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SIX ASPECTS OF SIX ASPECTS OF CLASSROOM CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT MANAGEMENT Stephanie Davis Robyn Elizabeth Ewert Ashley Freitas Tracy Turcotte David Thomas Ward Susan Jane Young
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Page 1: Classroom mgmt sy_rev

SIX ASPECTS OF SIX ASPECTS OF CLASSROOM CLASSROOM

MANAGEMENTMANAGEMENT

Stephanie Davis

Robyn Elizabeth Ewert

Ashley Freitas

Tracy Turcotte

David Thomas Ward

Susan Jane Young

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CONSEQUENCCONSEQUENC

ESES

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Importance of Importance of Classroom Classroom

ManagementManagement

• The research conducted on The research conducted on

teacher’s behaviors in the classroom teacher’s behaviors in the classroom

shows that teachers' actions in their shows that teachers' actions in their

own classrooms have twice the own classrooms have twice the

influence on student achievement influence on student achievement

than school policies. (Marzano, 2003a)than school policies. (Marzano, 2003a)

• It is known that the most crucial and difficult jobs of being a It is known that the most crucial and difficult jobs of being a teacher and having an individual classroom is managing the teacher and having an individual classroom is managing the classroom effectively. classroom effectively.

• Classroom management has the most significant effect on Classroom management has the most significant effect on student achievement. student achievement.

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Establishing Classroom Management

Consequences

• Teachers can set up clear expectations for behavior and classroom management techniques using two methods: establishing clear rules and procedures, and providing consequences for student behavior.

• Research indicates the Research indicates the significance of developing significance of developing clear rules and procedures for clear rules and procedures for general classroom behavior, general classroom behavior, seat work, group work, seat work, group work, transitional periods and transitional periods and interruptions, rules for going interruptions, rules for going to the bathroom, using to the bathroom, using materials and equipment, and materials and equipment, and the start and end of each the start and end of each period or subject. period or subject.

• If possible, the classroom If possible, the classroom rules and procedures should rules and procedures should involve both teacher and involve both teacher and student input and should be student input and should be consented by both parties consented by both parties (Glasser, 1969). (Glasser, 1969).

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Classroom Management Consequences

In addition to designing classroom rules and procedures, it is necessary for the teacher to recognize students' behavior by reinforcing acceptable behavior and providing negative consequences for unacceptable behavior.

** It is important not to ignore inappropriate behavior or be sidetracked by students denying, arguing, or blaming someone else for the misbehavior. Instead, listen to legitimate explanations**

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Strategies from Stage and Quiroz (1997) for Strategies from Stage and Quiroz (1997) for Classroom Management Consequences to Classroom Management Consequences to

Occur Occur

• Prompt the class about specific expected behaviors through prearranged signals.

• Use extensive and various verbal and physical reactions to students' misbehavior.

• Provide tangible recognition of appropriate behavior.

• When a student misbehaves, speak clearly and use an appropriate tone of voice in a pitch that is to some extent elevated from normal classroom speech .

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Stage and Quiroz (continued)Stage and Quiroz (continued)

•Use policies for group work that hold the entire group responsible for behavioral expectations.

• Use assertive body language by maintaining a firm and consistent posture and facial expression that is consistent with the body language, facing the offending student.

•Persist until students respond with the appropriate behavior.

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MOTIVATIONMOTIVATION

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Types of Motivation

There are two types of student motivation:

Intrinsic motivation: satisfies a student’s curiosity, the need to know and feelings of competence or growth.

Extrinsic motivation: comes from outside the learner and has to do with external rewards for completing a task.

The overuse of extrinsic rewards can eventually undermine the intrinsic rewards that students would gain.

It is important to use extrinsic rewards minimally. Students might come to rely too heavily on what they stand to physically gain from completing a task, rather than the more important academic gains.

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Motivation is an essential component of classroom management. Therefore, teachers should plan for motivation in the same way they plan for instruction.

When teachers and parents nurture a young child’s natural curiosity and encourage exploration, they are sending the message that learning is worthwhile, fun and interesting.

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Every lesson should plan for student success. When a student can expect to do well at a given task, the need for classroom management intervention is greatly minimized.

Some quick ways that teachers can do this:

•Meet the motivational needs of students by adjusting praise, guidance and reinforcement.•Treat students as eager learners; they are more likely to behave as eager learners!•Establish a supportive environment – be encouraging and patient, try to take away negative reinforcement.•Monitor the difficulty of the goals and tasks that students choose for themselves. •Express interest in the content, and project enthusiasm – students often find motivation knowing that the teacher enjoys the topic.

Motivation TIPS!

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Having an unmotivated student is not uncommon. It is important that teachers recognize that these students might “not care about their academics” because they are feeling discouraged.

In these situations the teacher should:

•Help students concentrate on the task at hand, rather than the fear of performing poorly.•Encourage the student to retrace their steps to find the source of the problem.•Promote alternative solutions to each problem rather than giving up on only one method.•Help the student to discover where they are going wrong, be it lack of effort or information, rather than their supposed lack of ability.

