Life is getting complicated again. The stack of stuff to grade is back. The lesson plans we got caught up on are now all used up and the next ones aren’t yet written. The meetings and conferences are filling up the calendar.
So let’s make life easier.
Here are my top five favorite tips to make your life easier in the classroom. Maybe if ONE of them works, then one little corner of your life has gotten easier? I can’t promise miracles. But if your frustration level is a 6 today, maybe we can move it down to a 5 or even a 4 with one of these ideas.
5. Written Directions: Not every kid is an auditory learner. And to be honest, not every kid is even listening when you give directions (I know, they should be, but daydreaming and distractions happen). So how can we help from repeating ourselves five hundred times? How can we stop getting work from kids who clearly missed the directions?
Write them down.
It’s so easy! Why did I never think of it?
Write down the directions step by step. Like this: “Step One: Put your heading on your paper. Step 2: Read the paragraph carefully, looking for a main idea or claim. Step Three: Answer the two questions on your own paper”
Written directions will help increase the number of kids on task and the number of kids who correctly complete an assignment. Write them down separately for EACH part of your lesson (don’t put bellwork directions on the same list or slide as the reading directions or the exit ticket directions).
4 Praise, praise, praise: There are few tools that I learned from the teacher down the hall that help as much as this one: give your kids constant, individual, public praise.
“Make it rain” with praise.
As kids walk into your room, call them out, out loud, individually, by name, with praise. “Thank you, D’Angelo for coming in quietly and getting your materials out. Thank you, Rachael for sitting quietly and starting your work. Thank you, Hector and Jayden, for staying on task”
This simple act actually hits management from four angles.
a. It tells your kids that you’re watching them and noticing their behavior.
b. It makes a show of the GOOD behaviors, not the bad ones (those negative behaviors like “Juanita, sit down; Milo, be quiet; Olivia, put your phone away”)
c. It gives positive attention to the good kids (who are usually ignored when you’re telling James to stop annoying his neighbor)
d. It reminds kids to do the positive behaviors without waiting for them to mess up.
3. Formative Assessment. Every day, when your kids leave class, you should know what they did learn and what they didn’t quite get. Every day, when kids leave, you should have done some sort of formative assessment. It’s easy to work it in daily.
But you should be able to know every day how it’s going. It doesn’t all have to be at the end of the period, (sometimes it’s best in the middle of your class period. but you should be able to know how your teaching is going (or went). It doesn’t even have to be always graded.
Set a purpose for every activity you do -- and tell them WHY you ask them to do the stuff you ask them to do. Why do we do bellwork? Why are we doing this in groups? Why do we have to be quiet? Why do we need to know about international organizations? Why do we need to know about Manifest Destiny? Why are we reading this?
Tell them.
Tell them every day. It helps them to buy in to what you’re doing AND it helps them to connect their learning to reasons for that learning!
- It can help you get/keep your kids on track (“turn and tell your neighbor what we’re supposed to do next”)
- It can help your kids process content in digestible chunks(“turn and talk about what we just read”)
- It can help you take a lower-level lesson up to higher order thinking (“turn and talk about what possible impact this could have”)
- It can help you give your kids a chance to talk -- but about content, not about Fortnight (“turn and talk about what you think about that idea”)
- It can help you make your classes more student-centered (“turn and explain this concept to your partner”)
- It can impress your administration (“turn and talk about why you chose the answer you chose”)
In addition to being powerful and effective -- it’s quick (30 seconds!) and can be thrown into the middle of a lesson when needed.
Kids need breaks to process content. Do you ever notice that they stop paying attention or stop working at a certain point? It’s because they are overloaded and need time to digest content. Turn and talks can provide that “content digestion” and can provide that break from concentration.
In Marzano-land, turn and talks COULD address...
- Helping students process new content
- Helping students elaborate on content
- Reviewing content
- Helping students practice skills, strategies, and processes
- Helping students examine their knowledge
- Helping students engage in cognitively complex tasks.
Turn and talks make every lesson better. You only need one or two or three a class period to up the rigor and increase the student ownership in your lessons
Here is a link to 50 different ones https://thecornerstoneforteachers.com/50-fun-call-and-response-ideas-to-get-students-attention/
Here are a couple of Youtube videos showing Call and Responses
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=78eiLtQjmss (don’t do bubble in the mouth. That’s elementary school. But some of the others might work)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l1QxsqrdpyI (elementary and over the top, but fun)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=99Wr9NDcTMs (dance moves I don’t think I could master, but he requests eyes tracking him and that’s important)
If you haven’t tried one of these -- please do! They will make your life easier and drop your stress a notch or two. I promise -- if you try them a couple of times they will become habit and you will see results!
Need ideas? Want to talk it out? Email me at newmantr@pcsb.org