How
to Manage classroom in Teaching process
1.
Use a normal, natural voice
Are you teaching in your normal
voice? Every teacher can remember this from the first year in the classroom:
spending those first months talking at an above-normal range until one day, you
lose your voice.
Raising our voice to get students'
attention is not the best approach, and the stress it causes and the vibe it
puts in the room just isn't worth it. The students will mirror your voice
level, so avoid using that semi-shouting voice. If we want kids to talk at a
normal, pleasant volume, we must do the same.
You want to also differentiate your
tone. If you are asking students to put away their notebooks and get into their
groups, be sure to use a declarative, matter-of-fact tone. If you are asking a
question about a character in a short story, or about contributions made by the
Roman Empire, use an inviting, conversational tone.
2.
Speak only
when students are quiet and ready
This golden nugget was given to me
by a 20-year veteran my first year. She told me that I should just wait and
then wait some more until all students were quiet.
3.
Use hand
signals and other non-verbal communication
Holding one hand in the air, and
making eye contact with students is a great way to quiet the class and get
their attention on you. It takes awhile for students to get used to this as a
routine, but it works wonderfully. Have them raise their hand along with you until
all are up. Then lower yours and talk.
Flicking the lights off and on once
to get the attention is an oldie but goodie. It could also be something you do
routinely to let them know they have three minutes to finish an assignment or
clean up, etc.
4.
Address behavior issues quickly and wisely
Be sure to address an issue between
you and a student or between two students as quickly as possible. Bad feelings
-- on your part or the students -- can so quickly grow from molehills into
mountains.
When students have conflicts with
each other, arrange for the students to meet with you at lunch, after or before
school. Use neutral language as you act as a mediator, helping them resolve the
problem peacefully, or at least reach an agreeable truce.
5.
Always have a well-designed, engaging lesson
This tip is most important of all.
Perhaps you've heard the saying, if you don't have a plan for them, they'll
have one for you. Always overplan. It's better to run out of time than
to run short on a lesson.
6.
It's Easier to Get Easier
Many teachers
make the mistake of starting the school year with a poor discipline plan.
Students quickly assess the situation in each class and realize what they will
be allowed to get away with. Once you set a precedent of allowing a lot of
disruptions, it can be very hard to start better
classroom management and discipline techniques. However, it is never
tough to get easier as the year goes on. While you don't have to follow the
adage, "Never smile until Christmas," it does have its merits.
Students have a distinct sense of
what is and what is not fair. You must act fairly for all students if you
expect to be respected. If you do not treat all students equitably, you will be
labelled as unfair students will not be keen to follow your rules. Make sure
that if your best student does something wrong, they too get punished for it. More »
8.
Deal with
Disruptions with as Little Interruption as Possible
When you have classroom
disruptions, it is imperative that you deal with them immediately
and with as little interruption of your class momentum as possible. If students
are talking amongst themselves and you are having a classroom discussion, ask
one of them a question to try to get them back on track. If you have to stop
the flow of your lesson to deal with disruptions, then you are robbing students
who want to learn of their precious in-class time.
Whenever there is a
confrontation in class there is a winner and a loser. Obviously as
the teacher, you need to keep order and discipline in your class. However, it
is much better to deal with discipline issues privately than cause a student to
'lose face' in front of their friends. It is not a good idea to make an example
out of a disciplinary issue. Even though other students might get the point,
you might have lost any chance of actually teaching that student anything in
your class.
Sometimes all it takes is for
everyone to have a good laugh to get things back on track in a classroom. Many
times, however, teachers confuse good humor with sarcasm. While humor can
quickly diffuse a situation, sarcasm may harm your relationship with the
students involved. Use your best judgment but realize that what some people
think as funny others find to be offensive.
Expect that your students will
behave, not that they will disrupt. Reinforce this with the way you speak to
your students. When you begin the day, tell your students your expectations.
For example, you might say, "During this whole group session, I expect you
to raise your hands and be recognized before you start speaking. I also expect
you to respect each other's opinions and listen to what each person has to
say." More »
12.
Overplan
Free time is something teachers
should avoid. By allowing students time just to talk each day, you are setting
a precedent about how you view academics and your subject. To avoid this,
overplan. Write additional activities into your lesson plans
just in case your main lesson run short. When you have too much to cover,
you'll never run out of lessons and you will avoid free time. You can also fill
up any left over time with mini-lessons.
More »
13. Be Consistent
One of the worst things you can do
as a teacher is to not enforce your rules consistently. If one day you ignore
misbehaviors and the next day you jump on someone for the smallest infraction,
your students will quickly lose respect for you. Your students have the right
to expect you to basically be the same everyday. Moodiness is not allowed. Once
your lose your student's respect, you also lose their attention and their
desire to please.
14. Make Rules Understandable
You need to be selective in your class rules
(no one can follow 180 rules consistently). You also need to make them clear.
Students should understand what is and what is not acceptable. Further, you
should make sure that the consequences for breaking your rules are also clear
and known beforehand.
15. Start Fresh Everyday
This tip does not mean that you
discount all previous infractions, i.e. if they have three tardies then today
means four. However, it does mean that you should start teaching your class
each day with the expectation that students will behave. Don't assume that
because Julie has disrupted your class everyday for a week, she will disrupt it
today. By doing this, you will not be treating Julie any differently and
thereby setting her up to disrupt again (like a self-fulfilling prophecy). Read
a personal example of this with my best
teaching experience.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar