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Effective Classroom Management Techniques

Effective Classroom Management Techniques. Freddy Poitra August 2009. Stress Test.

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Effective Classroom Management Techniques

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  1. Effective Classroom Management Techniques Freddy Poitra August 2009

  2. Stress Test • On the next slide, look at both dolphins jumping out of the water. The dolphins are identical. A closely monitored, scientific study of a group of scientists revealed that in spite of the fact that the dolphins are identical, a person under stress would find differences in the two dolphins. The number of differences observed matches closely to the amount of stress the observer is experiencing.Look at the photograph and if you find more than one or two differences you may be experiencing stress. 

  3. Topics for today include: • Harry Wong’s “First Days of School” --Having classroom management using procedures and routines (Unit C) • Teaching with Love and Logic --Some basic techniques that can be added to your toolbox • School-Wide Procedures --How to Quiet a classroom and “The Signal System”

  4. Some of today’s topics will be well-known for some and new (ah-ha moments) for others. Hopefully you can learn something new and know that there is one person who will make the difference in your classroom success this year…..YOU!!

  5. FYI • A study reviewing student learning looked at 11,000 pieces of research that spanned over 50 years. It determined and ranked 28 factors that influence student learning. The most important factor is…. Classroom Management

  6. Harry Wong Says: • The vast majority of the behavior problems in the classroom are caused by the failure of students to follow procedures and routines, which in turn are caused by teachers who do not have procedures and routines. • Effective teachers MANAGE their classrooms with procedures and routines. • Ineffective teachers DISCIPLINE their classrooms with threats and punishments.

  7. What is Classroom Management?? • Everything a teacher does to organize students, space, time, and materials so that instruction in content and student learning can take place. • If Pilots have flight plans, Coaches have game plans, Executives have business plans, then Effective teachers must have a Classroom Management Action Plan. Do you?

  8. 4 Characteristics of a Well-Managed Classroom

  9. Seven things students want toknow on the first day. • Am I in the right room? • Where am I supposed to sit? • Who is the teacher as a person? • Will the teacher treat me as a human being? • What are the rules in this classroom? • What will I be doing this year? • How will I be graded?

  10. Don’t Forget that Smile • Stand at the classroom door on the first day with a big smile and a warm welcome. Ensure the students are in the right place. • Direct the students where to sit. • Have their first assignment (non-graded) ready and have them get started on it immediately. • Show that you are efficient and competent as a classroom manager and teacher. (First Impression)

  11. The three most important studentbehaviors that must be taught the first dayof school are these: • 1. Discipline—Have a plan • 2. Procedures • 3. Routines

  12. Difference between Discipline andProcedures • Discipline concerns how students behave. • Procedures concern how things are done. • Discipline has penalties and rewards. • Procedures have no penalties or rewards. • ROUTINE:  What the students do automatically. (habit) • Students readily accept a uniform set of classroom procedures because it simplifies their task in succeeding in school. It creates a predictable and consistent environment.

  13. Basically….. • Procedures are a part of our everyday lives—telephone book, airplanes, traffic lights, texting. • Teaching procedures is teaching expectations. • Story of “The Power of Procedures Success”

  14. Classroom procedures that MUST become Routines • Beginning a class • Quieting a Class • Student seeking help • Movement of students and papers • End of Class

  15. The Procedure for Teaching Procedures • Explain.  State, explain, model, and demonstrate the procedure. • Rehearse.  Rehearse and practice the procedure under your supervision. (Must DO!) • Reinforce.  Reteach, rehearse, practice, and reinforce the procedure until it becomes a student habit or routine. Give Praise.

  16. How to Quiet a Class • Explain that you will raise your hand or tap a bell and the students are to freeze, turn and face teacher, and be ready for instruction. Model for the students. • Rehearse the procedure by having the students visit quietly for a few minutes. Then raise your hand or tap a bell. • Reinforce the procedure by correcting any mistakes or giving praise for following procedure. Then rehearse again and again and again.

