Tag Archives: Classroom Management

Artifact Reflection Peer Assessment, Classroom Management Revisited, & Dave’s Farewell: Update for Wednesday, 25 January 2012

Artifact Reflection Peer Assessment

We set some time aside at the start of today’s session for peer feedback on the Artifact Reflection you had posted on your ePortfolio.  The rubric we used to structure the feedback is below.  This is likely very similar to the tool that your EDUC 480 instructor will use to assess your ePortfolio this summer:

Please email the link to your revised Artifact Reflection Task on your ePortfolio to your FA by the end of Wednesday, 25 January 2012.

Inquiry Project Conference Setup

I reviewed the plan for the Inquiry Project Conferences that will occur over the next three Mondays.  Please make note of your meeting time and location, as shown in the image below, and come to this meeting with a one-pager answering the question:

  • What’s new with your I.P. since we talked last?

This one-pager will provide the stimulus for the conversation about your topic and task that will take place during our meeting.

Management Revisited

Dave and I were curious to hear about some of the successes that you had with management on prac.  To that end, we did the following:

  • Primed the Pump with Prezbo

I showed a clip from the HBO crime / drama series The Wire of a fired police officer / beginning teacher delivering his first lesson, and I asked you to look for what worked and what didn’t in his management:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mnbs4V426U[/youtube]

  • Panel of Proficiency

After giving you some time to think about what worked for you on the 2-Week Prac with respect to classroom management, we convened a Panel of Proficiency.  On the panel were TCs who had a management success story to share.  After the sharing, we had an open discussion on several management topics

Farewell to Dave

Seeing as today was Dave’s last day in class as an instructor / FA, I took a bit of time to:

  • present him with a VP Care Package of sorts
  • express what a pleasure it has been to work with him this year
  • wish him well in his future as an administrator.

We can all look forward to working with Shep Alexander for the remainder of EDUC 310/316 and during the long practicum.  Welcome (back), Shep!

– Lawrence

 

Efolio Setup, Classroom Management, & Pre-Prac Prep: Update for Wednesday, 30 November 2011

Efolio Setup

Thanks to Liz and Ali for presenting on how to setup your Efolio.

You can find more information on how to get your Efolio up and running on the TEO’s Eportfolios Resources page.  One item of particular interest from that page is a checklist of artifacts that would be suitable for each standard.  For ease of reference, I’ve posted that list here:

Classroom Management

We took some time to present the management role plays focused on low-level techniques in two categories:

Responses to misbehaviour

  • proximity
  • touch
  • student’s name
  • gesture
  • the look
  • the pause
  • ignore
  • signal to begin/signal for attention
  • deal with the problem not the student

Preventive techniques

  • transitions
  • rules
  • dealing with allies
  • winning over

I’ve posted the details on all of these processes in the previous lesson’s post.  For more information on management, please take a look at this detailed and very practical handout, Order in the Classroom. As per the files intro blurb:

“the intent of the following handout…is to help classroom teachers…consider certain strategies/ideas when they are supporting students with specific challenging behaviours within the classroom.”

Hankering for even more CM ideas?  Check out this vintage clip:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gHzTUYAOkPM[/youtube]

Pre-Prac Prep

Dave and I covered off a few important things as we looked ahead to your upcoming 2-Week Practicum:

– Observation of Your Teaching:  Dave or I will observe you once during EDUC 323.  We will set up our schedule on the first day back – Tuesday, 3 January 2012.  Your SA should observe you a minimum of once per week (or two times minimum) during the 2-week prac.  Please submit your plan for the lesson we will be observing at least 24 hours in advance of its implementation.

– Weekly Reflections:  During your prac, please send Dave or I via email a weekly reflection.  This is due on each Friday of the prac.  We suggest the What? So What? Now What? structure or the What’s working? What’s not? What’s next? format.

– Practicum Binder: Schools still very much rely on paper for their day to day business.  As such, you’ll need a place for you to store all these hard copies.  Below is a Table of Contents for your practicum binder.  Please us dividers to set it up and have it handy so Dave or I can look at it when we drop in to observe you:

– Unit Plan: Please complete your plan and submit it to both your SA and FA via email by Monday, 5 December 2011.

