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Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

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Page 1: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively
Page 2: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

Objectives of this session:

1. Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2. How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3. How to effectively manage transitions.4. Motivate your students with positive discipline strategies.5. How to organize your classroom for student success.

Page 3: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

Only those who have never taught are those who think

teaching is easy.

Page 4: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

Student achievement at the end of the year is directly related to the degree to which the teacher establishes good control of the classroom procedures.

Wong, H.K. & Wong, R.T (1998)

Page 5: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

Classroom management consists of many different components:

1. Holding children accountable for their own behavior2. Establishing rules, routines, and procedures 3. Teaching students to be independent4. Organization5. High expectations for all students6. Consequences that are clear to both teacher and students7. Taking responsibility for your student's behavior

Page 6: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

Children learn best in an organized environment with clear, consistent

rules and procedures.

Page 7: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

Young children are better behaved in places where they feel safe.

Aggressive behavior can often be traced to feelings of not belonging - when children feel safe they thrive!

When they do not feel safe they adopt survival behavior- "misbehavior"

Page 8: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

From the TEA Pre-Kindergarten Guidelines:v. The Learning Environment

Teachers play a critical role in helping children learn classroom routines, through modeling, thinking out loud and, initially, sharing the responsibility. The initial time put into this effort pays off in the long run with children being much more independent, allowing the teacher to spend time teaching and interacting with children.

Page 9: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

Characteristics of a well managed classroom:

• Children are engaged and attentive during large group activities.

• Children know how to use materials in the classroom properly.

• Children are not touching each other or fighting.

• Children can listen and follow simple directions.

• Children can move around the room independently with minimal teacher supervision.

Page 10: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

Characteristics of a poorly managed classroom:

• Students are not engaged or attentive during large group activities.

• Students are fighting and touching each other.

• Children can not move around the room independently without excessive adult supervision.

• Children do not know how to use materials in the classroom properly.

• Children do not listen and are not able to follow simple directions.

Page 11: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

Teacher's Job= Teach the child

Parent's Job = Love the child

The methods used to achieve each of these goals are very different, if the lines are blurred

chaos will reign.

Page 12: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

The teacher is the "bus driver“.He or she is responsible for getting

students safely from point A to point B.

As a responsible school bus driver you would NEVER let students drive the bus.

Page 13: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

A teacher with good classroom management:

Addresses problems head on as they arise.

Starts each day fresh- doesn’t dwell on yesterday’s behavior.

Sets high expectations for ALL students.

Page 14: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

The #1 secret to classroom management success:

The teacher is responsible for student behavior!

Page 15: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

Two biggest mistakes teachers make when disciplining children are:

• Too much talking• Too much emotion

Wah, wah, Wah, wah

Page 16: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

In Ineffective Classrooms:

The rules and the teacher are the focal points.

The teacher takes it personally when students misbehave.

There are more behavior problems.

Students resist teacher authority; they are always "in trouble".

Page 17: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

In Effective Classrooms:

The teacher recognizes that children are in the process of learning acceptable behavior.

The teacher sees inappropriate behavior as an opportunity to teach instead of a personal attack.

Students understand and can articulate why they need to behave.

Page 18: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

Age Appropriate Rules: • Helping Hands• Listening Ears• Eyes Looking• Quiet Voices• Walking Feet

Inappropriate Rules: • I will not interfere with the learning of others. • I will accept responsibility for my actions.

Page 19: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

Early Childhood Rules: • Use kid-friendly language• Use simple phrases• Always use pictures to illustrate meaning• Post at child eye-level in large print• Post in more than one area of the classroom

Page 20: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

How to teach students the rules:• MODEL, MODEL, MODEL! • Teacher models examples and non-examples • Students model examples • Review on a regular basis • TELLING is never enough• Always use pictures with Pre-K or Kinder students• NEVER assume your students understand the rules completely.

Page 21: Objectives of this session: 1.Identify and write age appropriate classroom rules. 2.How to establish rules, routines, and procedures. 3.How to effectively

The most successful transitions between lessons or activities are rapid ones that have clear ends and beginnings (Arlin, 1979; Burden, 2003; Cangelosi, 2000; Rosenberg et al., 1997) and that reduce the amount of “down time” between the activities (Sainato, 1990, Vartuli, & Phelps, 1980).