Title: Simpson County Schools New Teacher Induction
1Simpson County SchoolsNew Teacher Induction
- July 20-22, 2009
- Welcome to our Team!
2Goals of New Teacher Induction
- Welcome and orient you to our district.
- Explore topics important to new teachers, and
whats important for our district. - Let you know you are not alone You are
important to us. You are the future of our
district! - Long-term goal a network of resources, supports
and opportunities for your first four years.
3Key Theme
- Effective teachers are proactive They can
anticipate what students need, and work to
address those needs before the students even
appear in class. - Effective teachers can predict where students are
going to get off task or confused and plan
accordingly.
4Key Topics of NTI
- Establishing positive relationships with students
- Predictive instructional planning (including
classroom management) - Establishing clear learning targets for student
achievement - Writing high-quality classroom assessments
- Delivering effective, engaging, research-based
instructional strategies
5Expectations Procedures
- You are the expert on you and your experiences,
so share them! - Listen actively, ask questions, make a
contribution. - Be good to your neighbors.
- Well take breaks, but use the Law of Two Feet
(youve got two feet, use them when you need
them).
6The First Days of School Classroom Management
- New Teacher Induction
- Simpson County Schools
- July 20, 2009
7The Craft of Teaching
- Effective classroom management, like teaching in
general, is a craft, blending elements of art and
science. - No one formula, technique or plan is going to
work perfectly every time. - The living, breathing, unpredictable little
people we teach will let us know what works and
what doesnt from day to day.
8Goals of this discussion
- Identify the most important elements of a
successful first day of school. - Explore the basic features of effective classroom
management. - Identify the key components of effective,
predictive instructional planning.
9What makes the difference?
- Think of an effective teacher with whom you have
had recent contact. Now think of an ineffective
teacher. Compare these two individuals. - What quality(ies) or practice(s) made one
effective and the other ineffective?
10Establishing positive student relationships
- With a partner, generate a list of practical,
easy steps you can use to establish positive
personal relationships with students.
11Guidance/Control and Cooperation
- According to Marzano, effective student
relationships are based two dynamics
guidance/control and control. - Guidance/control established by your learning
targets, rules and procedures, and by emotional
objectivity.
12Emotional Objectivity
- Its not personal.
- Successful teachers have realistic attitudes
about kids - Gushy, kids-are-wonderful teachers are not
typically successful. - Neither are bitter teachers who look upon
students as the enemy.
13Action steps for emotional objectivity
- Consistently enforce positive and negative
consequences for student behavior. - Recognize emotions are natural and inevitable.
- Monitor your thoughts and emotions.
- Reframe situations that threaten to evoke
negative emotions.
14Action Steps for emotional objectivity
- Maintain a cool exterior
- Avoid pointing, raising voice, glaring, moving
toward students, or using ridicule. - Speak in a calm respectful voice, make direct eye
contact, maintain appropriate distance and
neutral or positive facial expression.
15Cooperation
- Demonstrating concern and building a sense of
community variables that make a difference - Duration of interaction
- Encouraging students
- Gestures
- Smiles
- Frequency of interaction
- Praise/eye contact
- Touch
- Enthusiasm
16Action strategies for nurturing cooperation
- Know something about each student
- Start with disenfranchised students
- Use interest inventories
- Parent conferences
- Use your knowledge about kids to initiate
conversations - Use behaviors that demonstrate affection
- Greet by name
- Go to students after-school events
17More action strategies for cooperation
- Bring student interests into content areas
- Use physical behaviors that communicate interest
in students smile, touch, eye contact, space - Use humor (appropriately) especially laugh at
yourself
18A word about social networking with students
- Dont avoid all social interaction with students,
but exercise thoughtful judgment every time you
face these situations. - Dont put anything on the internet that you
wouldnt want on your classroom wall. - Some considerations regarding Facebook, email,
texting, etc.
19Predictive Instructional Planning
- The First Days of School
- (with thanks to Harry Wong)
20What makes the difference?
- Effective teachers are proactive They can
anticipate what students need, and work to
address those needs before the students even
appear in class. - Effective teachers can predict where students are
going to get off task or confused and plan
accordingly.
21First Year Teachers
- Feel isolated, vulnerable, deeply concerned with
how they will be perceived, yet afraid to ask for
help. BUT the era of isolated teaching is
over. - --Harry Wong
22The Stages of Teaching
- Fantasy
- Survival
- Mastery
- Impact
- --Harry Wong
- The First Days of School
23It Takes a Plan
- To succeed, it takes love and skill. . . Love
without expertise is powerless. - --Fred Jones, Tools for Teaching
24The First Day (first seconds)
- Establishing consistency is the key
- Establishing control is the effect (but not
through threats or intimidation) - You know what you are doing
- You have clear classroom procedures
- You know your professional responsibilities
25What do students want to know?
- In small groups at your table, brainstorm the
kinds of things students want to know when they
enter your classroom.
26What students want to know
- Am I in the right room?
- Where am I supposed to sit?
- What will I be doing this year?
- Who is the teacher as a person?
- How will I be graded?
- What are the rules in this classroom?
- Will the teacher treat me as a human being?
