Title: Classroom Management
1Classroom Management
- Creating a Positive Learning Environment
2Why Effective Management
- Maximizes learning opportunities
- Discipline is more effective
- Guides students toward self-discipline
- Teacher is a guide, coordinator, and facilitator
NOT a director - Emphasizes student responsibility for learning
3What is Classroom Management?
- Its being prepared for class
- Its motivating your students
- Its providing a safe, comfortable learning
environment - Its building your students self esteem
- Unique in every classroom
4Affects on Management Styles
- Teaching styles affect management
- Teacher personalities
- Differing student populations
5Management Issues
- All teachers should design classrooms for optimal
learning - Create positive environments
- Establish and maintain rules
- Student cooperation
- Deal effectively with problems
- Use good communication strategies
6Elementary Issues
- Same students all day
- Same classroom with peers
- Interaction with the same people
- What can happen?
- Confinement
- Boredom
7Secondary Issues
- Confronted with a broader range of issues
- Spend lees time with students
- More difficult to establish personal
relationships - Get class moving more quickly
- Time management
- Infractions may be more severe
- Hallway issues make it into the classroom
- This happens every hour
8Whats Going On in the Classroom?
- Classrooms are multidimensional
- Many activities going on
- From academic to social
- Teachers keeping students on task
- Teachers keeping records
- Monitoring, collecting, reassigning, evaluating
9Whats Going On in the Classroom?
- Activities occur simultaneously
- Students performing a variety of tasks
- Socializing
- Students off task
- Working 1 on 1 with teacher
- Students picking on each other
10Whats Going On in the Classroom?
- Things happen quickly
- Require immediate response
- Students conflicts
- Disruptive behavior
- Student gets sick
- Student is defiant
- Bullying
11Whats Going On in the Classroom?
- Events are unpredictable
- Fire Alarm
- Student vomits
- Students get into a fight
- Students sneaks out
- Computer goes down
- Unexpected visitors
12Whats Going On in the Classroom?
- There is little privacy
- Public place
- Students observe how teachers handle
- Disruptions
- Discipline
- Unexpected events
- Frustration
- Students create perceptions about the teacher
13Whats Going On in the Classroom?
- Classrooms have histories
- Students remember
- Students talk to other students
- Remember discipline
- Remember how others were treated
- Teacher keeps promises
- Past affects the future
14The Right Start
- Take advantage of the new school year or term to
set the stage for cooperation - Be particularly prepared and organized
- Minimize transition time
- Utilize a communication style that establishing
non-threatening, comfortable environment - Clearly establish expectations for conduct
15The Right Start
- Gets students effectively engaged
- Take the time to establish expectations, rules
and routines - Go over each day for the 1st 3 weeks of school
- Helps makes sure your classroom runs efficiently
and sets a foundation for a positive learning
environment
16The Right Start
- Take advantage of the first days of class
- Establish an environment in which achieving
specified learning goals takes priority over
other concerns - It is much easier to establish this environment
from the beginning rather than later
17Positive Classroom Climate
- Use preventive, proactive strategies
- Avoid reactionary disciplinary approaches
- Place emphasis on guiding and structuring
classroom activities - Not emphasizing your disciplinary role
- Get students active in meaningful tasks
- Emphasize critical thinking, reflection, and
cooperative learning - Your classroom is a place of meaningful activity
18Management Strategies
- Assist students in spending more time on learning
- Maximize instructional time
- Increase learning time
- Minimize non-goal behavior
19Management Strategies
- Prevent students from developing problems
- Well managed class reduces academic and emotional
problems from developing - Students are
- busy
- challenged
- active and engaged
- motivated
- following the rules
20Classroom Arrangement
- 4 Basic Principles
- Dont create congestion in high use areas
- Make sure you can see all students
- Make often-used teaching materials and students
supplies easy to get to - Make sure all students can observe what you are
doing
21Congestion
- Distraction and disruption often occur in
high-use areas - Group work areas, students desks, teachers
desk, computer stations etc - Separate the areas
- Make access easy
22See Everyone
- You must be able to carefully monitor students
- See all students at all times
- Clear line of sight
- Look for blind spots and eliminate them
23Access to Materials
- Minimizes preparation
- Minimizes confusion
- Minimizes clean-up time
- Reduces slowdown and breaks in activity time
- Maximizes learning time
24Student Observation
- Students need to see what is going on
- Students need to be able to observe whole-class
presentations - Should not have to move desks or stretch to see
25Classroom Arrangement Styles
- Before arranging, need to decide what
instructional style will be used in the classroom - Whole-class
- Small group
- Individual
- The physical arrangement needs to support the
activities
26Arrangement
- Traditional Auditorium all students sit facing
the teacher - Allows for easy teacher movement, decreases
student interaction good for lectures/presentation
s - Face to Face higher distraction
- Off-set 4 desks students do not sit directly
across from each other good for cooperative