  17. How to Start the Day • Post a list of necessary morning routines such as: (verbally practice for lower grades) • Put coat and backpack in locker, come into the room, turn in homework, sharpen pencils, begin morning work. • Remember to explain, rehearse, reinforce. • Remember to post your assignments everyday in the same place as well as your schedule

  18. Signal System • The “ineffective” way goes like this…… • The “New Effective” way goes like this… • 2 Fingers—Sharpen Pencil • 3 Fingers—Get Drink/Use Bathroom • 4 Fingers—Talk to Teacher • 5 Fingers—Need Help • Now Let’s try it

  19. Movement of Paper • The “ineffective” way….. • The “New Effective” Way • Pass across (sideways) putting papers on desks. Never put in hands.

  20. Procedures to Rehearse (p 193) • Entering the classroom • Listening and answering discussion questions • Keeping a neat desk • Asking questions for understanding • Knowing the schedule • When you are tardy or absent • Turning in papers • Heading a paper • Coming to attention • Walking in the halls • Emergency Procedures • If your pencil breaks • Saying Please and Thank You • When you finish early • When visitors are in the classroom • When a schoolwide announcement is made • If you become sick • Riding the Bus • Going to Lunch • Using the Bathroom—1 at a time

  21. “The Book” • Rather than writing names on the board, write them down in a book. This helps with documentation, if needed.

  22. Help Keep the Noise Down • Play classical music at a low level and the students must keep the noise level lower than the music. It works. • “Do you have a question” to talking students

  23. When should you take roll? After the Students are working

  24. If not, how much time is wasted? • 3 minutes per day X 180 Days = 9 HOURS!!

  25. A 92 Percent Homework Turn-in Rate • You’ve Been Pink-Slipped! • Students are not allowed to sit passively and not turn in their homework.  They are required to take responsibility for their actions by completing a pink slip when homework is not turned in.  The students will be warned of this procedure on the first day of school.

  26. Provides excellent documentation for parent teacher conferences • No Penalties, just lose credit for homework • Too many, lose privileges??

  27. Attendance Keeper • Assign a student as the attendance keeper for the week • When the day begins, student puts ‘absent folder’ on desks of absent students • A quick glance will let you know who is absent when roll is taken (after students are working) • Fill absent folder as the day progresses with assignments missed and assignment sheet

  28. A First Day of School Script • Football coaches go into a game with a script of their first 15 to 20 plays. Meeting and wedding coordinators have a script of what needs to be done. And effective teachers have a script that helps them to organize the first day or days of school. Now its time to write yours.

  29. How to Take a Break Procedure • “In 15 minutes please be back in your seat—not walking in in or standing at the door. Please be in your seat in 15 minutes. When I raise my hand I would like it quiet so that I can immediately begin on ‘How to Use Love and Logic’ in your classroom. May I see a show of hands of anyone who does not understand the procedure?”

  30. Teaching with Love and Logic Founders--Jim Fay Foster Cline, M.D. Charles Fay, Ph.D.

  31. Philosophy of Love and Logic • Choice and freedom to make mistakes. • Equal balance of consequences and empathy replace punishment whenever possible. • Child takes responsibility of his/her actions. • Student is required to do more thinking than the adult. • Child is always left with a feeling that he or she has some control.

  32. Know that Love and Logic doesn’t replace your present system, instead it is a guide to help you solve the vast array of problems you may face in the classroom. It is a tool you can use to enhance your classroom management.

  33. Why Does It Work? • Uses humor, hope, and empathy to build up the adult/child relationship • Emphasizes respect and dignity for both children and adults • Provides real limits in a loving way • Teaches consequences and healthy decision-making

  34. The Three Rules of Love & Logic • Use enforceable limits--Don’t tell kids how to run their lives, instead tell them how you are going to run yours • Provide choices within limits--Offer choices to students that you can deal with. • Apply consequences with empathy-- When consequences are applied with empathy the child has an opportunity to build a thought process about the mistake.

  35. Control the time you spend on discipline by.. • Building positive relationships with your students • Set enforceable limits through enforceable statements. • Share control. • Implement disciplinary interventions that stop undesirable behaviors in their infancy, avoiding the need for consequences. • Delay consequences.

