Thursday, November 20, 2014

Stephanie Tubbs' Classroom Management Plan

Place: My classroom will be setup so that the students will sit in pairs. This allows them to have another person to work on tasks in class with, but reduces the amount of distraction that a group poses. This seating plan will allow for open walking space, the ability to maintain close proximity and eye contact, and a good flow of energy. As I talk with the class, I walk through the classroom. This allows for better management of classroom, since I can easily go around and see what each student is doing. I can more easily interact with the students and gain their participation.

People: Every person in a student’s life is a resource that can be utilized to help him/her succeed. The pupils can explain material in more simple way than the teacher can think of sometimes. Peers can give another way to present material, connect to students, or simply work with you to create a new lesson/activity. The principal can help in reaching out to parents or getting things done. Parents give another perspective about their child and may be able to help with the student succeed in school. All of these people are assets in teaching and management. They can inspire a new idea or plan and possibly help in the creation of a new way to manage/teach the class(es).
Purpose: Create critical thinkers who understand the content and learn about life. Students must be taught how to analyze any situation and assess what they need to do next. Being a critical thinker helps students in the real world outside of the classroom, and will help them be able to stand on their own two feet. In today’s world it is a bit of a dog eat dog society, and to be able to survive, you must be able to think logically and critically. I want to help students learn, not only the mathematical material that I will cover, but also things about life: maturity, confidence, time management, organization, and many other lessons that will help them throughout life. Education is not just content, but also life skills.
Practice: Student cooperation is essential. Getting to hear what they understand/think to assess what they understand correctly and what may be need to gone over again or retaught. When teaching, questions will be implemented into lessons in order to assess what the students remember, as well as see how they scaffold what they have been taught into the new topic/concept. When a question is asked, I would pose it to the class and have someone else answer it. This allows the students to see their peers as a resource and get them to ask one another questions if they are not already inclined to do so.
Punt: Always have a back-up plan. There are various plays in football in order to get the ball to the end-zone for a touchdown, just as there are various ways in teaching to get the light bulb into the socket so it will light up. When questions or a concept is posed in class, don’t dismiss it if it doesn’t match what is being said or doesn’t match your lesson plan. Provided the question or comment is related to the topic, find a way to address it or possibly implement it into the lesson.
Pace: They say that a steady pace wins the race. In order to keep the flow of academia going and keep the class running smoothly, there must be a set pace for lessons. Granted, a lesson may not go as planned, and a concept may need to be retaught; or the students may catch onto a concept quickly, and the lesson plan that you thought would take the entire class period, may only take 30 minutes. The steady pace must be in line with the concepts that need to be taught and any extra or less teaching the students need to understand a concept. The pace of a course is dependent on both the lessons that need to be taught and the rate at which the students are learning the material. One class may need to have a second class period spent going over a lesson, while another class is onto the next concept. At the same time, both classes should be on a pace that allows them to complete a chapter/section at the same time, so that they can be tested about the same time. Any two classes of the same section should be at about the same lesson, so that they aren’t tested at completely different times. Any two classes a teacher has that are the same subject should have their tests, if not on the same day, then within two days of each other. That is, let’s say Class A and Class B are both Geometry, but Class A took two days on understanding vertical angles congruency, Class B’s test is on Wednesday, but Class A’s test would be on Thursday.
Priorities: Students must realize that in each class, they have priorities; things that must be done. In my class, we would have a token system. Students will start off with $500 (not real money, of course). They must purchase their desk for the semester; they are allowed to sell their desk or rent it out at their own determined prices that someone else in the class is willing to pay. Extra materials are available to rent or buy: pencils, paper, books (rentable only), calculators (rentable only), food, and drinks. If at any time they go bankrupt, they are then evicted from their desk, must start over with $500, and buy their desk back. Before they can buy their desk back, it is put up for sale. Another student can buy that desk and then sell their current desk back to the bank. The student who went bankrupt can then buy the now vacant desk. The system is 10% of their grades for the class and is a total of ten points. Each time a student goes bankrupt, their grade for the system is dropped by a quarter percent; if a student goes bankrupt once, the ten points goes down to 9.75, bankrupt twice then down to 9.50, etc. At the end of the semester, students who break even get the grade that they have earned thus far (if no bankruptcies, then a full ten points is given) and students who turn a profit are given an extra five credit points to be used on any assignment. Students earn money by turning in their assignments, completing tests and quizzes, and tasks in class. The amount of money they earn on assignments is determined by the quality of their work.
·         Homework assignments: A-$10, B-$7, C-$4, D-$1, F-no profit.
·         Quizzes: A-$25, B-$18, C-$10, D-$1, F-no profit.
·         Tests: A-$100, B-$80, C-$70, D-$50, F-no profit.
Jobs in class:
·         Taking Attendance - $10
·         Writing assignment on the board - $5
·         Picking up trash before or after class - $8
·         Collecting Homework from the class - $5
Participation:
·         Answering a question (correctly) - $3
·         Putting work on the board - $5
The system not only teaches them to prioritize tasks, but also how to handle personal finances.

