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Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works
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Page 1: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Student Responsibility

Classroom Management that Works

Page 2: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Quote:

“Although teachers are the guiding force in classroom management, students also have a role in how well-managed the classroom is.”

Page 3: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Contributing Factors

Most important to overall productivity, GPA, and personal satisfaction:

– Attitude– Practice of taking responsibility for one’s

actions

Page 4: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Volunteers to report to group?

Benefits: Bottom up model- students feel ownership

Concern of NCLB and teach only Math/Reading

Page 5: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Research shows:

Although parents and teachers agree this is important, student responsibility is rarely taught in the K-12 arena.

Rather, the focus has been on the teacher and methods of control and discipline.

Page 6: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Teaching Student Responsibility

Takes a commitment that should be considered thoroughly

Brophy states: Teachers wanting to appropriately address this issue need to be willing to do the following:

Page 7: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Brophy’s 5 Suggestions

1. Personal relationships beyond instructional purposes

2. Spend time outside school hours dealing with students and families

3. Deal with complex problems 4. Face opposition – from colleagues and

administrators 5. Possibly face opposition from student and

family

Page 8: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Marzano’s 3 Action Steps to Enhance Student Responsibility

1. Classroom Procedures2. Self-Monitoring and Control

Strategies3. Cognitively Based Strategies

Page 9: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Classroom Procedures to enhance responsibility:

Class meetings Language of responsibilityWritten statement of beliefs

(mission)Written self-analysis

Page 10: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Class Meetings

Guidelines for effective class meetings:1. Determine who can call a class meeting and when it should be held

according to standards of appropriate time and place.

2. Seat students and teachers so that they can see the faces of all other members.

3. Establish the expectation that names will not be used in a class meeting because the purpose it to address issues, not people.

4. Establish the ground rule that the meetings will stay on topic.

5. Establish the ground rule that students have the right not to participate in meetings.

6. Encourage or require students to use journals in conjunction with the class meetings.

Page 11: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

A Language of Responsibility

The language we use is a window to our thoughts.

If students do not have a language to talk about responsibility, they have few tools to explore the concept.

Judicious Discipline – rights, freedoms, equality, responsibilities

Page 12: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Written Statements of Beliefs

Importance about being explicit and precise about our beliefs.

E.g. Ethos documents contain assertions of the beliefs that underlie expected behaviors and are created as a class.– All students and teachers have a right to be

treated with respect.– Everyone has the right to feel safe in the

classroom.

Page 13: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Written Self-Analyses

Use by students of a prescribed form to record their analysis of behavioral incidents.

Helps students to articulate their perspective on an incident in the context of a framework that requires them to examine their responsibility.– I think that I contributed to the incident when I

______. – When I think about what happened, I wish _____.

Page 14: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Marzano’s 3 Action Steps

1. Classroom Procedures2. Self-Monitoring and Control

Strategies3. Cognitively Based Strategies

Page 15: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Self-Monitoring and Control Strategies

Not to be used with the entire class, just with those students for whom the general management techniques are not working.

Require students to observe their own behavior, record it, compare it with predetermined criteria, and then acknowledge and reward their own success if reached.

Page 16: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Meeting with Student and Parents

Establish that the student’s behavior is a problem for you, the class, and the student.

Provide documented examples!!!!! Goal: not to punish, but to help them

succeed. Provide strategies to be used in a variety of

situations. Students and parents must accept.

Page 17: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Basic Design of Strategies

1. Record keeping and contingent rewards– Cue students to periodically monitor themselves.– Form can be provided. (p. 87)– Set targets.

2. Monitoring without formal record keeping.

3. No formal record keeping, no reward.

4. Student autonomy.

Page 18: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Marzano’s 3 Action Steps

1. Classroom Procedures2. Self-Monitoring and Control

Strategies3. Cognitively Based Strategies

Page 19: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Types of Cognitively-Based Strategies

Social Skills Training– Socially inept students

Problem Solving– More general.

These strategies generally contain the following steps:

Page 20: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Cognitively Based Strategies

1. Know your emotions- Stop!

2. Different ways to Respond

3. Think about Consequences

4. Select Action Best for You and Others Key: Helps them understand why and

how they react to specific situations so they can better control their own behavior.

Page 21: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Reflections

Look at reflection questions and discuss with a partner your ideas and how you might be able to implement this in your work.

Page 22: Student Responsibility Classroom Management that Works.

Turn to someone and discuss:

Why would it be useful to teach students about personal responsibility? How might it benefit students later in life?

Name a specific situation where it would help a student for them to be responsible for themselves.

What concerns do you have about using class time for activities such as teaching responsible behavior?