Behavior
Plan Week Two
The
first thing I noticed during my current placement is the significant difference
in classroom management compared to what I have previously observed. Both
teachers are very clearly well liked by students, respected by faculty, and
fluent in their content areas; yet my current placement experiences far fewer
interruptions and distractions from students. After wondering why this was the
case, I asked my host teacher how she had implemented her classroom rules in
the beginning of the year.
Firstly,
she admitted that it was a painstaking process to build the respect and
classroom environment that she has achieved. During the first week of the year
she laid down some very basic ground rules, all of which are very fair and
lenient on the students. An example of these rules is that students are not
allowed to not be on their phone or iPod during lecture or activity time, but
they may be used during personal work time. Another surprising rule is her
tolerance for occasional swearing as long as it is not directed at any person
or group. By acknowledging that swearing is a part of the language of many
youths she dodged many confrontations that would have arisen otherwise. She
explained that when you tolerate certain behavior during specific time and
occasions it takes away the “forbidden-ess” of that behavior and diffuses the
situation.
Once
students understood the ground rules and accepted that they are both fair and
consistent disruptions began to subside. One key factor in her classroom
management is that the students are consistently engaged in the material.
Certain subjects in history are difficult to avoid lecturing on, however she
gets very creative in her efforts to keep lecture to a minimum. Since the
students are occupied with activities and discussions they are less likely to
be falling asleep in class or scrolling through social media sites.
This
realization meant a lot to me as a teacher candidate. Classroom management is
just that, management, not absolute control. My host teacher is careful to pick
only the necessary battles, making sure to not escalate any trivial situations.
I feel that many teachers forget to question why students are misbehaving or
disrupting the class. Do they feel the rules are unfair? Inconsistent? Are they
bored or lost? Are they actively engaged or passively receiving information?
All of these questions have been addressed by my host teacher when she creates
her lesson plans, and are continuously re-addressed as the class dynamic
evolves. Students within her classroom are given respect and taught that their
opinions and thoughts are valuable to other students and to her as a teacher,
and because of this they respect her in return, rules and all.
I appreciate how you are thinking about classroom management as not simply something about behavior, but as a management plan for daily lessons, environment, and student engagement.
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