Policies: A long list of policies can be difficult to remember, so keep it simple.
1.      Be ready to learn. When the bell rings, it is time for class to begin. The talking is to stop and you are to be working on bell work or listening for instruction.
2.      Act and speak in an appropriate manner. No yelling, screaming, shouting, or profanities. Respect your environment and the people you are sharing it with. Don’t be disruptive during teaching or work time.
3.      No electronics out other than a calculator. If a cellphone is out, I have the right to take it and will give it back to you at the end of the day.
4.      Ask permission to leave the room. Be it for a drink, to use the restroom, go to the locker, the office, etc. you are to ask permission and receive a pass before leaving the classroom.
5.      If any of the preceding policies are broken repeatedly, a conference between you and me will be scheduled. If after that conference the policies are broken again, a conference with you, your parents, and me will then be scheduled.
Personal Differences: Being a part of the public education system, there will be students in my classes with various ethnicities, races, gender identities, and experiences. While their views may be different than mine, it is important to respect each individual’s opinions. Just because their opinion may different than my own, does not mean they are wrong or that I should necessarily critique what they have to say. Unless what they think is disrespectful or possibly harmful to another person or people, it is important to teach my students and instill in my classes to respect diversity in others.

Planning and Participation Point of Intersection: It is important to get students involved with the content. Student participation and responses are incorporated into the lesson plan and are used as a part of the lesson.

Clara Bepe's Classroom Management Plan

Classroom Management Plan
I believe that safety is an important component in an educational setting. I believe that students need to be in and safe learning environment. This means setting the tone of the class by using boundaries and agreements, which help the students, feel safe and responsible for their behavior.
I believe that students should have a voice in their own classroom. This helps them learn how to be responsible for their own actions. When setting the tone for the class, I will let the students know what my expectations and boundaries. I will give them the opportunity to add their own expectations to our list, in which we will agree upon as a class and will function under those terms. We live in a diverse nation and respecting individual’s backgrounds will be one of my biggest expectations. I will expect students to use “people first” language, and not degrade anyone based on who they are, whether it is race, gender, socioeconomic status, and/or religion. I believe that students are motivated to excel when they feel safe, important, and responsible for their own actions.
I believe that the seating arrangement in the classroom makes a difference in how the students view each other and me, as well as how they learn and work together. In my classroom, I will seat students in a circle in which I will be a part of. This creates a sense of community, unity, and belonging. If that sitting arrangement does not work, I will seat the students in smaller groups, which will change every quarter, to limit cliques, as well as give everyone the opportunity to get to know and work with a different person in the class.
I am a firm believer of student-centered instruction combined with strategy-based learning. I will teach my content in such a way that I am doing less talking and the students are doing more of the talking. This will encourage collaborative learning and teach students to work together regardless of their backgrounds. It will illustrate the importance of teamwork with in our classroom community and our society as a whole.
When giving instruction I will use the 100% model, in which I will ask for the students to give me their 100% attention. I will not give instructions until I have the classes 100%. Therefore if a student is distracted I will look at them, or move closer to them so that without calling them, out they know they are not giving me their 100% and will correct their behavior. (Jones) If that method does not work, I will say what the student is doing without using their name and say something like, “some of you are still reading and are not looking at me”. This will then let the student know I am specifically talking to them. Using the 100% rule once again enforces the idea of community that we all have to be on the same page. It is also a way to make sure that students are fully paying attention to what they need to do next. This will limit the time I will have to repeat instructions because students were not listening. If a student needs further instruction, once the class has started working on the task of the day, I will individually go to them and re-explain and give a quick example. I would then walk around the room and monitor and answer and ask questions to assist the students with staying on task.
When faced with a conflict I will have meetings with the individuals involved. For example, if two students are in a disagreement about something, I will meet with them individually, I will then sit the two of them down and try and compromise to make sure that they are both comfortable and learning can continue. If the issue is a large issue that violates school policy I will refer the student to the principal or follow school protocol. If I have a concern about a student’s performance, I will meet with that student and find out if they are struggling or if they have any other life concerns that are hindering their progress in class. If that is the case I will try to provide resources for them, or advise them to see the school social worker, or guidance counselor. If it is a comprehension issue, I will provide the student study strategies they can use to tackle their problem. I could offer before or after school tutoring. If and when it is a server academic concern, I will use RTI to assist the student to work their way up to level.
I would like my classroom to be conducive for learning for all students from all backgrounds. Students will be able to learn and express themselves in a comfortable manner that encourages growth and learning.



