+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Date post: 15-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: river-lapole
View: 213 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
30
Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida http://teflclassroommanagement.pbworks.co m
Transcript
Page 1: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Classroom Management for English Teachers

Marla Yoshida

http://teflclassroommanagement.pbworks.com

Page 2: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

What is classroom management?

• Student behavior and discipline• Rules and procedures in your classroom• Physical arrangement of things in the classroom• Student motivation• Everything you do to make your classroom run

smoothly

Page 3: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Why is classroom management important?• You must be able to manage your class before

you can teach your class.• We can help prevent behavior problems

through good classroom management.

Page 4: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of

cure.

Page 5: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

What do you want to change?

• No class is perfect. What are three student behaviors that you would like to change?

Page 6: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Take a positive approach• Recognize and reward students when they’re

being good.• Try not to scold, nag, or shout. It doesn’t help.

Page 7: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Take a positive approach• Express your instructions in a simple, positive,

respectful way. Compare:

Please listen. / All eyes on me. / Don’t talk to your friends. / Be quiet. / Shut up! / Shhhhh! / Would you please be quiet?

• Set your expectations high. Your students can accomplish more than you might think!

Page 8: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Positive self-fulfilling prophecies

• A self-fulfilling prophecy is an expectation that causes itself to come true.

• Teachers’ expectations have a powerful influence on their students.

• Have high expectations for your students, both in behavior and learning.

Page 9: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Movement and ProximityMove around the classroom as much as possible.

Page 10: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Zones of proximity

• The red zone

• The yellow zone

• The green zone

Page 11: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

“Working the Crowd”• Mobility: Moving around the room keeps

students in the “red zone” more often. • Deal with students’ misbehavior in private as

much as possible. (You can do this more easily if you’re moving around the room.)

• Eye contact gives you a way to “work the crowd” from a distance.

Page 12: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

What are the obstacles to “working the crowd”?• Habit—ours and our teachers’, going back

over many generations.• The arrangement of the room—the teacher’s

desk, students’ desks, other equipment.

Page 13: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Rearrange the furniture• Arrange the students’ desks so there’s more

room to walk around. • If other teachers share your classroom, talk to

them to ask their cooperation. It could help them, too.

• If it’s not possible to move desks permanently, train students to move their desks according to your plan when your class begins and move them back when it ends.

Page 14: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

x

Page 15: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

x

x

Page 16: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

x

Page 17: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

x

Page 18: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

An interior loop

Page 19: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Attention Seekers

Page 20: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

How can we stay calm?• Understand what’s happening, and then take a

relaxing breath. Don’t let it get to you.

• Emotions are contagious. If you’re calm, the class is calm. If you’re upset, the class is upset.

Page 21: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Strong body language: “The Look”• A strong “teacher

look” is calm and without emotion. Think of England’s Queen Victoria.

• If the student gives you a “cute” look, resist smiling.

Page 22: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .
Page 23: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Strong body language: “The Turn”• Turn slowly. Turn your

upper body first, then the rest of you. Finish with your feet pointing squarely toward the student.

Page 24: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .
Page 25: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

What happens to us when something goes wrong in the classroom?• We get upset and feel stressed out.

• The “fight-flight” reflex begins. We get angry and start shouting.

• Adrenaline starts pumping through our body. We get more upset. It takes a long time to calm down.

Page 26: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Calm is strength. Upset is weakness.

Page 27: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Giving instructions effectively

• Get the attention of the class. Make sure you have everyone’s attention before you start talking, or no one will hear you.

• Keep your instructions simple, short, and specific. Explain each step. Pause after each step.

• Have the students repeat the instructions back to you.

Page 28: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

Giving instructions effectively

• Demonstrate the activity with a more able student. Show what they should do.

• Write a shortened version of the instructions on the board.

• Tell students what they are responsible for doing, completing, or producing.

• Tell them how you will check to make sure they’ve done what you asked.

• Have a time limit for the activity.

Page 29: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .
Page 30: Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida .

An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.

Calm is strength. Upset is weakness.


Recommended