I think the answer you are looking for is all staff members should deal with misbehavior in the same way.
But dealing with misbehavior, all in the same way, is unrealistic in the real world. Students should be able to adapt to different situations. If all the teachers do the exact same thing, the students might expect that kind of treatment in the real world and that's not going to happen.
Hello Miss/Mrs/Mr (Teacher’s Name)
I have appeared to stay my foot due to the constant force of gravity in the area of the friction towards the surface area of my left vertebrae where my foot sits. I would very much appreciate the concern for another day as for now I must get it sorted and adhesive my crucial organ back on. Although, it may stay, it must leave, till death do us part in the Earth’s tectonic plates where a volcano erupts, rather, a lava earthquake, to be more specific. I hope you understand. Deeply, my heart goes out to you and those affected by this tragedy. For this reason, please allow me to step back during the games predict this week. It may seem like an enormous favour but you must accept it, before the time runs out. Time. It is nothing but a concept. Who invented it and how did they know what the time was for this exact moment in time in the universe? We shall never know. But, what we do know, is that I cannot attend this week’s class.
Thank you for your precious time. (although, it is a concept, right?)
Yours sincerely,
(Your name)
Answer:
You can show positive attitude towards physical activities by having a goal for youself with motivation, doing regular work out rountine and just have fun
<span>One support of the behavioral perspective is how B. F. Skinner s ideas have brought to light how the environment and learning influence personality. Skinner's most important work is his theory on operant conditioning which states that people's future behavior are influenced by the consequences of their past behavior.
This means that people operate in their environment and learn from the consequences of their behavior. Good consequences encourage the behavior that produced them, while bad consequences limit the behavior that caused them.</span>