Kyle Sagarsee's Classroom Management Plan

Josh Olsen's Classroom Management Plan

Joshua Olsen
11/20/2014
P475
Classroom Management Plan
            Dr. Fred Jones states that "For teaching to be enjoyable, you must be able to simply relax and teach. Classroom management must be built from the ground up so that most problems do not occur." In order to successfully teach, you have to have a foundation, that is your classroom management plan. Your classroom management plan helps set order and structure in the classroom. Knowing how to manage a classroom with mastery level understanding will make the classroom all the easier to contain and gear towards effective learning. Without management, the class room would be more like a warzone, paper planes and paper ammunition plaguing other students, along with all of the other ruckus going on. In order to setup a classroom for success for all students, the teacher will need a strong understanding of classroom management along with being able to apply this knowledge.            
            In order for my classroom to have a strong learning environment is to have specific classroom management skills to keep order in the classroom. There are a series of useful classroom management skills that I will use in order to create a strong classroom; establish relationships with my students, create a positive learning climate, encourage helpful hands, teach needed skills, set up structure and procedures, organize the lesson, and use effective discipline. Establishing a relationship with a student shows that you are there for them, that you care for them and want them to succeed. Passion is the most powerful thing in the world if you are passionate about helping students, show them. This will help them listen to you. Creating a positive learning climate will help you get the best out of my students. After getting to know them, I will know their strengths and weaknesses, what gets them riled up and who brings out the best or worst in each other. Being able to manipulate the seating based off of their interactions can save me a lot of stress as a teacher. Encouraging helping hands will give the students a sense of responsibility and positive reinforcement for positive behavior. The students will end up taking away the boredom they may possibly feel, by helping, especially if they finish an in class assignment early. Teaching needed skills will help the students see relevance in what they are learning, as opposed to learning something completely useless, there is practicality in what they are doing. Setting up structure and procedures will help to best accent my teaching style. Essentially providing style to best implement my teaching. Organizing the lesson is very important. Ultimately knowing what will work best for my students and applying it to the lesson will be extremely useful. The way I plan the classroom will affect the student’s ability to process the lesson and their self-esteem will also be influenced by the set up. For example you must spend time on accommodating a student in a wheelchair and make my classroom just as accessible for them as for the other students. Also if a student struggles with social interaction, placing them within a group of students who work well with others, would benefit them greatly. The way I will layout my classroom will be having the students desks arranged in a manner where they create a U-Shape, not only with they be facing the center of the class, I will be able to monitor the students easier. After the initial layout of the classroom, I will get to know my students on the first day of class by having a few ice breaker games, such as the snowball activity and the color based personality test.  The snowball activity will be utilized as a tool to help me see who the rowdier students are and also get to know some interesting facts about them. The personality test will help me decide where the students will sit. At first I will have the students who are most similar sit together, but if that doesn’t work I will separate the students based off of whose personality will work best together to prevent classroom disruptions.
            I will have certain rules set in place for the classroom. One of my rules will be no use of electronics in the classroom without my permission. Technology can be very distracting and will definitely disrupt students learning processes. Another rule that I will have is only the person that has the floor can talk. The students will only be allowed 3 bathroom passes throughout each quarter, unless I see it as an emergency. However, I won’t tell the students the last part, so some of them won’t try and fake it. If they can convince me that it is real, they deserve the bathroom pass. Students won’t be able to leave the classroom if there is trash by their seat as well. Gum will not be allowed in the classroom. For some reason, students can’t keep gum in either their mouths, or the trashcan. So no gum, whatsoever. In my classroom there will be an expectation, the students will be expected to follow the rules, be respectful, knowledgeable, accountable, and responsible. If the students meet the expectations of the classroom, along with maintaining a class average of a B, I will allow the students to bring in food and we will have a class party.

