and that student who sees the sign turns and gets back to work, you will not enforce a consequence, because they’re showing responsible behavior.”

Step 3: Teach the consequences.

“Walk them through the exact steps that would happen if they turn and talk to a neighbor, for example,” Linsin says. “The exact steps a misbehaving student would take from your initial warning to contacting parents or whatever your consequences look like.”

In order to do this, you have to know what your consequences are. Spend some time making sure you’re clear on that. If you need help, read our post on creating a classroom management plan.

Step 4: Do it for real.

Once students have been taught your expectations and have practiced exactly what they look like, it’s time to apply it in a real lesson. “Have a directed lesson ready,” Linsin advises, “to have them prove to you they can do it in practice.”

If you’ve taught the expectations in detail, students should do a good job, but if they don’t, you need to enforce your consequences exactly as you described. “You almost hope during that first wonderful lesson, that one student maybe turns, and so the class can see that you’re holding them accountable.”

If enforcing your consequences is difficult for you—and for many teachers, it will be—read Linsin’s post on why teachers struggle to consistently enforce consequences.

When Students Won’t Stop Talking (5)

Step 5: Continue to define expectations in small chunks.

This last step is crucial. From this point forward, keep telling students what is expected of them before every switch in classroom activity. When you are about to do group work, let students know that talking within the group is okay. If you then switch to independent work, remind them that absolute quiet will be expected. Briefly describe what that will look like, even spelling out what not to do if that fits the activity.

Taking time to do this might seem unnecessary, but being clear ahead of time will prevent problems.“Anytime you can give a reminder before misbehavior,” Linsin says, “it’s a good thing. Anytime you give a reminder after you see misbehavior, it’s a bad thing. You should be holding students accountable, but be preemptive whenever you can.”

Learn More from Michael Linsin

When Students Won’t Stop Talking (6)

The Happy Teacher Habits

(Links to this book are Amazon Affiliate links, which means I get a small commission on purchases you make through my links at no additional cost to you.)

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What to Read Next

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  • Know Your Terms: Holistic, Analytic, and Single-Point Rubrics

Posted In:

Categories: Classroom Management, Podcast

Tags: behavior management

When Students Won’t Stop Talking (2024)

FAQs

What to do when a student keeps talking? ›

15 Ways to Quiet a Chatty Class
  1. 1 – Desk Friend Quiet Reminders. ...
  2. 3 – Pre-Planned “Chat Time” ...
  3. 4 – Include Discussions in Your Lesson Plans. ...
  4. 5 – Give Yourself and Your Students Some Grace. ...
  5. 7 – Wireless Doorbell to Stop the Chatter. ...
  6. 9 – Make it a Challenge or Game. ...
  7. 10 – Rearrange the Furniture. ...
  8. 12 – Noise Level Lights.
Sep 13, 2021

How do you deal with constant talking in the classroom? ›

Curb Classroom Chatter! 6 Practical Ways to Deal With a Talkative Class
  1. Consider the “Whys” Before doing anything else, do some investigating. ...
  2. Restart and redefine. ...
  3. Model and practice. ...
  4. Reteach consistently as needed. ...
  5. Talk less. ...
  6. Make time for meaningful chatter.
Oct 6, 2021

How do you deal with smart but talkative students? ›

Tips for Dealing with a Talkative Class
  1. Don't Teach Over Student Talking. ...
  2. Less Teacher Talk. ...
  3. Give Students Opportunities to Talk Regularly. ...
  4. Keep Students Engaged and Moving. ...
  5. Have an Attention Getter and Practice the Procedure. ...
  6. Change Up Your Positive Behavior Program. ...
  7. Be Firm and Fair With Discipline. ...
  8. Noise Isn't the Enemy.
Sep 23, 2019

Should disruptive students be removed from a classroom? ›

Remember that disruptive behavior is often caused by stress or frustration. Address the disruption individually, directly and immediately. Be specific about the behavior that is disruptive and set limits. Remove the student from that class session if the student does not comply with your actions.

Why do students keep talking in class? ›

Chattiness begins when the teacher loses the attention of one or more students in the class. In many cases, this occurs because of information overload. Middle school students have attention spans limited by their incomplete brain development. Most can retain only five to seven pieces of information at a time.

How do you deal with a child who talks constantly? ›

Tips to handle hyper talkative children :
  1. Don't label your children. Labeling your children talkative can come as a serious blow and affect their self-esteem. ...
  2. Let them talk. ...
  3. Set boundaries. ...
  4. Playing a quiet game. ...
  5. Silent activities. ...
  6. Be positive and be patient.

What causes a person to talk nonstop? ›

Compulsive. Compulsive talking occurs when someone feels they cannot stop talking or they compulsively keep talking nonstop. This can occur for several reasons, including severe anxiety, the impact of substances, and ADHD.

Why does my 7 year old never stop talking? ›

They may just be passionate about a topic and want to share every single detail about it. Kids may also talk nonstop if they're stressed out. They may not know how to calm themselves, so they talk and talk. Shy kids might get anxious in social situations.