  36. Would you like to know what to say when kids try to push your buttons? • The Answer: “Probably So” (stated softly) • I’m trying to engage you in an argument and here’s my ammunition: (No matter what I say –you say “probably so”.) • Mrs. Morin doesn’t make me do this You’re mean I’m telling my Dad I’m telling my Mom I’m telling my Grandma I hate this This is stupid This sucks

  37. Try It • I am the student and you told me if I don’t turn in my work I can’t go our for recess. • So I say: That’s stupid You’re mean Other kids just get to go because their teachers are nice. I hate you This sucks I’m telling my Mom You don’t like me

  38. “You don’t like me…Probably So” doesn’t sound right. Try this instead: • 1. Smile 2. Say: “Nice Try” • Other One-Liners: I respect you to much to argue; I know; Thanks for sharing; I bet it feels that way; I’ll listen to you as soon as your voice is as calm is mine. (Then walk away). Memorize one.

  39. For Kids that have damaged self-esteems. • Try a One-Sentence Intervention • Think of a student that has low-self esteem or one that is hard to reach • In private, tell them something non-academic that you notice about them. • “I noticed that...........” Let the student respond, if at all. Then end with “I noticed that.” • This is called “making a deposit” for when you may need to “make a withdrawal” (consequence). Give 1 per week until rapport has been established.

  40. Rules for using choices • Be sure to pick choices you can live with • If child does not choose, be prepared to choose yourself (10 seconds). This teachers them to choose quickly. • Never give a choice unless you are willing to allow the child to experience the consequence of that choice.

  41. Examples • Would you rather listen without interrupting or choose another place to be right now? • You’re welcome to wear your coat or carry it with you. • Do you want to sit in the red chair or the blue chair? • Would you rather do questions 1-5 or 6-10? • Out of the 40 problems, do the 20 easiest, I don’t care which ones you do.

  42. CAUTION It is very easy to turn your choices into threats: Choose my way or the highway. Knock that off or I’m going to call your parents. Consider if Mr. Gourneau said: Would you rather do your report today or get fired?

  43. Empathy(not sympathy) • Adults must demonstrate a sincere and empathetic response to child’s misbehavior. • We hand over the problem for the child solve. • The students are in the thinking mode rather than the fighting mode. • The child’s poor decision becomes the “bad guy” while keeping the adult the “good guy,” thus having a hard time blaming the adult. • You become a consultant, not the one who rescues.

  44. Empathy One-Liners • This must really hurt. • That is really hard • I am sorry you feel that way. • I feel bad for you. • Bummer • It must be hard to feel so frustrated. • How Sad. • Oh, man. • What a drag. • That’s too bad. • What will your one-liner be? Pick one or make up your own and practice.

  45. Power Messages After Empathy • What are you going to do about it? • Have you come up with anything so far? • I am here to help. Just let me know what you decide to do about it.

  46. Let empathy and consequencesdo the teaching • NOT sarcastic or condescending • Keep it short, sweet and repetitive. • Express your empathy before your consequence • Delaying your consequence gives you time to think. Say “How Sad. I am going to have to do something about this! But not now, I am teaching. I will later. Try not to worry about it too much.” • This gives you time to think about your consequence and keep your cool.

  47. Setting Limits with Enforceable Statements • The happiest students are those with teachers who set reasonable limits. • The happiest teachers are those who know how to set AND enforce these limits without raising their voices. • We you say “you will…” we lose control, but when you say “I will…’ we gain control. • An enforceable statement is something that you do, not the student. (can’t argue)

  48. A few examples (see handout) • “You are not going to talk to me that way!” vs. “I will be glad to discuss this with you as soon as the arguing stops.” • “You need to start respecting me.” vs. “I will be happy to do nice things for you as soon as I feel respected and helped.” • “There is too much talking” vs. “I take quiet classes to music.”

  49. Enforceable Statements and Questions • Statement: I call on students who raise their hands. • Question: Who do I call on?

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