 Having control of the classroom will give anybody a strong advantage when it comes to teaching. Utilizing effective discipline will create a safe learning environment, allowing students to be comfortable to learn. I will introduce classroom disciplines and post them on a bulletin board of some sort at the beginning of the year, this can be extremely useful. I will be creating a safe zone for all of my students. As a teacher, I am going to need to demand the attention of my students before I even get started. Trying to teach over the students would just cause more stress. I will use silence as a tool to show the students that I will not be competing with them. I will give direct instruction to also help with discipline. Uncertainty will cause the students to get rather rowdy. I will monitor what the students are doing during the class time to prevent them from thinking that they can get away with things. If I are constantly walking around and demanding eye contact or asking questions about the work students won’t have time to act up. I will use myself as a model, if I am yelling, that will enable the students do the same. I will use non-verbal cueing as well. If I use the proper non-verbals, students are more likely to respond right away. I will also use environmental control, this will help the students stay interested. By randomly switching posters or decorating the classroom, I will bring a level of controlled excitement to the classroom. Also if a student acts up, I won’t turn it into a big deal. I will set them aside, possibly to the back of the room to have a time out. Once an opportune moment appears in my lesson, I will go to the back of the room and talk to them. This will prevent embarrassment. During our discussion, instead of blaming students, I will use the appropriate I-messages. I can’t teach if… works way better than stop that. When it comes to teaching, classroom management and classroom discipline are integral for being able to teach. A teacher must be able to control the room effectively.

Gina Gaines' Classroom Management Plan

Classroom Management Plan

·         In my classroom I will post the standard that I am working on and the vocabulary that will be used with the content.  I also will put the desk in circle or pods instead of the usual seating assignment as Fred Jones suggested in his writings.
·         I want to build strong relationships with my students like William Glasser talks about in his theory.  I also want to know what is going on inside the school.  I find these things out when I go into Marshall County’s out of school suspension room and talk to the students.  Every day I do this almost everyday and talk to the students that are not in there.  I get many different stories and the teacher in there is amazed at the fact the students tell me what they did wrong.  I do tell them that I am becoming a teacher and want to know what is going on in the schools before I come into the classroom permanently.  I will try to keep in contact with the teachers and administration I will deal with so I can always know what I need to do to improve.  I plan on the first day to give the students an index cards with a few questions for them to fill out and turn in to me so that I can get to know them.  I could use a “snowball fight”, this would be where I would give each student a piece of paper to write something that they would like to share.  I would then have them crumple up the paper and have the snowball fight for a few seconds.  Then pick up a paper and open it and take turns reading what is written on the paper. 
·         Ultimately I want my students to feel good about themselves.  I want them to succeed and do well.  I will ask students about them and try to get to know each one.  That way I may be able to help them achieve a goal.
·         I will have many ideas at hand to be able to change direction if needed.  Incase the students do not understand I can come at the concept from a different way.  This is idea that I would be reusing from Fred Jones. 
·         In my classroom I will set my priorities and find out what the students priorities to combine them to set an over all priorities for the whole class.  This is what William Glasser uses in his classroom.

·         I also like the Wong uses role-playing in the classroom.   I think it is important for the students to have a job in the classroom so it will make us a community.  This concept goes along with Redl and Watburg and the idea that each student has a role or job in the classroom.