– Student Writing Samples for Use In LLED 320 Class: Please collect 4-6 samples of student writing (photocopies are fine).  Please black out the names so the author of each piece remains anonymous.  The samples should reflect the range of writing abilities you find in your students. The pieces could be from lessons you teach, from work your students do with your School Advisor, or from writing your students have done in other classes.  We will be completing a writing assessment task in LLED 320 and the best samples to work with for this assignment are about one-page long (longer is fine, mind you).  The following types of work best suit the LLED 320 task:

  • Short stories
  • Paragraphs
  • Poems
  • Essays
  • Reports

That’s all for today.  Enjoy your break.

Oh , and here’s a song sure to get you in the Christmas mood:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ycfuj5y7qds[/youtube]

– Lawrence

Administrivia & Classroom Management: Update for Monday, 28 November 2011

After I presented a lot of admin-related info we got down to the business of considering how to effectively manage your classroom.  Here’s a rundown:

Admin

Paperwork

  • EDUC 315 TC Feedback Form:  If you have not yet submitted your completed form, please do so by the end of Tuesday, 29 November 2011.  It is OVERDUE.
  • Inquiry One-Pager Posted on VISTA: Please have your post up by Wednesday, 30 November 2011
  • SRL Consent Form:  Please hand in your completed form to Dave or I ASAP.
  • Videotaping & Still Images Consent Form:  In order to videotape a lesson and collect still images of students or their work, you need to get parental consent.  Please use this form – Permission for Classroom Videotaping & Still Photography Form – and personalize it with your details.  Hand this paperwork out and collect it on the 2-Week Prac so you are ready to videotape and what not when your 13-week in-school experience gets rolling.

Unit Planning

  • Performance Standards:  The BC Performance Standards are a great source for rubrics and work samples in the areas of writing, reading, numeracy, social responsibility, and healthy living.  Don’t spend hours creating a rubric of your own.  Stand on the shoulders of giants and tweak an existing rubric.

LLED 320

  • Student Diversity, 2nd Edition Textbook:  I showed you the text we’ll be using in class and noted that you can order it directly from Pembroke Publishers.  Also, I indicated that they have a Book of the Month preview on their website.

Bits & Pieces

  • EDUC 310/316 Coping Fees:  Please bring $5 in coins to Wednesday’s class.  In class we will indicate the Term 1 copying fees and we’ll collect the amount of money owed by each TC.
  • SD43 Usernames and Passwords: We gave you your U & PW and urged you to change your password immediately upon logging on to the SD43 system.  You can access the SD 43 home page here.  Click on the “my email” link to access your SD43 email account.

Classroom Management

Your EDUC 315 reflections indicated to Dave and I that classroom management is on the minds of many of you.  As such, we wanted to take some time to introduce you to some management related materials that should help you on your 2-week prac in January.

The materials we presented today were adapted from Classroom Management: A Thinking and Caring Approach by Barrie Bennett & Peter Smilanich.  The PPT slideshow below supported Dave’s presentation (Please note that I’ve had to remove the slide themes in order to shrink the file size to post on the blog):

Here’s what we did:

  • Considered the qualities of ineffective & effective teachers
  • Categorized student behaviours based on how you think and feel about them.  Here’s a photo of the categories you came up with courtesy of Jerin, the photographer, and Liz, the scribe:

  • Considered Dreikur’s 4 Goals of Misbehaviour – attention seeking, power, revenge, assumed disability
  • Thought of how best to match a response to a behaviour with the Law of Least Intervention in Mind
  • Read info about and prepared a short NO/YES role play on how to use responding and preventive low key management techniques

We ran out of time to present the role plays so we’ll do that next session.

If you’re interested – and I suspect that you are – here is the section from Bennett and Smilanich’s book that identifies all of the low-key management we’re playing with in class:

You’ll need to muster one or more of these strategies if Russell’s in your class 🙂

See you Wednesday.

– LH

EDUC 310 – End-of-Term Calendar & Classroom Management BUMP 1: Update for Wednesday, 2 March 2011

Here’s what we managed to wedge into today’s POT class:

Calendar

Here are some dates to remember:

  • Thursday, 3 March = Practicum Seminar in Hebb Theatre from 12:30 to 1:30
    • LLED 320 class will start when the seminar ends
  • Monday, 7 March = Assessment Lecture in SC 100 from 10:30 to 12:00
    • Please attend this lecture in lieu of our regularly scheduled class
  • Wednesday, 9 March = TCs Without Lawrence As An FA Inquiry Project Conferences in SC 1310 from 9:45 t0 12:30.
  • Monday, 14 March = Pre-Practicum FA Meetings By School Group in SC 210 from 10:00 to 12:00

Classroom Management: Working with Barrie Bennett’s Theory of Bumps

Connecting

I asked you to think back to your classroom experience and…

“Recall a student who was beginning to stop you from teaching or stop others from learning.  Perhaps they were pencil tapping, talking to a classmate, or calling out.  How did you respond to that student?”

