Monday, February 8, 2016

Quick & Simple Classroom Management Tips

I'm sure we've all heard of the old saying 'you live and you learn'; well I've certainly learned a lot in the past six months and I thought it wise to pay it forward as I know I still have much more learning to do. I would also like to quickly touch on a topic that I think is usually taken for granted and that is mentoring. While I think it pertinent to find ways to incorporate mentoring and apprenticeships within our educational institutions, I also think that there is an important aspect being ignored which is the mentorship of new teachers. Having mentors ensure that we are continually able to pass our cultural traditions on through educational lessons as well as bridge the old with the new. While there are many new practices in early childhood and education in a whole over the last few decades they have all come with a great deal of good and they were all also build on the backs of the previous generation. Encourage others you know to mentor new professionals entering their field. It does not mean that they have 'vouched' for them but rather taken time out to share some of the experiences they have learned within the classroom. For new professionals adopt a mentor, tell them how much you value their professionalism and would like to learn more about their journey through professional development in a hopes to find peace within your own niche.  
Now that we've gotten through how I got my idea for this blog post let's actually get to the post. Within the last six months I've had the opportunity to work with some amazing individuals, all with a vast variety of techniques and methods for classroom management. Being the inquisitive individual I am I decided to try a few of these classroom management tips or 'diffusers' and I found five to be effective hands down with different age groups. As I mentioned before I decided to share them in the hopes of continually 'paying it forward' and I hope that others will too share their ideas and experiences as well. So without further adieu, these are my quick simple classroom management tips! 
  
Quick & Simple Classroom Management Tips 

1. Give clear and concise directions 
  • Post classroom rules and expectations within eye level and sight range. Use teachable moments to reinforce the need for rules and consequences if necessary 
2. Engaging work alternatives for students who finish earlier 
  • Use learning areas/ stations with engaging manipulatives as resources to aid in lessons 
3. Engaging energetic activities 
  • Play student oriented music during transitions and encourage them to dance and re-energize themselves. I've personally become partial to the Jammin Minute videos that are engaging ways to exercise while having fun. As school across the nation participate there are many video to different songs that can be found via YouTube and incorporated into any routine; you can even add your own! 
4. Rearranging furniture  
  • Redecorating can have powerful positive effects on the environment and may possibly changing the tone in your classroom; restructuring/ rotating learning areas and tools or even student partners can also attribute to a positive environment for learning 
5. Humor 
  • Reading age appropriate comic strips or even using spontaneous moments to encourage laughter in the classroom. The classroom should be viewed as neutral place where they can have fun and learn, usually giving students the opportunity to laugh at the teacher is usually ideal and always calls for response. 
  
Regardless of your teaching style, culture, or the environment in which you live I'm sure you can agree that an engaging activity can usually set a positive tone within the atmosphere. With that being said I believe the greatest tool to classroom management is to model and display a mutual sense of respect within reasonable bounds. It is understandable that a line must be drawn between teacher and student to many great reasons but role modeling a mutual sense of respect for all regardless of everything is a lesson that students can take with them throughout their lives and one in this day and age that many would say they need.  
  
The views expressed within the blog are solely those of Ms. Child Advocate and does not reflect on any of her affiliations. For more on the U.S Virgin Islands youths read PTA, Parent Committee, & Volunteering: Get Involved , Too Much Violence: USVI Shootings Near Preschools, USVI Shootings Near Preschool's 2, and Respect Goes Both Ways: Teacher and Student 

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