Haley Hines' Classroom Management Plan

Haley Hines
Professor Heck
EDUC-P 475
13 November 2014

Classroom Management Plan

1.      PLACE:

My future classroom will be designed so that students can work individually and in groups or pairs. When I instruct to the class and need their full attention, I plan on having them sit in their desks so that there are fewer distractions and they can focus better. I would like to leave sufficient space between the aisles of the desks so that I can walk around and monitor my students during independent work time. From my experience and observation as a student, it is likely that students will stay on task if they know the teacher is monitoring the classroom regularly. It is also more engaging when a teacher moves around the room and utilizes the entire space instead of being stuck in one place.
As much as I would like to have my students be able to pick where their desks are, the purpose of being in individual desks is to be able to work independently, so it should not matter where they sit, because while I am speaking or while another student has the floor, my students should be listening and focusing on the speaker. Once I get to know my students, I will make sure students who have difficulty hearing or seeing sit near the front. Students who have a tendency to act out will also sit near the front so that I can control and monitor their behavior closely. For the rest of the students, I will place them anywhere as long as they aren’t distracted. Plan B to this strategy would be to allow students to sit wherever they would like from the beginning. If students abuse the privilege to choose their seats by acting out or distracting others, they will be rearranged and will only be able to choose their seats again if they earn the privilege back by demonstrating positive behavior.
In terms of group work, I believe that it is important to provide students some options of grouping arrangements. I would like to give my students the option to choose whether they want to move their desks around to form a group, sit at a square or circle table, or even sit on the floor. I will sometimes give them the option to choose their group members, but I also think it is necessary to encourage the students to form new relationships with classmates whom they don’t interact often. Depending on the activity and other factors, I may give them the choice or I may strategically group my students with others I think they would work well with. For example, from my experience studying Spanish, whenever my teachers or professors grouped me with a native speaker, it was very helpful for me to practice my auditory and oral skills. My personal strengths are reading and writing in Spanish, so I was able to help the native speakers in that aspect of the language.
I also believe that it is important to acknowledge when students need a break. Some students become easily frustrated and some just did not get enough rest the night before. That’s why I included a couple beanbag chairs in the corners of the classroom away from everyone else. I think that it is appropriate to allow students who are not feeling well, or whatever the case may be, to rest and take some time for themselves. I would obviously not allow this to be an everyday thing for the entire class period, but maybe every once in awhile for 15 minutes or so.
As far as the organizational structure of my materials, I plan on keeping them in two places. The first place is two bookshelves that have materials students can access such as supplies, paper, pencils, absent work, books, and homework. The second place is my personal desk with the items I don’t want students to access such as graded work, lesson plans, etc. This strategy will help manage behavior because on the first day of class I will make it clear they can have access to the materials on the shelves, but my desk is my own space.
2.      PEOPLE:
There are several aspects to building a classroom community. The two most important in my opinion are the students’ social skills and parental involvement. I believe being a teacher goes far beyond how much of the content students learn. As a future educator, I want to teach compassion, caring, tolerance, and cooperation to my students as a whole class and as individuals to create a positive learning community and to teach my students social skills that will help them in their futures.
One of the best ways to teach compassion, caring, tolerance, and cooperation to students is to make a conscious effort to demonstrate these skills on a daily basis. Acting as a role model with all of these characteristics will be enough for some students to want to possess these characteristics. The next step to take is to discuss with the class what you expect out of them in terms of how they treat others and how they behave in the classroom. It is also important to teach students what each of these terms mean. It is a good idea to encourage positive behavior and acknowledge students when they are demonstrating the characteristics. I believe it is important to make it clear to students right away that bad attitude and negative actions will not be tolerated.
For social skill development for the whole class, it is important to explain to students how to work effectively in a group. The group work should be divided equally between everyone; not one student should be in charge of more or less work. When somebody is talking, they should have everyone’s undivided attention and there should be no interruptions until their thought is finished. Every group member should receive the opportunity to contribute to conversation. Whether everyone agrees or disagrees with that someone says, they should never be rude to another student about their own thoughts and opinions. To enforce these rules, I will include a grade for each student as part of the assignment grade for how well they work in groups. If I notice any behavior that is unacceptable, then their grade will be impacted, and we will come up with a plan one on one to fix the behavior and make goals.
