i can do it malinda giles, malinda giles, nbct lawton public schools lawton, ok melonie hau, melonie...
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I Can Do ItI Can Do ItI Can Do ItI Can Do ItMalinda GilesMalinda Giles,, NBCTLawton Public Schools
Lawton, OK
Melonie HauMelonie Hau, , NBCTDeer Creek Public
Schools Edmond, OK
Session 1: Training Goals Session 1: Training Goals Session 1: Training Goals Session 1: Training Goals
Let’s Get StartedLet’s Get Started
KWL Chart
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WWWhhhaaattt yyyooouuu wwwaaannnttttttooo kkknnnooowww:::
WWWhhhaaattt yyyooouuullleeeaaarrrnnneeeddd:::What I Know What I Want to Know What I Learned
Training GoalsParticipants will:
1. Learn about the elements necessary for successful classroom management.
2. Discover communication styles and how they relate to student/teacher/parent communication.3. Learn about interventions for selected difficult behaviors encountered in the classroom.4. Have opportunities to find out about hints that help
create the smoothly flowing classroom.5. Acquire information that will help build
successful parent/teacher relationships. 6. Have the opportunity to link with a support partner at or
near one's grade and/or content level.
Agenda9:00-10:15
Sessions 1-3
10:15 Break
10:25-12:00Sessions 4-6
12:00-1:00 Lunch
1:00-3:00Sessions 7-9
• Ensure the safety of staff and students.
• Create an engaging learning environment.
Objectives of Classroom Management
Session 2: Getting to Session 2: Getting to Know Your StudentsKnow Your Students
Session 2: Getting to Session 2: Getting to Know Your StudentsKnow Your Students
Creating Classroom Creating Classroom CommunitiesCommunities
Survival
Safety
Bonding
Community
Personal Responsibility
Come To The Edge
Come to the edge.
It’s too tall.
Come to the edge.
I’ll fall.
Come to the edge.
And they came.
And you pushed them.
And they flew.
Creating Acceptance
•Make eye contact with each student
•Call all students by their first or preferred name
•Move toward and stay close to the learners
•“With-it-ness”
Enhancing AcceptanceCOMFORT
1. Room Temperature2. Furniture Arrangement3. Physical Activity4. Breaks5. Bulletin Boards/Walls6. Climate (Humor and Tone)
Order1. Routines2. Guidelines3. Perception of Safety
CLASSROOM CLIMATE
• What I will do to help students:_____ feel accepted by the teacher and their peers_____ perceive the classroom as a comfortable and orderly place
Responding the Right WayThese are power behaviors that influence a student’s sense of acceptance
and thereby enhance his or her creativity and engagement with the lesson.
Provide Wait TimePausing to allow a student more time to answer instead of moving on to another student
when you don’t’ get an immediate response
Dignify ResponsesGiving credit for the correct aspects of an incorrect response
Restate the QuestionAsk the question again using the same words
Rephrase the QuestionUse different words that might increase the probability of a correct response
Provide GuidanceGiving enough hints and clues so that the student will eventually determine the correct
answer
Session 3: Session 3: Rules and RoutinesRules and Routines
Session 3: Session 3: Rules and RoutinesRules and Routines
How Do I Get Started?How Do I Get Started?
The chief sourceof the “problem of discipline”
in schools is that…a premium is put onphysical quietude; on silence, on rigiduniformity of posture and movement;upon a machine-like simulation of theattitudes of intelligent interest. The
teacher’s business is to hold the pupils upto these requirements and to punish the
inevitable deviations which occur.
John DeweyDemocracy and Education
Independent ActivitiesStudents Should Know:
• Where to get materials
• What to do if they have a question
• Where to work• Where to put finished
work• What the classroom
rules are
• How to focus on the task
• What the limitations are
• If and why the teacher is unavailable
Formula for Success
VoiceVoice + + ChoiceChoice = = LoyaltyLoyalty
Make it a rule of lifenever to look back.
Regret is an appalling waste ofenergy; you can’t build it; it’s only
good for wallowing in.Katherine Mansfield,
Writer(1888-1923)
• Involve the class in making rules.• Keep the rules short and easy to understand.• Phrase rules in a positive way.• Remind the class of the rules at times other than
when someone has misbehaved.• Make different rules for different kinds of
activities.• Key children in to when different rules apply.• Post the rules and review them every so often.• If a rule isn’t working change it.
How to Establish Rules
How Do You Think He Did?
– Made a plan– Used his resources– Changed what he
was doing when things weren’t working
– Hung in when the going got tough
– Trusted his own ideas and abilities
Rules are unclear or seen as unfairly or inconsistently enforced.
Students did not believe in the rules.
Teachers & administrators did not know the rules.
Teachers & administrators disagreed on responses to student misconduct.
Teacher & administrator cooperation was poor.
Administration was inactive.
Teachers had punitive attitudes.
Misconduct was ignored.
Schools were too large.
Schools lacked adequate resources for teaching.
John Hopkins University Researchers, Gottfredsons
CARS Newsletter, April/May 1995
SCHOOL/CLASSROOM CHARACTERISTICS ASSOCIATED WITH DISCIPLINE PROBLEMS
Session 4: Session 4: ReinforcementsReinforcements
Session 4: Session 4: ReinforcementsReinforcements
Rewards and PraiseRewards and Praise
If you punish a child for being naughty, and
reward him for being good, he will do right merely for the sake of the reward, and when he goes out into the world and finds that goodness
is not always rewarded, nor wickedness always punished, he will grow into a man who thinks about how he may get on in the world, and does right or wrong
according as he finds of advantage to himself.