Is excessive talking part of ADHD? ›

Excessive talking is a common symptom for kids with ADHD (attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder), who often have trouble inhibiting and controlling their responses. 1 They may blurt out whatever first comes to mind, whether appropriate or not, without thinking through how their words may be received.

How do you treat compulsive talking? ›

How to deal with a compulsive talker
  1. Attempt to redirect the conversation. Without being confrontational, introduce another topic and ask others to share their thoughts.
  2. Intervene. ...
  3. Point out the pattern of interrupting. ...
  4. Talk to the overtalker privately. ...
  5. Leave the room. ...
  6. Orchestrate gatherings.
Feb 22, 2019

What is the condition of constant talking? ›

Logorrhea is characterized by the constant need to talk. Occasionally, patients with logorrhea may produce speech with normal prosody and a slightly fast speech rate.

How can I quiet a class without yelling? ›

There are lots of great techniques for quieting a noisy classroom that don't involve your vocal cords. Try ringing a bell or a doorbell, playing music, clapping your hands, or turning over a rainstick. Train your students to recognize the sound as a signal to turn off their voices and turn their attention to you.

How do you know if a student is intelligent? ›

Some signs that often appear in children include:
  1. Intense need for mental stimulation and engagement.
  2. Ability to learn new topics quickly.
  3. Ability to process new and complex information rapidly.
  4. Desire to explore specific topics in great depth.
  5. Insatiable curiosity, often demonstrated by many questions.
Jun 7, 2022

How do teachers deal with disruptive students? ›

Lead discussions that focus on the positive rather than negative. Identify what it is the student is doing to disrupt the classroom. Make sure to clearly express your expectations for behavior. Stay calm and do not become defensive.

Will ignoring disruptive behavior just make it worse? ›

The behavior you ignore will get worse before it goes away. This is because the behavior used to work to get attention, so students will try it again and again and again until they realize it is no longer effective.

What is the best way to deal first with a defiant hostile student? ›

7 Effective Communication Techniques to Manage Defiant Students
  1. Prepare, Prepare, Prepare. There is no stronger classroom management technique than preparation. ...
  2. Remain Calm. ...
  3. Your Words Matter. ...
  4. Praise Positive Behavior. ...
  5. Let Them Know You Care. ...
  6. Give Them an Incentive. ...
  7. Ask for Help. ...
  8. Dealing With Defiant Students.
Apr 13, 2020

Is excessive talking ADHD or autism? ›

Other social differences may include: ADHDers are more likely to talk excessively, interrupt others and not listen to what is being said, while Autistics are more likely to struggle with back-and-forth conversation and use language repetitively or robotically (Sokolova et al., 2017).

Can excessive talking be a symptom of autism? ›

One of the hallmarks of High-Functioning Autism (HFA) and Asperger's is the kid's tendency to be obsessed with a particular topic and to talk incessantly about it. The child may want to constantly talk about cartoon characters, insects, movies, race cars, video games, etc.

What does a talkative child mean? ›

Typically, a talkative child is one who loves to socialise, is friendly and outgoing. Ever so often these aspects, however, are camouflaged by the child's nonstop chatter and one tends to be weighed down by this singular aspect of the child's personality.

What is it called when someone won't stop talking? ›

If someone's always mouthing off and just can't shut up, they've got logorrhea, a pathological inability to stop talking. Sounds better than "loudmouth." As its sound suggests, logorrhea is related to diarrhea — an inability to stop something far more unpleasant from flowing.

What does incessant talking mean? ›

: in an unceasing manner : without interruption or relief : continually. talking incessantly.

Do gifted kids talk a lot? ›

Some gifted kids like to talk a lot. They love to share their knowledge with others. They are highly verbal, and may possess an advanced vocabulary for their age. When talking to students, pay attention to not only how much they talk but also to the vocabulary used in daily conversation.

Why do autistic kids talk so much? ›

Children with autism spectrum disorder often become overly interested in a single object or subject and devote all their time and attention to it. They tend to learn everything they can about that one topic and talk about it constantly, sometimes sounding like a junior expert. Unusual speech.

What age do kids stop talking constantly? ›

Older kids should be able to keep quiet

But by age five, they typically master the social conventions of a conversation: taking turns talking and listening.

What are signs of ADHD when talking? ›

Hyperactivity and impulsiveness
  • being unable to sit still, especially in calm or quiet surroundings.
  • constantly fidgeting.
  • being unable to concentrate on tasks.
  • excessive physical movement.
  • excessive talking.
  • being unable to wait their turn.
  • acting without thinking.
  • interrupting conversations.

What do people with ADHD talk like? ›

People with ADHD often exhibit such behaviors as blurting out answers, interrupting, oversharing, and speaking at too high a volume. These things break away from the social norms of interaction and conversation. This can cause difficulties when relating to and interacting with others.

Why do ADHD kids talk so much? ›

Children with ADHD and impulsivity issues might talk excessively because it's difficult for them to think before they speak. The adage "think before you speak" isn't easy for my child to adhere to, especially when he's excited.

What is the psychology of people who talk too much? ›

Over-talking often arises from social anxiety, which creates a troubling feedback loop. The more people talk, the more anxious they become about their social selves, and the more they talk. At that point, over-talking can feel like an uncontrollable habit.