To teach social skills to individual students, it is important to be social with each student. I will try my best to have small talk conversations with each one of my students daily. I will try to relate the conversation to their interests so that they know I care not only about how well they are doing in my class, but about their personal interests and lives as well. I will demonstrate active listening and make sure they know I am interested and engaged in what they have to say. This will also benefit the relationships I have with my students because they will feel more comfortable to approach me and participate in the classroom.
3.      PURPOSE:
Although there are aspects of several theories that I personally like, one of my favorite theories is the “Working on the Same Side with Students” approach by Spencer Kagan. The overall purpose of his theory is to “establish harmonious classrooms, promote responsible behavior, and improve students’ social skills, character qualities, and academic achievement” (205).  Kagan’s theory aligns the best with my purpose of becoming a teacher and how I want to approach managing my classroom.
Each time a student misbehaves, it is due to a physical or emotional state that he or she is experiencing. The student could be wanting attention, avoiding failure, angry, seeking control, energetic, bored, or uninformed. Using Kagan’s theory, after the teacher identifies the misbehavior and the purpose behind the misbehavior, the next step is to apply an appropriate procedure to help the student return to responsible behavior. Using a “we” approach, Kagan’s classroom management theory helps to create a responsible learning community.
4.      PRACTICE:
The goal of my practice using Kagan’s approach to behavior management is to intervene and end the disruption quickly and then refocus attention to the original task. I want to establish a challenging and interesting curriculum, provide cooperative activities that allow students to work together, and be a stimulating teacher to keep students motivated and interested. For example, if the several students in the classroom are off task or disruptive I could say, “If we were at our very best right now, how would we look?”, “Let’s try to think of a better choice to make right now”, or “To you, this lesson may be boring; to me, it’s important because…”
5.      PUNT:
Provided multiple alternative examples throughout behavior management plan in the different sections.
6.      PACE:
The pace I imagine in my future Spanish classroom is definitely varied. I will have students who are native heritage speakers to learning disabled students and every level in between. For the most part, the heritage language learners will need the most help with reading and writing in Spanish, and the other students will need help in all areas, but especially in speaking and listening. It will be especially important to incorporate sponges and reteach activities in my classroom to accommodate for all students’ needs.
There are few sponge activities I would like to incorporate in my classroom. The first one is charades. This is an activity that works great in a foreign language classroom because it can be used to review vocabulary, conversation, and spelling. The second sponge activity is a description exercise where the teacher (or even a student) chooses an object in the classroom and the class creates a list on the board to describe the object in Spanish. Lastly, I want to have novels and short stories for students to read in Spanish when they are done with work. The beginning level learners can start with children’s books and heritage language learners can read more challenging texts.
There are many strategies that appeal to multiple intelligences such as pictures, graphs, videos, models, guided notes, etc. that I will use to reteach concepts to students who need more instruction. In particular, there is a strategy I want to try in the future: Jigsaw Groups. In this activity, each student in the group is responsible for being the “peer-teacher” for the rest of the group. The groups are provided with a graphic. Each part of the graphic is assigned to one student in the group and that student is responsible for re-teaching it to the rest of the group.
7. PRIORITIES:
There are many ways to intrinsically and extrinsically motivate students. Some students, especially at the secondary level, need to have a sense of control and choice over what occurs in the classroom. Giving students these opportunities is a great way to keep them motivated. For many assignments in my classroom, I plan on giving each student an option of what they want to do. For example, they could write a paper, create a PowerPoint, make an iMovie, or give a speech. This way, students could choose whichever option they are most comfortable and interested in.
Another way to keep students engaged in the classroom is to assign them classroom jobs such as writing the daily agenda, taking attendance, passing out papers, being in charge of technology we use in the classroom, etc. These jobs help kids to feel like they are part of the classroom and are more likely to participate in class. This also helps with students with special needs like ADHD students. These students usually have a difficult time sitting still all class period. Giving these students jobs and opportunities to move about the room and release some energy will help them focus better when it is time to work independently.
A third motivational strategy that I would like to implement in my future classroom is “Open Format Fridays.” Although I will probably never have a free day in my classroom to have my students watch a movie that isn’t content related or have a day to just socialize, I would like to do Open Format Fridays so they have a choice and motivation to earn it. For example, I would offer to have class outdoors if weather permits, watch a fun, content related film, listen to Spanish music while making Spanish recipes, etc. There are fun ways to give students a break from the regular class day without completely omitting content.