We took a few responses.  As it turns out, many of you were already using some of the techniques advocated by Bennett in Bump 1 – Preventing and Responding to Misbehaviour Through Low-Key Responses.

Processing

I used this PPT slidewshow to give you some background with Bump 1:

Next, partnerships presented short role plays demonstrating NO and YES examples on how to use 12 low-key techniques.  Each role play was followed up with a quick blurb on how to use the technique effectively and artfully.

The responses fall into two categories and are as follows:

Responding Strategies

  • Touch
  • Student’s Name
  • Gesture
  • The Look
  • The Pause
  • Ignore
  • Signal to Begin
  • Deal With the Problem Not the Student

Here’s an example of “The Look”.  Watch and determine if it’s a NO or a YES example:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SNEmyHsqoVY[/youtube]

Here’s a musical example of “The Look”.  Please wield this one with extreme caution:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LlVI7ZNiFlI[/youtube]

Preventive Techniques

  • Transitions
  • Dealing With Allies
  • Winning Over
  • Pre-empting Call Outs

You can find all the low-key responses in this handout from Bennett’s book, Classroom Management: A Thinking & Caring Approach:

Personalizing

To close, I asked you to consider the following question and to share your thoughts as you left the classroom:

“Which of the techniques we worked with today will you add to your repertoire on practicum?”

By the way, check out this clip from Star Trek IV: The  Voyage Home that I was referencing during our discussion on swearing.  After watching it, I recalled that “Double dumb-a*$ on you!” was my favourite expletive of 1986.  Enjoy.

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7WTvEbUkeLM[/youtube]

That’s a wrap.

– Lawrence

5 Classroom Management Skills & More: Update for Wednesday, 1 December 2010

Well, Movember is over and so is the term.  Here’s how we wrapped up:

Nonverbal Communicative Intelligence for Classroom Management

Seeing as management is a concern for all beginning teachers, I wanted to address the topic in some manner before you headed out to your 2-week prac.  That said, the topic is huge, so I wanted to keep the session short, practical, and focused on skills that you could use on the morning of Tuesday, 4 January 2010, if need be.  Thus, I focused on five nonverbal skills:

  • Choose voice
  • Pause
  • Frozen hand gesture
  • Incomplete sentence
  • Freeze body

that research has proven to be very useful in creating effective learning environments.

Here’s a link to the Prezi I created to introduce the topic:

Also, here’s the full article on which today’s class was based:

We used the Learning Stations strategy to process the skills-based content of the article. Stations are a great way to allow students to set the pace of their own learning.  Here are some links to sites with info on LS:

After the station work, I took a few questions and provided suggestions for how management skills can be stacked – done simultaneously – to increase their effectiveness.

If you feel like kicking it old school, watch the classic training video below – “Maintaining Classroom Discipline” – to see how Mr. Grimes teaches and manages his Math class:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gHzTUYAOkPM[/youtube]

Bits & Pieces:

Writing this heading reminds me of Kibble and Bits and that product’s TV commercials.  Check it out as we skip down memory lane:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NP9dn3j6uDk[/youtube]

Now, where was I?  Oh, ya, bits and pieces:

– 2-Week Practicum Observation of Your Teaching

  • Bob and I will see you teach once during this practicum
  • We’ll drop by to see you and set up an observation time

– Practicum Binder

  • Please set up a practicum binder to house paper copies of your prac-related paperwork
  • Please have your binder handy at all times for your SA or FA to flip through
  • Here’s the required Table of Contents for your binder:

– LLED 320 Writing Samples

  • Please collect 4-6 samples of student writing (photocopies are fine) to use in your Term 2 LLED 320 class.
  • The samples should reflect the range of writing abilities you find in your students.
  • The writing samples could be from lessons you teach or from work your students do with your SA.
  • We will be completing a writing assessment task in LLED 320 and the best samples to work with for this assignment are:
    • Short stories
    • Paragraphs
    • Poems
    • Essays
    • Reports

Here’s the first page of a sample writing sample:

Pre-2-Week Practicum Letter

  • Bob and I will send out a letter to both you and your SAs to outline expectations some point in mid- to late-December.
  • Please read the letter thoroughly and be in touch with any questions.