What is speech OCD? ›

What is speaking related OCD? People with Perfectionism OCD focused on speaking experience intrusive doubts, thoughts, or fears regarding their verbal communication. Someone with fear of speaking OCD may find it difficult to say specific words, phrases, etc., or to express certain concepts or themes when around others.

What is tangential speech? ›

[1] Tangentiality refers to a disturbance in the thought process that causes the individual to relate excessive or irrelevant detail that never reaches the essential point of a conversation or the desired answer to a question.

What is rambling a symptom of? ›

Disorganization. Disorganization involves thought disorders and bizarre behavior: Thought disorder refers to disorganized thinking, which becomes apparent when speech is rambling or shifts from one topic to another. Speech may be mildly disorganized or completely incoherent and incomprehensible.

What is it called when someone keeps talking and talking? ›

Definitions of loquacious. adjective. full of trivial conversation. synonyms: chatty, gabby, garrulous, talkative, talky voluble.

How do I tell my students to be quiet? ›

  1. Explain Your Plan and Establish Consequences. ...
  2. Grab their Attention from the Start of Class. ...
  3. Use Clapping and Echo Games to Get Their Attention. ...
  4. Stop and Listen. ...
  5. Take Off Quietly with Themes. ...
  6. Choose a Secret Behavior Representative. ...
  7. Praise Students Silently. ...
  8. Develop Empathy in Disruptive Students.
Jun 19, 2020

How do you tell a class to quiet down? ›

15 creative & respectful ways to quiet a class
  1. Sing a song. For the youngest students, use finger plays like the Itsy Bitsy Spider and Open, Shut Them. ...
  2. Play a song. ...
  3. Use a special sound. ...
  4. Clap out a rhythm. ...
  5. Get kids moving. ...
  6. Do a countdown. ...
  7. Try a hand signal. ...
  8. Use sign language.

How do you control a crazy classroom? ›

10 Ways to Control an Unruly Class
  1. Be the boss. Think of yourself as the commander in chief! ...
  2. Redirect Attention. ...
  3. Let the children call the shots... ...
  4. Give Incentives to Do Their Best. ...
  5. Keep an Eye Out. ...
  6. Establish Consequences for Misbehaving.
Sep 20, 2019

What are the 7 signs of intelligence? ›

7 Signs You're Incredibly Intelligent
  • Smart People Prefer Dynamic Work. ...
  • You See Patterns Others Don't. ...
  • You Prefer Building to Communicating. ...
  • You Have Adapted to the Modern World Better Than Those Around You. ...
  • You're Happier Working without Distractions. ...
  • You've Developed Perfect Adaptation Skills.
Jul 15, 2022

What is the IQ of a smart student? ›

85 to 114: Average intelligence. 115 to 129: Above average or bright. 130 to 144: Moderately gifted. 145 to 159: Highly gifted.

What are the characteristics of high IQ? ›

Positive signs of high intelligence
  • Good memory and thinking ability. ...
  • Good attitude and hard-working nature. ...
  • General and Tacit Knowledge. ...
  • Good language proficiency and reasoning skills. ...
  • Reliable decision-making. ...
  • Trusted by others. ...
  • High Creativity. ...
  • High Achievements.
Feb 10, 2023

Is it normal for a child to talk non stop? ›

There are lots of reasons kids talk too much. They may just be passionate about a topic and want to share every single detail about it. Kids may also talk nonstop if they're stressed out. They may not know how to calm themselves, so they talk and talk.

What to do when your child talks too much in school? ›

The first thing to do is to talk with your child's doctor, who may want to prescribe or change medications or refer your child to a psychologist or occupational therapist to address excessive talking. If it's left unaddressed, it may impair your child's learning and social life.

What is excessive talking a symptom of? ›

Hyperverbal speech may show up as a symptom of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) or anxiety . If you have anxiety, you might talk more than usual or speak very quickly when you feel most nervous. Excessive talking about the self.

What disorder causes excessive talking? ›

In psychology, logorrhea or logorrhoea (from Ancient Greek λόγος logos "word" and ῥέω rheo "to flow") is a communication disorder that causes excessive wordiness and repetitiveness, which can cause incoherency.

What mental illness causes excessive talking? ›

Schizotypal Personality Disorder: Compulsive talking can also be a symptom of Schizotypal Personality Disorder. Individuals with this disorder may compulsively discuss specific ideas or beliefs, such as conspiracy theories, ESP, or paranoid thoughts.

How do I get my child to talk quiet in class? ›

Encouraging Students to Participate: How to Help Shy Students...
  1. Create a Safe Space. There is absolutely nothing wrong with being introverted. ...
  2. Start Small (Groups) ...
  3. Assign Conversation Partners. ...
  4. Let Them Prepare.

What is it called when you can't stop talking? ›

Compulsive talking (or talkaholism) is talking that goes beyond the bounds of what is considered to be socially acceptable.

Is yelling at a student abuse? ›

Child abuse is when an adult hurts a child, and it is not an accident. Hitting, constant yelling or unwanted touching can all be child abuse.

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