For individuals that are distracted easily and that tend to get work done when they are reinforced positively, I could offer things do to for these students when they complete a sufficient amount of work. Many students like to play games on the computers or tablets. I could offer incentives like these to students to encourage them to finish their work. For the entire class, I could do something similar, but a reward for the whole class. If the entire class is well behaved for the week, we could have class outdoors or watch a movie on Fridays.
I also like the idea of a token economy. I could reward students for positive behavior, class participation, kindness, helpfulness, etc., and take away tokens for negative behavior, disruptions, etc. The class could either earn points independently and be rewarded by dropping the lowest assignment, receiving an extra restroom pass, candy, etc., or they could earn tokens as a class to receive enough points for a class prize like outdoor class, movie, snacks, etc. There are pros and cons to each system. Many students might find it unfair to be penalized for another student’s actions.
A final strategy I could see myself implementing is a self-management for students to monitor and “grade” their own behavior and explain why providing examples. Self-management systems work well with students with learning disabilities. I could provide them a sheet of paper that has a picture of a stop light on it with a red, yellow, and green light. Red would represent negative behavior, yellow would be OK behavior, and green would be good behavior. The student would circle whichever light they felt they earned that day and explain in a few sentences why and give examples. Then we could discuss whether I agree with them or not, how well they did that day, what they could work on to improve, etc. We could set goals and work to achieve them, and I could reward them in some way.
8.      POLICIES:
Since part of Kagan’s classroom management theory is working on the same side with students, I want to spend some time on the first day of class establishing class rules with the class. This way, students are more likely to feel a sense of community and belonging in the classroom. If students help to create rules and policies, they are more likely to abide by them because they do not feel like the rules are being imposed on them. In Building Classroom Discipline, Kagan gives examples of classroom rules: 1) Ready Rule: Come to class ready to learn 2) Respect Rule: Respect the rights and property of others 3) Request Rule: Ask for help when needed 4) Responsibility Rules: Strive to act responsibly at all times. Even though these rules are all very vague, I think it would be great to start with these rules, and then as a class come up with several specific examples of each rule. It is important to have these agreements worked out cooperatively between the teacher and students because it builds student involvement.
9.      PERSONAL DIFFERENCES:
The most important practice a teacher can implement in the classroom to accommodate for cultural differences is to build relationships with the students as a class and as individuals. When teachers create a trusting relationship, a sense of community is established and students become motivated to succeed. One way to do this is to positively and appropriately greet students every day. I want to strive to always greet students with a smile on my face, ask how they are doing, and demonstrate my interest in their personal lives. I want to show students that even if we have a bad day the day before, each day is a new day we can start off positively. I want all students in my classroom to feel welcome and comfortable regardless of their cultural backgrounds.
One group of students in particular that I will most likely be working with often will be Hispanic and Spanish speaking students. It is common that sometimes these students feel embarrassed to speak Spanish in front of others. They sometimes feel very different from other students, and there are even some students who barely know English. Beyond establishing a relationship with these students, I want to make these students feel comfortable embracing their backgrounds and cultures. I plan on having show and tell days for these students to share interesting cultural aspects of their lives such as popular recipes they make at home or celebrations. This would be beneficial not only for these students to feel welcome and comfortable but also for the rest of the students to learn about Spanish-speaking cultures.
10.  PLANNING AND PARTICIPATION POINT OF INTERSECTION:
Content management and behavioral management overlap and directly affect one another. In order for content management to be successful, the behavior of students needs to be managed as well in order to prevent disruptions and distractions. For example, teachers need to be aware of which students work well together and which students interrupt other students’ learning. Teachers need to strategically decide whether or not to have students work independently or in pairs or in groups so that they perform to their maximum potential. In order to do this, teachers need to build relationships to get to know the students and also build a community in the classroom so that students feel comfortable to participate. If a teacher’s behavior management plan is effective, then the content management will more than likely also be very effective. It is nearly impossible for content to be learned by the students when a teacher’s behavior management plan is not effective.  







Resources
“21 Simple Ideas to Improve Student Motivation.” Teach Thought. 11 Dec. 2012. Web. 13 Nov. 2014.
Charles, C.M. (2014) Building Classroom Discipline, 11/E. Boston: Pearson
Condron, Annie. “Top 12 Ways to Motivate Students.” Teach Hub. n.d. Web. 13 Nov. 2014.
“Ethical Advocate for Accurate Application and Dissemination of Behavior Analysis.” Welcome to Behaviorbabe. 1 Apr. 2014. Web. 13 Nov. 2014.  















Thursday, November 13, 2014

restroom break

I want to use passes for leaving class.  I want to make copies of the monopoly "get out of jail" card for the students to use.  I would only allow them 3 per semester.