27Answer the questions
- Greeting at the door
- Directions on seating and the first assignment
- Your first words
28Introduce your Discipline Plan
- About behavior, not academics
- Limited number of rules (general or specific)
- Posted rules
- Explain both the rules and why these rules are
important - Involve students in rule-making, but be careful
- Consequences and rewards
29Introduce your Procedures
- Procedures are critical to effective classrooms
- Explain, rehearse, reinforce
- Differ from rules in that there you will usually
have limited rewards or consequences - Reinforce following procedures with praise
correct not following procedures with re-teaching
and rehearsal
30Kinds of Procedures
- How to enter the classroom.
- What to do when they enter.
- Where to find the assignment.
- What to do when you want their attention.
- How to ask a question or ask for help.
- How a paper is to be done.
31Kinds of procedures, cont.
- Where you want assignments to go.
- What to do if they want to sharpen a pencil.
- Where to find assignments if theyve been absent.
- What to do at the dismissal of class.
- Substitute Teacher Test
32- Never underestimate what students dont know,
regardless of their age. Be prepared to teach
them EVERYTHING.
33Positive Expectations are Critical
- Five things that enhance communication of
positive expectations - name
- please
- thank you
- smile
- love
34Classroom Management General Principles
- Its easier to get easier (meaning add
flexibility over time not the adage dont smile
until Christmas) - Fairness is the key.
- Deal with disruptions with as little interruption
as possible. - Avoid confrontations in front of students.
- Stop disruptions with a little humor (but not
sarcasm).
35More General Principles
- Keep high expectations in your class.
- Over plan.
- Be consistent.
- Make rules understandable.
- Start fresh every day.
36Elements of a Well-Managed Classroom (Wong)
- Students are deeply involved with their work,
especially with academic, teacher-led instruction - Students know what is expected of them and are
generally successful. - There is a relatively little wasted time,
confusion, or disruption. - The climate of the classroom is work-oriented but
relaxed and pleasant.
37Myths about Discipline
- Parents should teach values, not teachers.
- Punishment works.
- Bribing students so they will behave well works.
- Parents need to do something about their kids
behavior. - If you are not sure whos guilty, punish the
entire class until someone tattles.
38More Myths
- They are old enough to know better.
- A teacher temper tantrum now and then shows that
you mean business. - Assigning punishment work will stop misbehavior.
- Dont smile until Thanksgiving (or Christmas or
next summer).
39Disruptions The Teacher Killer (Jones)
- Most common management technique is to nag, nag,
nag. - The disruptions that cause a teacher to go home
tired are the common misbehaviors that occur
minute by minute, day after day. - Talking to neighbors accounts for 80 percent of
disruptions in a typical classroom, while out of
seat accounts for 15 percent.
40Proximity Your 1 Tool
- Biggest factor in student goofing off physical
distance from the teacher. - Make an art of working the crowd.
- Use mobility and proximity to disrupt student
impulse to be disruptive (using eye contact,
questioning techniques, etc., to close the
distances psychologically) classroom
arrangement is a key.
41Proximity, continued
- Supervise work as you move about discipline
management for free - Allows you to speak to student at close range,
reducing embarrassment and confrontation - For more on classroom arrangements, see Tools for
Teaching, Fred Jones
42Relax.
- Any classroom disruption will trigger a mild
fight-flight reflex. - This reflex not only makes you vulnerable to
becoming upset, but it also stresses you
physically. - Triune Brain Theory (brainstem, paleocortex,
neocortex) explains how the brain downshifts
during a fight-flight reflex so that you end up
functioning out of your brainstem instead of your
cortex.
43Relax some more
- The understanding and the complex social skills
required for leadership reside in the cortex. - To lead under pressure, you need to use all of
your knowledge and experience. Thus, the
fundamental rule of social power is, Calm is
strength. Upset is weakness.
44Breathe easy
- Remaining calm under pressure is achieved through
relaxation. Relaxation is a skill that can be
mastered with training. - Practice daily relaxation (mindfulness
meditation, for example), as well as relaxation
on-the-spot (handout).
45Predictive, Proactive Teaching
- Lesson Planning that Brings it all Together
46What makes the difference?
- A key difference between successful and
unsuccessful new teachers is the ability to
predict before a lesson is taught all the ways
that students might get off task and proactively
plan to address those problem areas.
47The challenge
- When you are plan a lesson, put yourself in the
mind of the student and try to anticipate every
place in the lesson where students will get off
task or confused.
48Predicting is a learned skill
- For some, this is an innate ability to analyze a
lesson and find all the things that could go
wrong. - But for everyone, predictive teaching can be
learned and with practice, a teachers ability to
skillfully predict and proactively plan can be
enhanced. - This skill is never fool-proof, of course.
49Off-task triggers
- Lack clear and consistent rules and procedures
- Beginning of class
- Moving from activity A to B
- Gathering materials and supplies
- Wrapping up lesson
- Lesson activities intersect with lack of
procedures (like moving into groups)
50More off-task triggers
- Students are asked to do something out of their
comfort zone - Instructions are unclear
- Deliver instructions verbally, orally, and in
writing
51Confusion triggers
- Unclear instructions
- Lack of a clear learning target
- Lack of vocabulary or background knowledge
(forget about what the students are supposed to
know). - Teacher doesnt know students are confused until
its too late (use formative assessment
techniques)
52Practicing Predictive Planning