Title: Classroom Behavioral Strategies
1- Classroom Behavioral Strategies
2Words to live by
- If you want your students to change their
behavior, you have to change yours. - Inappropriate behavior is a very effective way to
get teacher attention. - If students are not doing what you want, teach
them! - Pay attention to behavior you want.
- Catch students doing the right thing.
- You never know when you will get a surprise!
3What will we do in this Session
- Describe the organization of an effective
classroom. - Identify positive consequences to use in your
classroom. - Teach on-task behavior (concentration/focus power
game) during disruptions. - Design integrated motivational systems to teach
and reinforce positive behavior. - Identify effective corrections or corrective
consequences.
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5Classroom Setting Systems
- Classroom-wide positive expectations taught
encouraged - Teaching classroom routines cues taught
encouraged - Ratio of 4-6 positive to 1 negative adult-student
interaction - Active supervision
- Redirections for minor, infrequent behavior
errors - Frequent precorrections for chronic errors
- Effective academic instruction curriculum
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7Guiding Principles
- Remember that good teaching is one of our best
behavior management tools - Active engagement
- Varied activities
- Positive reinforcement
- Pre-correction
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9Active Engagement
- Efficient transitions
- Self-management
- Active supervision
- Move
- Monitor
- Communication/Contact/Acknowledge
- Vary format
- Written, choral, gestures
- Specify observable engagements
- Link engagement with outcome objectives
10Varied Activities
- Whole group instruction
- Small group instruction/ cooperative learning
- Individual activities
- Demonstrations
- Hands-on activities
- Discussion groups
- Multimedia instruction (video, audio, computers)
- Project-based learning
- Simulations, role-plays, academic games
11Activity
- Create a Classroom Management Web
- Example
Organization
Classroom Mgmt
Furniture
Routines Procedures
Restroom
Transitions
Sharpening Pencils
12Features of Effective Classroom Management
- Establish structure
- Know what you want to see (e.g., entering,
leaving, transitions, independent work). - Know what you want to hear (e.g., noise level,
asking for help, being respectful). - Explicitly teach your expectations
- Do not assume students know what to do
- Provide positive constructive feedback until
the behavior is automatic
13Activity- Think, Pair, Share
- List five or more important features of the
classroom environment to which a teacher must pay
attention before the school year starts. - What are some good classroom rules (positively
stated, easy to remember) that link with your
school rules. - List two or more classroom management activities
to which teachers must attend on the first day of
school. - What would you do if two or three students in a
class of 30 constantly disrupted the class? - Name two strategies you would use to keep all
students on task during independent work.
14Physical Space
- Create a welcoming environment
- Monitor students at all times (no groups or
students behind bookcases or dividers). - Gain physical access to all students (sufficient
space between desks). - Place high-need and low-performing students where
you have easy access for reinforcement and
feedback. - Decide seat assignments or provide choice
seating. - Position the teacher desk unobtrusively and not
accessible to students (teach your expectations)
15- Now that weve covered some of the basics, what
about positive and corrective consequences?
16Activity
- Turn to Your Partner and Brainstorm 10 Examples
of Positive Consequences
17Examples of Positive Consequences
- Sitting where they want
- Music
- Treats
- Fun activities (puzzles, games)
- Videos
- Being first in line at lunch
- Free time
- Computer time
- Meaningful work
- Physical activities
- Art Activities
18Ratio of Interaction The Golden Rule
Positive Reinforcement
19Ratio of Interaction
- When you are
- dog tired at night,
-
-
- could it be that youve
- been growling all day?
20Rationale For The Concentration/ Focus Power Game
- On-task behavior is the factor most associated
with student achievement - Pre-teaching students to ignore distractions
will - Prevent reinforcement of attention seeking
behavior - Increase student on-task behavior
- Prevent chaos during emergency situations
- Prevent escalation of dangerous behavior
- Help teachers maintain sanity
21Basic Steps for The Concentration/Focus Power Game
- Make a chart.
- Set a goal ( of minutes).
- Tell students you want to teach them to
concentrate and focus in spite of minor
distractions. - Tell them the rules of the game.
- Model with examples and non-examples.
- Select independent activities.
22Concentration/Focus Power Game (Continued)
- Practice for fun for short periods of time in the
beginning. - The teacher should be the only person trying to
distract students. - Focus only on students doing well.
- If a few students are not concentrating, try some
other time. - Mark time on chart.