Helping Unmotivated Students

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Every student has intrinsic motivation within them, sometimes the teacher just has to find their own in order to guide their students on

the path toward success.

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SUPPLY SUPPLY

TEACHINGTEACHING

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Preparation

•Arrive early.

•Post the day’s assignments at front of class for all to see.

•Be prepared to be flexible.

•Greet students when they enter the classroom.

•Have quick access to school’s timetable for reference and time management.

•Have a ‘bag of tricks’ resource kit.

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Set Expectations 

Set high behavioral expectations by:

• Using professional dress and manner.

• Restating existing classroom rules .

• Posting 5 or fewer rules if no rules posted, with consequences and rewards.

• Providing clear and specific directions.

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Manage with Confidence •Use posture, demeanor and voice to project confidence.

•Walk around the room to use proximity and assessment to assert control.

•Keep students on task by immediate involvement in the lesson.

•Be observant of and highlight on task behavior.

• Immediately redirect any off-task behavior quickly.

• Follow-up on assigned consequences .

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‘Bag of Tricks’ You never know what you will find/have available in the classroom, so be prepared with:

• A ‘hook’ prop to engage students and share your personality (puzzles, video, favorite book/quote, word games or other games).

• Books for various grade levels for reading aloud.

• Lesson plans for various grade levels with generalized expectations.

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• Worksheets for various grade levels, enough for class set (e.g.

crosswords, word matches).

•A couple of activities that cross grade levels and strands (ex. chocolate chip cookie

mining).

•Chalk, whiteboard markers, pens, paperclips, Kleenex tissue, blank paper, lined paper, pencils, erasers, blank overheads, sticky notes.

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CLASSROOM CLASSROOM

DESIGNDESIGN

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Classroom Design Enhances Classroom Management

• Set up spatial boundaries to:

• create mood .(“Classroom Connection:, 2006)• establish how/how much communication takes

place .• ( “Classroom Connection:,” 2006)• avoid classroom management problems .(Jones,

2003)

• Foster trust, respect and mature interaction with design . (Streich, 2009)

• Turn classroom into “true learning center.” (Streich, 2009)

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Work the Crowd

• Manage group behavior more easily by “working the crowd.” (Jones, 2003)

Access to all students is important

• Use teacher proximity, mobility, and access as “instruments of management.” (Jones, 2003)

• Tools for Teaching by Fred Jones is a great source for more information about “working the crowd.”

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Reorganize the Room

•Move teacher’s desk away from room front. (Jones, 2003)

•Arrange furniture to get students closer to teacher/room front. (Jones, 2003)

•Place trash cans and pencil sharpeners to reduce distractions and ease use. (Wagaman, 2008)

•Improve teacher movement and access to all parts of room by eliminating obstacles . (Jones, 2003)

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Plan to Improve Teaching/Learning

• Reduce clutter and disorganization. (Wagaman, 2008)

• Make space for paper, tools, materials, and technology. (Wagaman, 2008)

• Improve proximity to all students . (Jones, 2003)

• Keep proximity in mind for a variety of seating arrangements. (Jones, 2003)

An interior loop allows room to walk around

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CLASSROOM CLASSROOM

ROUTINESROUTINES

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All teachers strive for the prevention of behavior problems and find ways to use instructional time more effectively.

It is important to tell your student what is expected, model the expected behavior, and then allow students to practice.

There are 5 kinds of routines according to “Teaching Effective Classroom Routines”:

1.Teacher Routines

2.Basic Student Routines

3.Responsible Student Routines

4.Transitioning Routines

5.Special Behaviors

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1. Teacher Routines1. Teacher Routines

Signal for AttentionSignal for Attention Giving Direction Giving Direction

2. Responsible Student Routines

Working Independently

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3. Basic Student 3. Basic Student RoutinesRoutines

Organizing Organizing Student MaterialsStudent Materials

Request Teacher Request Teacher AssistanceAssistance

4. Transitioning Routines

Switching Classes Returning from Nutrition

Break or Recess

5. Special Behaviors

Free-Time Behavior Behavior for Sub

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A procedure becomes a routine when the student does it automatically without prompting or supervision.

It is important to have very clear and concise procedures so that students are less likely to act up in frustration.

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POSITIVE POSITIVE

RECOGNITIORECOGNITIO

NN

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“Positive reinforcement is anything that occurs after a behavior that increases the likelihood that the behaviour will reoccur.” (Special Connections) “The results of current research indicate that an over reliance on punitive policies is not only ineffective at changing behaviour … but possibly exacerbates problems.” (Morrissey et. al) 

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Types of Group Positive Reinforcement

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Verbal praise•Sounds simple, but often teachers forget how important this is. Certificates•Well Done certificates, bookmarks, stickers

on work. Class activities •The class collects points that earn them

something, an activity, a reward, pizza party, trip, movie, etc.

“One approach could be to make one activity contingent on another: students can earn time in one favored activity by performing well in another.” (ERIC)

 

Reward Systems

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Prizes•Students get coupons, ballots for good behavior they write their names on them and enter them into a draw at the end of a given period of time, for a prize. Token Economies•Students earn points, tokens, or coupons by demonstrating desired behavior and saving them up to buy prizes or rewards.

