Title: Chapter 4 Group Management Approaches
1Chapter 4 - Group Management Approaches The
Professional Teacher
- Dr. Thomas G. Ryan
- Nipissing University
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3Classroom Management is
- A dimension of curriculum, instruction, and
school climate that requires teachers to
acknowledge, - the importance of arranging the classroom and
planning for instruction, - ways of instructing and interacting with groups
of learners and - methods of responding to disruptive behaviors of
individual students without losing control of the
classroom group
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4Classroom Management is Proactive!
- Three characteristics of this Proactive approach
- (1) it is preventive rather than just reactive,
- (2) it integrates management methods that
encourage appropriate student conduct with
instructional methods that encourage student
achievement of curricular objectives and - (3) it focuses on managing the class as a group,
not just on the behavior of individual
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5Basics of Effective Teaching
- Lesson Design - Clarity
- Introduction - Hook
- Coached Practice - Like this
- Closure - draw together
- Independent Practice - U try
- Review - A,B,C,D. . .
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6Don not forget Student Motivation
- Interest level - ballet vs nintendo
- Student Needs - hunger - food
- Novelty - field trip
- Success - Win, play, win, play.
- Tension - Affective state
- Feeling tone - climate
- Feedback - coaching
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8Teachers Classroom Questioning ?
- Effective questions are clear, purposeful, brief,
naturally sequenced, and thought provoking. - Cognitive levels - list to evaluate
- Call on volunteers/nonvolunteer
- Wait 3-5
- Multiple student responses before feedback - OK!
- Be Positive - tell student why answer is good
- Extend answer via probing questions.
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9Instructional Approach - Learning Facts
- When teachers wish to teach specific facts, they
may employ a strategy consisting of - information giving,
- factual questioning,
- informational feedback with corrections and
- descriptive praise for correct responding
10To provoke discussion requires a spark!
- When you wish to assist students in discussing
information and arriving at their own opinions,
teachers employ - open-ended questioning,
- redirection of pupil comments to other pupils
- responses to student comments which ask them to
further probe and/or extend their ideas.
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12Maximizing Learning Time
- Good Teaching(Instruction) Good Tasks
Learning - Time on tasks Teacher directed(Coaching)
individual practice time progress, example
Sports Skills - Student Misconceptions problematic
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13Constructivism
- Active construction of knowledge by learner
- Teacher coaches, guides, supports, facilitates,
questions socratically - Prior knowledge informs current growth
- restructuring prior learning is key to new
learning - Knowledge is socially constructed
- Thinking skills, Critical thinking, Multiple
Intelligence's 8
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14Teaching for Understanding
- Deep Understanding - Howard Gardner
- Explain in your own words
- Make Predictions
- Apply concepts to new context
- Find exemplars in new situations
- So - Cover less curricula but go deeper rather
than wider and shallow
15Authentic Instruction
- Higher Order Thinking Skills HOTS emphasis
- Depth of coverage
- Connection to real world
- Achievement via trial and error/risk taking
- Emergent teaching style - self regulation develops
16Emphasis on Thinking Problem-Solving
- Thinking Dimensions (5)
- 1 Positive attitudes/perceptions - Physical -
Psychologically comfortable - Order/Routine - 2 Acquiring new knowledge/skills - relate new to
old - 3 Extension Refinement of knowledge using HOTS
- 4 Using knowledge in meaningful and productive
habits of mind - self-direction - long term
projects
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18Create Community
- Cooperative learning activities Cooperative
teaching and learning . - Face-to-face interaction 11, small group
- Positive interdependence (team approach/sink or
swim together) - Individual accountability (we are all
responsible)
19Attitude
- Teachers must
- (1) earn the respect and affection of their
students by developing personal relationships
with individual students and demonstrating
enjoyment of and concern for students and their
individual welfare, - (2) be consistent and, therefore, credible and
dependable, - (3) assume responsibility for seeing that their
students learn and - (4) value and enjoy learning and expect their
students to do the same
20Style Chameleon as context changes !
- Teaching styles are reflections of what teachers
are, as much as of what they do, styles are not
as easily acquired or altered as are skills and
strategies - Consider MI What learning style describes how
you learn, and does this affect how you teach ?
see next slide for 8 MI areas.
21Multiple Intelligences MI
- 8 types at present,
- linguistic
- logical-mathematical
- spatial
- body-kinesthetic
- musical
- inter-personal
- intra-personal
- nature - ecology - environment
22With-it-ness
- With-it-ness refers to a teacher's behaviors that
demonstrate knowledge of what is going on in the
classroom. Kounin defines with-it-ness as "a
teacher communicating to the children by her
actual behavior that s/he knows what the children
are doing." Increases students' work involvement
and decreases deviant or disruptive pupil
behavior. (p.221)
23With-it-ness
- Desist Stop touching others (hitting)
- Suggest Alternative Behavior Hit the ball not
Eric! - Concurrent Praise Good, the class is working
quietly! - Description of Desirable Behavior How do we
move through the Halls, Susan?
24Smoothness of Transitions
- Delayed Response - "I'll get your permission
slip after we solve this problem, Ilene. - Timely Interjection - "Oh, by the way, that
reminds me - Smooth Transition Closure then new Acitivity
25Group Alerting
- Positive Questioning Technique - teacher frames
a question, pauses (3-5 seconds on the average)
and then calls on a student. This ensures that
all students think through the question. - Positive Recitation Strategy - If students know
exactly when they will be called upon, they can
"turn-off' during safe times. - Alerting Cues - "Now, I want everyone to think
about this as I might ask anyone
26Questions and/or Conundrums - Kounin
- What are Goal-Directed Prompts ?
- Work Showing Peer Involvement is self
explanatory! - What is Overlapping
- What is Momentum ?
- Always have variety novelty in a lesson/day?
- What do you do with these students who are
active aggressive (acting out), passive
aggressive (delaying, off-task), withdrawn
(avoidant, dreamy) and overly peer dependent
(distractible) do not learn well in typical
classroom settings . - What is Direct instruction?
27Task 1
- Hand your reflection to a peer for evaluation
they will forward your grade our of 10 to me on a
small piece of paper - Name on it?