Search for Course

Code Titel ST Date EN Date Venue Register
MAS12 Dealing with Difficult Behavior 2025-10-02 2025-10-06 cairo
MAS12 Dealing with Difficult Behavior 2025-08-14 2025-08-18 IStanbul
MAS12 Dealing with Difficult Behavior 2025-06-19 2025-06-23 Sharm El-Shaikh

  Course outline

  • What Is the Behavior?
  • What Is the Situation?
  • Understanding the Reasons for Difficult Behavior
  • What Is Going on Before, During, and After the Behavior?
  • How Do You Feel About the Behavior?
  • What Changes Would Make the Behavior or Situation Acceptable?
  • Understanding the Reasons for Difficult Behavior
  • Develop tactics that can help manage difficult behavior
  • Diagnose underlying factors that cause barriers or breakdown of communication
  • Respond to difficult situations with professionalism and confidence
  • Examples of Difficult      
  • Behavior
    • Examples of Difficult Behavior
    • Aggressive abusive behavior
  • Disruptive behavior
  • Bored, apathetic and disinterested
  • Strange bizarre behavior
  • Non-attendance
  • Non Compliance
  • Scapegoating
    • Lack of personal hygiene
    • Personality conflicts - Which aspects?
    • Potential Reasons for Behavior
    • Underlying Causes of Difficult Behavior
    • Don’t want to be there
    • Disability/health problems, brain injury, psych illness, diabetes
    • Emotionally upset Sad, angry, grieving
    • Inappropriate social skills, eg. Different culture, low self-awareness
  • Low self-esteem
    • Just having a bad day
    • Practical Action Section
    • Recognizing your own responses
    • Our Emotional Baggage
    • Early life experience
    • Unresolved anger, grief and loss
  • Our own prejudices
  • Personality style
  • Professional insecurities
  • Work stress
  •  Home pressures and concerns
  •  Just having a bad day
  •  Popular Irrational Beliefs
  • Recognizing your own responses
  • The person you have most control over is you!
  • Managing Yourself
  • Know your buttons or triggers
  • Refer on
  •  Recognise you’re aroused/upset
  • Consciously calm and relax yourself
  •  Take time to choose your response
  •  Get another perspective and/or debrief
  •  Deal with your feelings
  • Get over it!
  • Prevention and Early Intervention Prevention
  • Make environment comfortable and program interesting
  • Explore students’ motivation to be in the group
  • Establish group rules and contracts - boundaries
  • Involve participants in the decision making
  • Establish a positive relationship and encourage relationships in the group modelling
  • Prevention and Early Intervention Prevention
  • Accept that it is OK to express feelings
  • Listen to and acknowledge students feelings and concerns
  • Behavior observation
  • Be consistent in applying rules and boundaries
  • Re-assess, update
  • Reward positive behavior and ignore non-damaging negative
  • Model appropriate behavior
  • Initial Techniques for Responding to Difficult Behavior
  • Keep yourself and other students safe
  • Don’t add to the angst; stay calm, be discreet
  • Ignore negative, non-damaging behavior
  • Communicate your concern clearly.
  • Acknowledge the person’s feelings.
  • Refer back to contracts made earlier
  • Don’t issue ultimatums
  • Provide the opportunity for time out or a private chat
  • Assess the impact on others. Seek advice if necessary.
  • Follow up after an incident
  • Documenting the specifics of the incident
  • Determine the seriousness.
  • Options for action:
  • University ordinances/policy
  • Referral to line manager
  •  Meeting to develop behavior agreement
  •  further training and support for staff
  • Guidelines for an informal meeting
  • Sample Behavior Agreement
  • Self-care issues and other support available
  • Recognise the effect an interaction has on you
  • Allow yourself recovery time
  • Be aware of things that help you to recover effectively and quickly
  • Be available to support others who may have been through a difficult interaction where possible
  • Access other helping agencies
  • support available to you
    • staff counselling
    • supervisor
    • HR
    • Student Services
    • a Summary Master Plan

 Who Can Benefit?

  • Frontline managers
  • supervisors, team leaders, coordinators, administrators, public relations and sales personnel and other staff members who deal with the public or provide a service to internal clients