For more information on setting up a token economy visit http://www.usu.edu/teachall/text/behavior/LRBIpdfs/Token.pdf

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A Different Take on Token Economies

Have an auction!

Students save up tokens and then have an opportunity to bid on rewards

Sample rewards include; using the good chair for a period (teachers chair), 15 minutes in the gym at recess, working in the hall with a partner, having a period on the computer (teacher chooses activity), having a 1-day extension on an assignment, no homework pass, sit with a friend, silent reading in the library, recess extension of 5 minutes for the whole class (one who bid on it got to pick the day), etc.

** An advantage to using the action system is that the students who consistently demonstrate desired behaviors have more tickets to bid with at the action and usually get the best prizes. Students can save their tickets for later actions to get better prizes (Jackson)

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Reflection Time

• Keep data to determine whether an approach is working. Compare behaviour during baseline and treatment phases. (ERIC)

• For example track how many coupons you are giving out and to whom. (This is also useful when it comes to filling out the “learning skills” section of the report card.)

• Re-assess effectiveness and make adjustments accordingly.

• Consider integrating other behavior management techniques.

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References

Burden, Paul. (2000). Powerful Classroom Management Strategies: Motivating

Students to Learn. Retrieved on 2010/06/13 from http://books.google.ca/books?hl=en&lr=&id=BbJJzPLe_9IC&oi=fnd&pg=PP13&dq=motivation+and+classroom+management&ots=gqBAjzlHUI&sig=MsnCguTJQZHNyt2wMpFsUMYtHSU#v=onepage&q=motivation%20and%20classroom%20management&f=false

Byer, John L., “A Comprehensive Method for Effective Substitute Teaching,”

Eric. http://wf2dnvr13.webfeat.org:80/JhBOO11535/url=http://tpdweb.umi.com/tpweb?Did=ED503689&Fmt=1&Mtd=1&Idx=1&Sid=1&RQT=877&EricUrl=http://www.eric.ed.gov/contentdelivery/servlet/ERICServlet?accno=ED503689&TS=1276560463.

ERIC # ED371506, 1990, Managing Inappropriate Behavior in the Classroom.

Retrieved from http://www.ericdigests.org/1995-1/behavior.htmGlasser, W. (1969). Schools without failure. New York: Harper and Row.

Leadership, 61(1), 6-13. Jones, F. . (2003). Set up an effective room arrangement. Retrieved from

http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/visio-help/set-up-an-effective-room-arrangement-HA001207138.aspx?CTT=5&origin=HA001207150

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References continued

Levin, James and Nolan, James F., “Principles of Classroom Management: A

Professional Decision-Making Model, Fourth Edition.” Pearson Education, 2009.

Lumsden, Linda S. (June 1994). Student Motivation To Learn. ERIC Digest,

Number 92. Retrieved on 2010/06/27 from http://www.kidsource.com/kidsource/content2/Student_motivatation.html

Marzano, R. J. (2003a). What works in schools. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.Marzano, R.J., & Marzano, J.S. (2003). The Key to Classroom Management.

Educational Morrissey, Kelly L, Bohanon, Hank,& Fenning, Pamela. Positive Behavior

Support: Teaching and Acknowledging Expected Behaviors in an Urban High School, Teaching Exceptional Children. Reston: May/Jun 2010. Vol. 42, Iss. 5; pg. 26, 10 pgs

Odette Jackson, FSL Literacy Resource Teacher with Simcoe County District

School Board, personal communication, June 28, 2010Rutledge Janz, Janice, Teaching Effective Classroom Routines: Intervention in

School and Clinic v.37 I1 (2001) p.48 Gale GroupSpecial Connections, University of Kansas 2005. Positive Reinforcement.

Retrieved from http://www.specialconnections.ku.edu/cgi-bin/cgiwrap/specconn/main.php?cat=behavior&section=main&subsection=classroom/positive

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References continued

Stage, S. A., & Quiroz, D. R. (1997). A meta-analysis of interventions to

decrease disruptive classroom behavior in public education settings. School Psychology Review, 26(3), 333–368.

Streich, M. . (2009, July 20). First school week in high school classes.Retrieved from http://classroom- management-tips.suite101.com/article.cfm/first_school_week_in_high_school

Classroom connection: classroom configuration. (2006, September). Techniques: Connection Education & Careers, 7-8.

Utah State University PDF handout. Token Economy. Retrieved from http://www.usu.edu/teachall/text/behavior/LRBIpdfs/Token.pdf

Wagaman, J. . (2008, December 4). Preparing your classroom for the start of

school. Retrieved from http://classroom-organization.suite101.com/article.cfm/preparing_your_classroom_for_the_start_of_school

Wang, M. C., Haertel, G. D., & Walberg, H. J. (1993). Toward a knowledge

base for school learning. Review of Educational Research, 63(3), 249–294.

Wong, Harry How to Be an Effective Teacher: The First Days of School (2005)

Harry K Wong Publications Inc.