“ keep student drama on the stage and out of your classroom ”

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Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom

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Page 1: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

“Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom”

Page 2: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

Compensatory EducationThe idea behind compensatory education

is to, in a sense, "compensate" for disadvantages that children living in poverty face by expanding and improving the educational programs offered.

Page 3: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

Early intervention programs that focus on young preschool and primary school children, attempt to provide them with the skills they will need in school.

Many of these skills they do not learn at home or in their regular school.

Page 4: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

According to Ruby Payne in her book , A Framework for Understanding Poverty,

Low achievement can be closely correlated with low socioeconomic status.

Poverty can be related to academic achievement in the United States.

Page 5: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

Facts About Low-Income FamiliesBefore entering kindergarten, the average

cognitive scores of preschool-age children in the highest socioeconomic group are 60% above the average scores of children in the lowest socioeconomic group.

At age 4 years, children who live below the poverty line are 18 months below what is normal for their age group

By age 10 that gap is still present. For children living in the poorest families, the gap is even larger

Page 6: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

By the time children from middle-income families with well-educated parents are in 3rd grade, they know about 12,000 words.

Third grade children from low-income families with undereducated parents who don’t talk to them very much have vocabularies of around 4,000 words,

One-third as many words as their middle-income peers.

Page 7: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

It has been well documented that there is an association between family poverty and children’s health, achievement and behavior

Family income appears to be more strongly related to children’s ability and achievement than to their long term emotional outcomes.

Page 8: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

•Educational professionals know that the science of teaching requires developing specific, measurable goals, which determine mastery.

•The art of teaching rests on the instructor’s innate understanding of students’ needs and motivations, which are complex and difficult to identify, much less, to measure.

SCIENCE AND ART OF TEACHING

Page 9: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

Art of Teaching and Classroom Management

Through clear, systematic instruction, this presentation proves how effective classroom management brings the art and science of teaching into balance, which in turn, translates into academic success and personal satisfaction for students

Page 10: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

Understanding certain beliefs will provide a foundation that will change the life of teachers and student.

I am providing a set of strategies and beliefs that students and teachers will carry with them the rest of their lives.

 

Page 11: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

Caring is KeyBuilding on the central belief that caring is

the key to effective teaching, the “why”, “what”, and “how-to’s” of research-based classroom management strategies are the focus of this presentation.

Page 12: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

Key ComponentsBut first there are beliefs to reflect upon.

Caring is the key. Understand that conflict is an essential part

of growing up. The strategies presented to you have helped

teachers realize how “good behavior” must be systematically taught, how behavior can be changed and how “good discipline” is related to “good timing.”

Page 13: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

It’s All About Timing…It is always “good timing” to implement self-

control, especially when a problem has potential for escalating.

It is the SMARTR response to remain calm and use words or phrases that neutralize verbal exchange and maintain teaching. Some examples are to say “I understand” or “nevertheless”.

Page 14: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

Who better to provide this than the teacher who acts as a role model and teaches life skills?

Teachers are the provider of life skills and correct behaviors that will help the student excel today and tomorrow. What you expect and teach in the classroom will be your return

Page 15: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

What to ExpectOutline ways to allow your students to rise to

meet your behavioral expectations. Given tools to guide your students to a level

of learning you never thought possible. Outcome

Students are able to focus on learning not the discipline

Page 16: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

Expect To Be…challenged to reexamine traditionally-held

assumptions about behaviors that students bring with them to the classroom and will be asked to make adjustments to their educational philosophies based on this paradigm shift.

Page 17: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

BE PROACTIVEThis is not, however, an “all talk, no action”

presentation. Innovative, common sense techniques for classroom management will be modeled for participants.

Session attendees will return to the classroom equipped with the tools they need to put philosophy into effective practice.

Page 18: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

STUDENT EXPECTATIONSChildren come with all kinds of ‘plans’, just

like cell phones the reception is better on some networks than others.

We can no longer assume they can ‘hear you now’.

We need to have clear connections with our students before we can try to begin to teach.

Page 19: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

WHAT YOU LEAVE WITH…What teachers will take from this is a belief

system and a set of strategies which are the foundation of the nationally acclaimed Time to Teach seminars.

Punishment does not work because it is a temporary fix for a set of behaviors.

This will impact your teaching.

Page 20: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

Are You Ready…To change the cultural of your campus that is

based on mutual respect for the teacher and student that ensures that teachers can teach and students can learn.

Page 21: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

For More Information…You can go to youhavetimetoteach.com

Or email me [email protected]

Page 22: “ Keep Student Drama on the Stage and Out of Your Classroom ”

Thank You!