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Classroom Management

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Online Whiteboard & Online Collaboration Tool. Slack: Where work happens. A Classroom Management Strategy For The First Days Of School. At the start of a new school year, it’s common for teachers to send home a packet of information for parents.

A Classroom Management Strategy For The First Days Of School

This packet typically consists of school policies and procedures, daily schedules, papers to be signed, and hopefully a classroom management plan. This is all fine and good. But by throwing all this information together in a single packet, you’re missing an opportunity to get classroom management started with a bang. The beginning of the school year is the perfect time to send a pleasant behavioral shock wave through your new class of students and their parents. After all, they’re ripe for a change. The students who have had behavior problems in the past are either hopeful to turn over a new leaf or chomping at the bit to wrest control of the class from you as quickly as they can. Either way, the strategy I’m going to share with you sets the tone for the upcoming school year and is an important first step to creating the class you really want. The Classroom Management Packet 1. 2. How To Talk To Parents About Their Misbehaving Child. Many teachers, even seasoned veterans, have a fear of talking to parents about their child’s misbehavior.

How To Talk To Parents About Their Misbehaving Child

Generally, they’re afraid of three things: The parent (or parents) will get angry and defensive.The parent will question their competence.The parent will complain and make demands. These fears are well founded. While discussing behavior, teachers tend to say things that rub parents the wrong way. And because the topic of conversation is their child, their beloved flesh and blood, parents respond by fighting back. Their protective instinct kicks in, their emotions flare, and in an instant you find yourself backpedaling, apologizing, and explaining away your decisions and methods. Or worse, you bristle at their angry tone, become defensive, and drive a wedge through the critical teacher-parent relationship. Yikes! Planboard — Lesson planning made easy for teachers. Kinvolved: Messaging and Attendance Reporting App for Schools and Families. Kinvolved is a fantastic EdTech company I’ve had the pleasure of seeing present at events in New York City.

Kinvolved: Messaging and Attendance Reporting App for Schools and Families

They’ve created a platform that makes it easy for teachers and schools to communicate with parents in real time. With Kinvolved teachers can send home information on student attendance that keeps parents informed and kids accountable. Their goal is to reduce dropout rates and increase graduation rates. Teachers can use Kinvolved to quickly and simply input students’ attendance information for each period. Messages are sent to families in different languages – all with the goal of keeping parents in the loop. Visit Kinvolved’s website to learn more about the impact they’ve had so far and how to sign up your school! Monica Monica Burns is an Author, Speaker, Curriculum & EdTech Consultant and Apple Distinguished Educator. Needs Focused Teaching. Top 5 Classroom Management Tools for Teachers. 1- Socrative Socrative is a smart student response system that empowers teachers to engage their classrooms through a series of educational exercises and games via smartphones, laptops, and tablets.

Top 5 Classroom Management Tools for Teachers

Socrative is simple to set up and there are a variety of options for you to use. You can ask multiple choice questions, have exit tickets to gauge understanding at the end of the lesson, you can include pictures in your questions and you can also have Socrative answers your short answer questions too. ClassDojo is a classroom tool that helps teachers improve behavior in their classrooms quickly and easily. It also captures and generates data on behavior that teachers can share with parents and administrators. Pick a student at random just by giving your device a shake or tapping the screen -- but that’s just the beginning.

Classroom Management Tips for Kids and Adolescents. How to Handle Classroom Management Like A Referee. As I was watching my favorite hockey team the other day, I noticed something that struck me during one of the brawls that (for whatever reason) still occur in the almost every game.

How to Handle Classroom Management Like A Referee

I was amazed as the guy wearing the black and white striped shirt held two huge athletes at bay and got them to stop fighting without even being phased. He calmly talked to both players, they released their stranglehold on one another, and the game continued (after penalty minutes were distributed, of course). I immediately thought about so many issues that I’ve seen with classroom management, and how this guy might have the solution.

I know what you’re thinking: “what does this have to do with me, my students, or my classroom?” Let me explain. Before I get to far, I want to point out that there are systems, routines, procedures, and a myriad of other pieces that go into good management, such as building relationships. You’ve set your rules…enforce them. Stay calm. Get back to the game. Sites. Tout Google avec un seul compte Connectez-vous pour accéder à Google Drive.

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Localiser mon compte Mot de passe oublié ? Se connecter avec un autre compte Créer un compte Tout Google avec un seul compte. Remind. Homeroom - Private classroom albums for teachers and parents. Beautiful and easy to use newsletters.