Title: Nuts and Bolts of Preventative Classroom Management
1Nuts and Bolts of Preventative Classroom
Management
- PBS in the Classroom
- Erin Chinworth
- Ebony Dorsey
- Melinda Gallagher
- Jennifer Kain
2What this is not
- This is not about teaching classroom management.
You are already classroom managers. - This session is about connecting and intertwining
PBS ideology with classroom management.
3Why do we need this?
- If you have more than 50 of your referrals in
the classroom, you need help with classroom
management. 86 of CMS is in the classroom. - Teachers know their content and how to help
students academically, but they panic when it
comes to behavior. - Another problem is that everyone is doing their
own thing. PBS is about getting all teachers
speaking the same language in their classrooms
and increasing consistency throughout your
school.
4What it is.
- Every teacher has classroom management skills
that they are implementing. Unless every teacher
has the same procedures, there is no consistency
and procedures are not clear to students. - These are the nuts and bolts of using PBS in
classroom management. We want to address
strategies that your school can use to get all
teachers speaking the same language and teaching
the same procedures.
5- A more accurate description of what effective
classroom management requires is teacher
self-management of instructional practice in
group settings. - What is teacher self-management and why is this
effective classroom management?
Knoster, (2009)
6Self-management is
- Bringing our own personal best into the classroom
everyday enables us to be more effective in the
classroom. - Physical Health
- Mental Health
- Emotional Health
- Since we cannot control our students behavior,
the only power we have is in managing ourselves.
7Agenda
- PBS ideals overview
- Building rapport
- Reflection
- Consistency and clear expectations
- Buy-in and academics
- Mantra activity
- Positive reinforcement
- 4 to 1 activity
- Universal classroom procedures and rewards
- Brainstorm with your team or find a partner
- Diffusers and classroom management strategies
8The Grand Illusion
- The idea that you are going to control or manage
how someone else acts. - However, what we do (how we act) in the classroom
does directly influence how our students act.
Knoster, (2009)
9Building Rapport
- Set goal of all communication to be reciprocal
and equal connect with the other person you are
communicating with whether it is a student, a
co-worker, a family member, or a friend. - I dont have the right to choose which students
I build a rapport with. I can choose in my
personal life, but not at school. - We must proactively reach out to those kids that
we have a hard time connecting with.
Knoster, (2009)
10Building Rapport continued
- All behaviors are contextual different for all
based on cultural, spiritual, experiences, etc. - The need for belonging is more primary than
physical needs (reversal of Maslows hierarchy). - We all need to feel safe in our social
relationships. - PBS does not FIX top-tier kids, but it gives them
support to be successful.
Wonnacott Moore, (2009)
11Evaluate Yourself.
- Minimally, you want 80 of your interactions with
students invested in prevention through positive
rapport-building and no more than 20 of your
time in responding to (intervening on) student
inappropriate behavior. - Spend a moment and think about your classroom and
how much time you spend building rapport versus
disciplining students. - What are some ideas that you have that can help
improve your rapport with students?
12Ideas for Building Rapport
- Go to students performances, athletic events,
after-school programs, etc. - Take an interest in the books that they read, the
movies they watch, and the songs that they hear. - Notice if they get a haircut or have new shoes.
- Show interest in them who they are and what they
do.
13Its more than being hip
- Show appropriate facial expression,
- Use appropriate tone of voice,
- Be physically close,
- Use Appropriate touch,
- Show appropriate body language,
- Listen while the student speaks,
- Show empathy,
- Ask open ended questions, and
- Ignore junk behavior.
Knoster, 2009
14- It has to be about improving Quality of Life
not just decreasing bad behaviors. - Student quality of life
- Teacher quality of life
- Our mission should be to create supports
opportunities for quality of life. It should be
about empowering individuals.
Horner, (2009)
15Consistency and Clear Expectations
- Consistency of enforcement of procedures gives
the students clarity and lessens atmosphere of
confusion and chaos throughout the school. - -Clinton teacher, 2009
- During the first week rules were explained.
Throughout the year, no. Very little consistency
between teachers and no follow-through on
discipline. - - Clinton student, 2009
16Staff Buy-In
- Teachers know their content and how to help
students academically, but they panic when it
comes to behavior (Hatton, 2009). - Behavior and academics cannot be separated out!
They must go together. (Response to Intervention
with Positive Behavior Supports) - Good instruction doesnt mean anything if
behavior isnt good enough to allow it and
perfect behavior means nothing without good
instruction (Abernathy, 2009).
17Both sides of the triangle must be strong
18Research
- Class-wide systems of PBS increased amount of
academic instructional time by 57, amount of
on-task behavior by 24 (Putnam, Handler
OLeary-Zonarich, 2003 Putnam, Handler, Rey
OLeary-Zonarich, 2002) - The relationship between problematic behavior and
academic performance strengthens over the course
of middle school (Roeser, Eccles, Sameroff, 2000) - Schools implementing SW-PBS scored higher on
state Reading tests than non-PBS schools (FL PBS
Project, 2007 Horner, Sugai, Todd,
Lewis-Palmer, 2005)
19Mantra
- Classroom procedures must correlate to
school-wide mantra. Let teachers make their own,
but create them using the same language of the
school-wide expectations. - Classroom expectations should follow the same
format as the school-wide mantra. - Procedures must be observable, measurable,
positively stated, with no question about
meaning. (Lewis, 2007)
20Pet Peeves Self-Management
- Most Pet Peeves can be sufficiently addressed
through preventative classroom management
approaches (Knoster, 2009). - Jot down your pet peeves, those student behaviors
that tend to send you over the edge. - Make sure your classroom procedures address your
personal pet peeves to prevent frustration and to
create an environment that is workable for you.
