classroom management

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How you manage your classroom will determine whether or not you are a successful teacher.

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Page 1: Classroom management

How you manage your classroom will determine whether or not you are a successful teacher.

Page 2: Classroom management

Topics to be discussed on the first day of school are extremely important. If a teacher does it right, it sets a great tone for the

year!

Student Agreement/Syllabus Rules/Procedures Expectations Successful

Okay to be wrong Directions to high school Green Eggs & Ham

Emergency/Fire Drill Seating Chart Share enthusiasm/excitement

GREET AT THE DOOR!!!

Page 3: Classroom management

The #1 problem encountered by teachers in the classroom is NOT discipline, but rather the lack of structures and

procedures.

Classroom management is like an offensive lineman, in that they’re only noticed when something goes wrong.

Once it’s gone, you can never get it back.

Page 4: Classroom management

Have them for almost everything Entering and exiting the room

Homework Procedures

Materials - where they’re located

Have a “location” (dry erase board, easel, bulletin board, etc.) where that day’s expectations can be seen by students when they enter the room.

*Learning and creativity should be free flowing but behavior needs to be directed with procedures.

Page 5: Classroom management

Make the punishment fit the behavior (crime), not your level of frustration.

Handle discipline discreetly.

Learn what to overlook.

Avoid power struggles with kids.

“What hill do you wanna die on?”

Have rules, but not too many

*Handle as much as you can on your own without it allowing it to take away from learning.

Page 6: Classroom management

If kids think you care, they’ll behave.

Show concern, not aggravation.“You were behaving a little inappropriate and

it’s so unlike you.”“I know something must be bothering you for

you to act that way so I just want you to know I’m here if you need to talk.”

Made the point the behavior is inappropriate. Maintained students dignity. Acted out of concern, not frustration. Let the student know you care about them.

What have you accomplished?

Page 7: Classroom management

Make the students feel welcomed.

(It might be the only greeting they’ll get all day.)

Greeters (Walmart, Restaurants, Airplanes)People appreciate and respond to

environments where they feel welcome.Students who feel more welcome are more

likely to “buy” what you’re “selling.”

Page 8: Classroom management

When you observe positive behaviors, reward them.

Bomb de-activators (for when they “bomb” a test/quiz)

Homework passes

Mystery Motivators – reward them with something that appeals to them

Teachers are trained to recognize problems, diagnose the cause and respond accordingly. Why not try these things on positive behaviors.

“Thanks for _____________, it means a lot.”

Page 9: Classroom management

By greeting kids at the door, you can see potential problems.

Problems in the cafeteria, a previous class, in the gym, home.

Send them somewhere “Do you need a minute?” “Why don’t you go get a drin.k” Play messenger (blank envelope)

*Recognize a potential before it becomes a actual problem.

Page 10: Classroom management

Without a seating chart, “problem” students will gravitate to the back of the classroom. Even with assigned seats, problems tend to arise in

the back of the room.

MOVE AROUND!! Get to the back of the room (or that’s where the

problems will be) Use what works for you without the “teacher

eye” or verbal reprimand Move problems up front

*Physical distance = mental distance in the classroom

Page 11: Classroom management

Don’t ask a question you aren’t prepared to hear the answer to.

“How many times do I have to tell you?”“Do you have a problem?”

Questions such as these provoke defensiveness and create power struggles.

Last word kids – no matter what you say, they will always get in the last word (cause they know it pushes your buttons.)

Yellers and screamers – eventually kids know its coming. They’ll tune you out and ride out the storm.

Page 12: Classroom management

“Down time” – any time a student has nothing to do.

Usually occurs at the end of the period or an assignment as a teacher “transitions” to their next class.

Structure EVERY minute of the class period. “Teach” through the entire class.

There are several activities that can be used when confronted with the possibility of down time.

Homework – Teach by the 10, 20, 10 method A brain teaser, or problem of the week Tickets out the door DEAR time

Page 13: Classroom management

Don’t be afraid to make promises to your students.Tell them what they can expect of you.

It makes you accountable to your students. It will put your students at ease.

“No one is going to work harder to see that you’re going to be successful.”

Let kids know that it’s ok to be wrong. (Hall of Fame baseball players are unsuccessful 7 out of 10 times.)

When kids are feeling nervous or anxious, their brains focus solely on relieving the anxiety.

Page 14: Classroom management

“Bell work” doesn’t have to be problems. It can be the procedures you’ve established at the beginning of the

year.

Having proper materials/tools for that days lesson Handing out homework to go over in class

Get them working without knowing they are working.

Get them busy, keep them busy, keep your sanity!

Page 15: Classroom management

Don’t excuse the behavior, but still…attack the problem.

Some of the struggles our students deal with are beyond the scope of what we have ever encountered in our classrooms, and for that matter, in our homes.