Immanuel Kant Education
Selecting Appropriate Reinforcers
1.Ask the child.
2.Observe the child’s preferences.
3.Use what worked elsewhere.
4.Give the student choices.
5.Reinforcers lose value over time.
Instructions forGive-One-Get-One
1. Jot down three (3) of your own ideas.2. Get up and find someone from another table. Share
your lists.3. Give one new idea from your list to your partner. Get
one new idea from your partner's list.4. Move on to a new partner and repeat Steps 2 and 3.5. If your list and your partner's list are identical and you
have no new ideas to exchange, you must remain together and brainstorm something that can be added to each of your lists.
**Note: Exchange no more than one idea with any given partner.
Session 5: Polishing Your Session 5: Polishing Your TechniqueTechnique
Session 5: Polishing Your Session 5: Polishing Your TechniqueTechniqueTips and HintsTips and Hints
Session 6: Smoothly Flowing Session 6: Smoothly Flowing ClassroomsClassrooms
Session 6: Smoothly Flowing Session 6: Smoothly Flowing ClassroomsClassrooms
Signals, Transitions and SpongesSignals, Transitions and Sponges
SIGNALSUse a classroom signal for attentionWhatever signal you use -- be consistent!!!
GIVING DIRECTIONSPlan your directions ahead of timeUse 3 step directionsGive directions immediately before the activityGet the attention of every studentGet feed back from studentsTell them and show themKeep your voice lowUse signals for whole class response
Thumbs up = yesThumbs down = no
Fist = question or I don't know
Independent ActivitiesStudents Should Know:
• Where to get materials
• What to do if they have a question
• Where to work• Where to put finished
work• What the classroom
rules are
• How to focus on the task
• What the limitations are
• If and why the teacher is unavailable
Smoothly Flowing ClassroomsTransition Problems
1. A few students always seem to be slow during transitions delaying the rest of the class.
2. Students frequently find reasons to wander during transitions.
3. The teacher delays the beginning of activities to look for materials, finish attendance reporting, returning or collecting papers, or chat with individual students while other students wait.
4. Students talk loudly at the beginning of the period. The teacher is interrupted while checking attendance, and the start of content activities is delayed.
5. Students socialize too much during transitions, especially after an assignment has been given, but before they have begun working on it. Many students do not start their assignments for several minutes.
6. Students stop working well before the end-of-period bell. They then engage in excessive talking and inappropriate behavior.
7. Whenever the teacher attempts to move the students from one activity to another, a number of students don’t make the transition but continue working on the preceding activity. This delays the start of the new activity or results in confusion.
8. While the teacher gives directions during a transition, many students do not pay attention. They continue to put their materials away or get new materials.
Session 7: Communication Session 7: Communication StylesStyles
Session 7: Communication Session 7: Communication StylesStyles
Sensors, Thinkers, Feelers, and Sensors, Thinkers, Feelers, and IntuitorsIntuitors
Session 8: Home/School Session 8: Home/School CommunicationCommunication
Session 8: Home/School Session 8: Home/School CommunicationCommunication
Two-way communicationTwo-way communication
Home & SchoolHome & School
CommunicationCommunication
IndividualIndividual
StudentsStudents
InstructionalInstructional
ProgramProgram
EngagingEngaging
FamiliesFamilies
HOME AND SCHOOL COMMUNICATIONHOME AND SCHOOL COMMUNICATION
PAGE 67 INTRODUCTION LETTER
WEEKLY PROGRESS REPORTS
PAGE 68-69 LETTER HOME – Have a tear-off that the parent/guardian signs and returns so you have a record (Keep a paper trail).
PAGE 70 LETTER REGARDING DISCIPLINE
PAGE 71-72 STRATEGIES FOR DEALING WITH HOSTILE PARENTS
HINTS
*****KEEP A LOG OF PARENTAL CONTACTS
*****KEEP YOUR PRINCIPAL INFORMED – GIVE HIM/HER COPIES OF YOUR HOME COMMUNICATIONS
Session #9: Dealing with Session #9: Dealing with Difficult BehaviorsDifficult Behaviors
Session #9: Dealing with Session #9: Dealing with Difficult BehaviorsDifficult Behaviors
Carousel BrainstormingCarousel Brainstorming
GOALS WHEN DEALING WITH GOALS WHEN DEALING WITH
DIFFICULT BEHAVIORDIFFICULT BEHAVIOR
1. To eliminate or minimize the behavior.
2. To maintain student’s self esteem.
3. To maintain the lesson.
AttentionAttention
AvoidanceAvoidance
PowerPower
Do It:Quietly
Calmly
Privately
Discussing Inappropriate Behaviors
Every Time You Can!
Whenever you are dealing with unacceptable behavior always question whether the behavior in question is an isolated event or a recurring symptom of a greater problem.
Don’t major in minor problems!
KWL Chart
WWWhhhaaattt yyyooouuukkknnnooowww:::
WWWhhhaaattt yyyooouuu wwwaaannnttttttooo kkknnnooowww:::
WWWhhhaaattt yyyooouuullleeeaaarrrnnneeeddd:::What I Know What I Want to Know What I Learned
Phases of First Year Teacher’s
Attitudes Towards Teaching
Anticipation
Survival
Disillusionment
Rejuvenation
Reflection
Anticipation
Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May June July
Source: Trainer’s Manual, Support Provider Training, Revised May 1996