21Jennifers Classroom Procedures
- PRIDE
- Procedures Enter class sharpen pencil start
bell work sit in assigned seat - Respect Show respect by borrowing materials at
beginning of class and returning them at the end. - Individuals Do your work individually. Class
work is done everyday. Write it in your spiral.
You may redo any test. - Differences We will celebrate everyones
different birthdays on Fridays. You will be
rewarded for your good behavior. - Everyday Be prepared everyday. Come with a
pencil and your math spiral everyday. Quiz every
Friday bell work everyday.
22SCOTS Example
- Student made videos are an excellent way to teach
classroom procedures. - Use humor to keep interest, but be clear on
expectations. - While you watch video pay attention to skills and
strategies for classroom management - Stop, redirect, reinforce
- defusers
23Activity
- In groups of 4 to 6, choose a school mantra and
develop classroom procedures using the same
language and format. - Share with the group
24Positive Reinforcement
- Teach define, teach, and reward expectations.
ALL staff must do this to gain success.
(Wonnacott Moore, 2009) - Avoid responding to junk behavior by positively
recognizing the students who are following
expectations. Give positive rewards to students
who are in close proximity to students with
problematic behavior. (Knoster, 2009)
25Providing Positive Reinforcement
- Tell the student what he or she did that was
correct. - Stay close when acknowledging appropriate
behavior. - Provide positive acknowledgement that fits the
situation. - Provide the positive consequence within 3-5
seconds of recognizing the appropriate behavior.
Knoster, (2009)
264 to 1
- Strive to achieve a four to one ratio of positive
reinforcement for appropriate behavior for each
instance where you provide corrective feedback
for problem behavior. (Knoster, 2009) - What are some compliments you can give your
students? Make a list! (Add your ideas to the
Building Rapport handout.)
27Universal Classroom Procedures/ Rewards
- This is tier 1 classroom support
- School-wide classroom procedures
- Classroom rules are developed according to
school-wide expectations - Teachers teach procedures and reward students
with a SW reward system
28Examples of Universal Procedures
- Restroom procedures- orange vest, clipboard
- All students must use agenda for hall pass
- Attention signal- peace sign
- Paper heading
- Dismissal procedure
- Can you think of other procedures that are
universal in your school?
29Examples of Universal Rewards
- Tokens, bucks, tickets for school store
- Caught You Being Great with candy
- Free Dress Fridays
- Send home letters to parents about rewards
- Pizza parties
- AttenDance
- Students vs. Staff sports events
- Can you think of any other rewards that are
universal at your school?
30Defusing Problem Behavior
- Defusing Anger and Aggression Safe Strategies
for Secondary School Educators with Geoff Colvin,
PhD. - Our teachers watched short vignettes on defusing
problem behaviors. See handout for notes on
appropriate responses to angry and aggressive
students.
3117 Classroom Management Strategies(See handout
for descriptions)
- Increase ratio of positive to negative teacher to
student interactions - Actively supervise- continuously and positively
- Positively interact with most students during
lesson - Manage minor problem behaviors positively
quickly - Follow school procedures for chronic problem
behaviors - Conduct smooth and efficient transitions between
acitivities. - Be prepared for activity.
Lewis, (2007)
3217 Classroom Management Strategies continued
- Begin with clear explanations of
outcomes/objective. - Allocate most time to instruction
- Engage students in active responding
- Give each student multiple ways to actively
respond - Regularly check for student understanding
- End Activity with specific feedback
- Provide specific information about what happens
next - Know how many students met the objective/outcomes
- Provide extra time/assistance for unsuccessful
students - Plan for next time activity conducted
Lewis, 2007
33Sources
- Abernathy, S. (2009). Come together! Braiding pbs
and rti. 6th International PBS Conference March
27, 2009. - Colvin, G. (1999). Defusing anger and aggression
Safe strategies for secondary school educators.
IRIS Media, Inc. - Hatton, H. (2009). Scaffolding classroom
management with PBS. 6th International PBS
Conference March 27, 2009. - Horner, R. (2009). Keynote presentation at 6th
International PBS Conference, Jacksonville, FL,
March 26, 2009. - Knoster, T. (2009). The nuts and bolts of
preventative classroom management PBS in the
classroom. 6th International PBS Conference
March 26, 2009. - Lewis, T. (2007). Making connections november
2007 Small group strategies. Accessed July 7,
2009 at http//www.pbis.org - Wonnacott, A. Moore, M. (2009). Theories of
love, relationships, communication, PBS. 6th
International PBS Conference, March 26, 2009.