learning
27Arrangement
- Seminar Style circular, square, U shaped
arrangement good for student to student and
teach to student interaction - Cluster Style 4-8 students in a grouping
effective for collaborative learning - Clustering desks fosters student interaction
28Personalizing the Classroom
- Put student work up
- Classroom should reflect what is going on
- Who is in there
- What is being learned
- Creates a more personal and positive environment
29Positive Learning Environments
- Management Styles
- Authoritative
- Authoritarian
- Permissive
30Authoritative
- Teachers who use this style have students who
- Tend to be self-reliant
- Delay Gratification
- Get along well with peers
- Show high self esteem
31Authoritative Strategy
- Encourages students to be independent thinkers
- Independent doers
- Effective Teacher monitoring
- Teacher engages students in verbal give take
- Show a caring attitude
- Boundaries are set, rules and regulations are
clarified - Allows for student input
32Ineffective Strategies
- Authoritarian
- Restrictive and punitive
- Keep order
- Not instruction focused
- Firm limits and controls on student behavior
- Little verbal exchange
- Passive learners
- Not self initiating, poor communication skills
33Ineffective Strategies
- Permissive
- Considerable autonomy
- Little or no support for developing skills
- Little behavior management
- Low self-control
- Low academic abilities
34Rules and Procedures
- Must have clearly defined rules
- Students need to know expectations
- Rules Standards for behavior
- Procedures How things are done correctly in your
classroom
35Tips About Rules and Procedures
- Should be reasonable and necessary
- Should be clear and easily comprehensible
- Consistent with instructional and learning goals
- Room rules should be consistent with school rules
36Student Cooperation
- Develop a positive relationship with students
- Develop a caring attitude
- Students need to fell safe and secure
- Fairly treated
- Good communication skills
- Atmosphere is relaxed and pleasent
37Responsibility and Reward
- Help establish rules
- Commitment to rules and procedures
- How can rewards be used effectively
- Choose effective reinforcers
- Use prompts and shaping
- Reward for mastery not compliance
38Good Communication
- Three keys to good communication
- Speaking skills
- Listening skills
- Nonverbal communication
39Speaking Skills
- Clearly communicate information
- Correct grammar
- Vocab they understand and appropriate
- Use strategies to improve student understanding
- Be precise
- Think logically
- Good pace
40Speaking Skills
- You an I messages
- Replace you messages with I messages
- You messages put people on the defensive
- You didnt follow through
- I dont like it when people dont follow through
- I messages are more constructive
41Speaking Skills
- Dealing with Conflict
- 4 styles
- Aggressive
- Manipulative
- Passive
- Assertive
42Speaking Skills
- Aggressive
- Abrasive, demanding, hostile, bullying,
insensitive - Manipulative
- Guilt trips, play the victim, martyr, get people
to do things for them
43Speaking Skills
- Passive
- Nonassertive, submissive, dont express feelings,
dont let people know what they want - Assertive
- Express feelings, ask for what they want, say no,
stand up for themselves, misbehavior be corrected
44Speaking Skills
- Barriers to effective communication
- Criticizing
- Name calling
- Advising
- Ordering
- Threatening
- Moralizing
45Listening Skills
- Active listening
- Giving full attention to the speaker
- Paraphrase what the speaker has said
- Synthesize themes and patterns
- Give good feedback
46Nonverbal Communication
- Facial expressions and eye contact smiling and
good eye contact - Touch use appropriately and courteously
- Space Students need their own space and respect
others space - Silence remain silent long enough for students
to respond
47Problem Behaviors
- Management Strategies
- Minor interventions speaking out of turn,
eating in class, leaving their seat without
permission, being chatty - Use nonverbal cues
- Redirect behavior
- Provide needed instruction
- Move closer to students (proximity)
- Give student a choice
48Problem Behaviors
- Management Strategies
- Moderate interventions- abuse priveledges,
disruption, goofing, interfere with instruction,
bothering other students work - Deny or withhold activity
- Isolate or remove
- Impose a penalty
- ASD, recess detention
49Problem Behaviors
- Management Strategies
- Moderate interventions- abuse priveledges,
disruption, goofing, interfere with instruction,
bothering other students work - Parent teacher call/email
- Peer mediation
- Find a mentor
50Problem Behaviors
- Management Strategies
- Aggression - Fighting, bullying, defiance
hostility toward the teacher, stealing - Fighting- depending on the age intervention, call
for help, sharp verbal command of STOP,
separate fighters, carry out school policy on
fighting, let students cool off, get both points
of view
51Problem Behaviors
- Management Strategies
- Aggression - Fighting, bullying, defiance
hostility toward the teacher, stealing - Bullying 1 in 3 students are bullied
- Bullying verbal or physical behavior intended to
disturb someone less powerful - Follow school sanctions
- Form friendship groups of bullied students
- Speak to parents
52Problem Behaviors
- Management Strategies
- Aggression - Fighting, bullying, defiance
hostility toward the teacher - Defiance and Hostility
- Defuse by keeping it private, handle student
privately, depersonalize it to avoid power
struggle, meet and spell out consequences - In extreme cases have the student removed
- Above all else keep your composure and stay calm