- Play for fun at least 5 times for every time you
need to play it when students are creating
distractions. - Concentration Game Video Clip
23Class-Wide Motivational System
- Purpose
- Increase positive student behavior
- Decrease undesired behavior
- Create a positive classroom environment
- Promote team work
- Provide data on clarity of expectations
- Provide data on positive teacher interactions
24Rationale For Green/Red Game
- Students need to know whether or not they are
meeting expectations - An external system like this helps students
develop an internal self-management system - Promotes teamwork and shared responsibility for
the success of all team members
25Green / Red Card Game
- 3. Make place to mark points so students can see
the points. (e.g. Laminate card or write points
on board or paper) - 4. Have an intermittent audible signal.
- Computer Prompter program (edsoftworks.com)
- Timer
- Stopwatch
- 1. Make a large card
- Green on one side
- Red on the other side
- 2. Place card so class can see it.
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28- Green / Red Card Video Clip
29- Apply the tiered prevention logic to classroom
setting - Primary for all
- Secondary for some
- Tertiary for a few
30Activity
- Walk and Talk
- Walk around the room with a partner. While
walking, talk about the most successful
strategies you use to correct student behavior.
Tell one specific story in which you used one of
those strategies to correct behavior.
31Planned Ignoring
- Unspoken message I will only pay attention to
you when you are doing the right thing. - Never ignore
- - The first time the behavior occurs.
- - When student hurts self or others.
- - When several students are involved.
32Classroom and School-Wide Expectations
- Be clear about what behaviors are to be dealt
with in the classroom vs. those that should be
sent to the office - Balance need of individual student with problem
behavior against needs of other students - Maintain academic engagement
- Plan ahead
33Arundel High School
Office Referral Flow Chart
34Activity
- Rank the following strategies as a continuum that
may be used in correcting behavior , then turn to
your partner and share your ranking/ reasoning - _____ Gentle verbal correction
- _____ Loss of points or privileges
- _____ Discussions
- _____ Student completes self-report behavior
form - _____ Send student to hall or other time-out
area - _____ Send student to the office
- _____ Parent contact
- _____ Isolation within classroom
- _____ Extra work
35Correcting Behavior
- Instructional Responses to Inappropriate
Behavior - a. Immediate
- b. Contingent on behavior
- c. Non-argumentative, non-critical
- d. Specific to behavior
- e. Systematic correction, model, lead, test
- f. Consistent (with behavior and across staff)
36Delivery of Corrective Consequences
- Consequating Inappropriate Behavior
- Be Calm, Professional
- Be Sure You Have the Facts as Straight as
possible - Be Clear on which rules or expectations have been
violated and why they are important - Focus on the Behavior, not the Student
37Corrective Consequences
- Take the student(s) aside
- Avoid embarrassing the student in front of others
- Review what you saw with the student(s) in a
calm, businesslike, impersonal manner - Don't argue - don't allow yourself to be drawn
into an argument - Define the Inappropriate Behavior - state the
rule(s) or expectation(s) that were violated - Ask the student to state the appropriate,
expected behavior for the situation - if they
can't or won't, state the appropriate, expected
behavior and ask them to repeat it to you - Remind the student(s) what the school prescribed
consequence for the particular behavior is - Use the least aversive consequence allowed -
follow school guidelines concerning repeated or
chronic violations - Apply the consequence immediately
38Strategies for Managing Minor Problem Behavior
- Planned ignoring
- Redirection
- Use of gestures or signals proximity
- When a student is beginning to be agitated
(before - behavior intensifies)
- Provide support
- Give space
- Allow for choices
- Arrange for some relaxation activities
- Use teacher proximity
- Suggest an independent activity
- Allow for some movement activities
- Engage in preferred activities
39Negative Consequences Considerations
- Pick your battles decide which behaviors are
important to target and which are not - Consistency correct each inappropriate target
behavior in the same way for each student - Fidelity consequate each inappropriate behavior
each time. Dont blow it off!
40Negative Consequences Other Considerations
- Ongoing measurement Write referrals consistently
- Keep logs of behavioral data consistently
- Regularly Scheduled Meetings team and staff
meetings to share behavior data, engage in data
analysis, and make data-based decisions
41In Summary
- To prevent problem behavior in the classroom
- Engage students in instruction
- Provide high levels of structure within the
classroom - Positively reinforce students for following
expectations - Have a continuum of consequences available for
minor infractions in the classroom.
42Activity Countdown
43Classroom Systems
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48Classroom Systems for Individual Students