Title: Chapter 11 Creating Learning Environments
1Chapter 11Creating Learning Environments
- Cathy is the class rebel of the ninth grade. She
attempts to undercut all authority figures,
especially her history teacher. Today she is
making sarcastic remarks to her best friend while
the teacher lectures. The teacher says, All
right, Cathy, Ive put up with your wisecracks
for as long as I can. Even a teacher runs out of
patience sooner or later. Now shut up.
2Characteristics of Classrooms
- 1. Multidimensional individuals with differing
goals, performing various tasks within particular
time pressures. - 2. Simultaneity many things happening at once.
- 3. Immediacy very fast pace.
- 4. Unpredictability even with best plans,
disruptions are likely. - 5. Public students evaluating interactions
between students and teacher. - 6. Histories current events often depend on
past.
3Gain Students Cooperation
- Gaining cooperation product of many managerial
skills, not merely controlling behavior. - Age-related needs four levels of classroom
management - 1. Early elementary grades direct teaching of
rules and procedures. - 2. Middle elementary grades time spent
monitoring and maintaining management system
less time on direct teaching of rules.
4- 3. Late elementary-early high school motivating
students concerned with peers channeling
challenges to authority productively. - 4. Late high school fitting curriculum to
student interest and abilities helping students
become more self-managing in learning.
5Goals of Classroom Management
- 1. More time for learning
- Much time lost to interruptions and rough
transitions. - Significant positive correlation between content
taught and student learning. - Learning is highly correlated with amount of
engaged time (time on task time spent attending
actively to specific learning tasks).
6Goals of Classroom Management Continued
- 2. Access to learning
- Explicit participation structures rules defining
participation in various activities. - Teachers need awareness and communication of
rules. - 3. Management for self-management help students
learn to manage themselves.
7Creating a Positive Learning Environment
- Rules and Procedures Required
- Procedures describe how to accomplish activities
in the classroom. - 1. Administrative routines lunch count, etc.
- 2. Student movement entering and leaving room
- 3. Housekeeping taking care of classroom and
personal items
8- 4. Routines for accomplishing lessons
collecting and distributing papers - 5. Interactions between teacher and students
- 6. Talk among friends
9Rules expected and forbidden actions in the
classroom
- Please get with a few classmates who plan to
teach at about the same grade level that you plan
to teach. Design a plan for creating classroom
rules for your future classrooms. How would you
go about this task? What specific rules would
you enforce? How would you let the students know
your rules and the consequences for breaking them?
10Rules for Elementary Schools
- 1. Be polite and helpful.
- 2. Respect other peoples property.
- 3. Listen quietly while others are speaking.
- 4. Do not hit, shove, or hurt others.
- 5. Obey all rules.
- (What is missing from this list?)
11Rules for Secondary Schools
- 1. Bring all needed materials to class.
- 2. Be in your seat and ready to work when the
bell rings. - 3. Respect and be polite to everyone.
- 4. Respect other peoples property.
- 5. Listen and stay seated while someone else is
talking. - 6. Obey all school rules.
12Consequences
- 1. Determine beforehand the consequences for
following or breaking rules. - 2. Logical consequences have student go back
and do it right. - 3. Consequences should be clear and enforceable.
- 4. Who sets the rules and consequences? (See
Table 11.2)
13Consequences
- Please go back to the rules you devised earlier.
Get together with the same classmates and
determine the consequence for breaking each rule
you created.
14Seven Categories of Penalties for Students
- 1. Expressions of disappointment (student needs
to like you). - 2. Loss of privileges (homework during recess).
- 3. Exclusion from the group (for students
distracting others). - 4. Written reflections on the problem (journals,
essays how behavior effects others). - 5. Detentions (to talk about behavior high
school usually used as punishment).
15Penalties continued
- 6. Visits to the principals office (expert
teachers seldom use this). - 7. Contact with parents (repeated pattern or
problems should be used to help and support
student, not to punish student). - What is the best penalty for catching a student
chewing gum?
16Getting Started The First Weeks of Class
- Effective elementary teachers
- 1. Organized from the first day
- 2. Gave children interesting tasks
- 3. Monitored behavior as a whole group
- 4. Taught rules!
- 5. Provided consequences for misbehavior
immediately.
17Ineffective teachers for elementary students
- 1. Gave vague or complicated rules
- 2. Provided inconsistent consequences for both
positive and negative behaviors - 3. Procedures were not taught or practiced
- 4. Teachers frequently left the room
18Effective Managers for Secondary Students
- 1. Focused on establishing rules
- 2. Clearly communicated standards for academic
work and class behavior - 3. Dealt with infractions of rules quickly
- 4. Students in low achieving classes were given
a variety of tasks
19Maintaining a Good Learning Environment
- Encouraging Engagement
- 1. Lesson format effects involvement
- 2. Involvement without supervision
- 3. Prevention is the best medicine
20Characteristics of Effective Managers
- 1. Are withit (aware of what is happening in
the classroom) - 2. Stop minor disruptions before they become
major - 3. Avoid blaming the wrong student for
misbehavior (target errors Sister Freun) - 4. Avoid timing errors (waiting too long before
intervening in misbehavior0 - 5. When multiple problems occur, deal with the
most serious one first
21Characteristics of Effective Managers Continued
- 6. Keep track of and supervise many activities
at once (overlapping) - 7. Keep as many students as possible involved in
appropriate activities (group focus) - 8. Makes smooth transitions, appropriate pace,
and uses variety when changes are necessary - 9. Avoids taking too much time to start new
activities (slowdown)
22Dealing with Discipline Problems
- 1. Make eye contact, move closer, and use
non-verbal signals - 2. Verbal hints
- 3. Ask student if they are aware of the negative
effects of their behavior - 4. Remind students of procedures/rules
- 5. Calmly ask student to state correct procedure
- 6. Assertively telling student to stop behavior
- 7. Offer a choice
23Are zero tolerance policies a good idea?
- Consider your own view on this issue. Now find
someone from the class who agrees with you.
Prepare to debate your views against classmates
who disagree with you on this issue.