Unit Planning

  • The unit plan you’ll be using in January is due a email to both your SA and FA on Monday, 6 December 2010.
  • Your advisors will look it over and give you feedback
  • Please revise the unit with the feedback in mind.
  • You cannot start teaching in January until both your SA and FA have viewed and approved your unit plan.

Inquiry Task One-Pagers

  • Thanks for handing in the one-pager with your inquiry question on it
  • As you teach, your question will likely evolve
  • We’ll delve deeply into the inquiry task in 310 class during January and February

That’s all for now.  All the best for a relaxing holiday.

– Lawrence

EDUC 310 – Pre-Prac FA Conferences: Update for Weds, 17 March & Mon, 22 March

Cheryl and I enjoyed the time we had to sit and talk to you about your management plan, any practicum-related questions, and expectations for the final school experience of the year.

For your reference, here’s a copy of the meetings agenda and the information that we shared regarding the FA’s role during EDUC 419:

Pre-Practicum Conferences Agenda & FA’s Role Info

For your viewing pleasure, here’s a short PBS video clip from their Essential Practices series on Classroom Management:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SLIpCJybXLI[/youtube]

– Lawrence

EDUC 310 – Bennett’s BUMP 1: Update for Wednesday, 10 March 2010

Here’s what we managed to wedge into today’s POT class:

Planning for EDUC 419, the Long Practicum

We touched on 2 items here:

  • Submit the plan for your first unit to your SA between Thursday, 17 March and Monday, 22 March. This will allow your SA time to look at and give feedback on your planning before you start teaching.  As a guest in your SA’s classroom, it is a professional courtesy that you keep them well informed of all that you hope to do in their classroom.

  • Pre-Practicum FA Conferences
    • We asked you to sign up for a 30-minute conference with your FA to talk about the following agenda items:
      • Your Classroom Management Plan (the EDUC 310 Inquiry Task for Term 2)
        • Please bring a WORDLE of your plan as a conversation starter.  To create your WORDLE, sImply input the writing in your plan into the “Create” page of the WORDLE website.
      • Expectations for the Practicum
      • Your Planning
      • Answer Your Questions About the Practicum

Here’s an Management Plan WORDLE from last year:

Here are the conference schedules.  Please check to see that the time listed is accurate.  If you do not have a time, please email Shep or I to get one:

Classroom Management: Working with Barrie Bennett’s Theory of Bumps

Connecting

I asked you to think back to your classroom experience…

“Recall a student who was beginning to stop you from teaching or stop others from learning.  Perhaps they were pencil tapping, talking to a classmate, or calling out.  How did you respond to that student?”

We took a few responses and wrote them on the board.  As it turns out, you were already using some of the techniques advocated by Bennett in Bump 1 – Preventing and Responding to Misbehaviour Through Low-Key Responses.

Processing

I used this PPT slidewshow to give you some background with Bump 1:

Bennett’s Clasrroom Management BUMP 1 Slideshow

Next, partnerships presented short role plays demonstrating NO and YES examples on how to use each of the 14 low-key techniques (In fact, we didn’t do “Student’s Name” because we were missing one pair of students from today’s lesson).  The role play was followed up with a quick blurb on how to use the technique effectively and artfully.

The responses fall into two categories and are as follows:

Responding Strategies

  • Proximity
  • Touch
  • Student’s Name
  • Gesture
  • The Look
  • The Pause
  • Ignore
  • Signal to Begin
  • Deal With the Problem Not the Student

Matt sent me an example of The Look.  Watch this YouTube clip and determine if it’s a NO or a YES example:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SNEmyHsqoVY[/youtube]

Here’s a musical example of The Look.  Please wield this one with extreme caution:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LlVI7ZNiFlI[/youtube]

Preventive Techniques

  • Transitions
  • Rules
  • Dealing With Allies
  • Winning Over
  • Pre-empting Call Outs

You can find all the low-key responses in this handout from Bennett’s book, Classroom Management: A Thinking & Caring Approach:

Bennett’s Bumps 1 & 2

Personalizing

To close, I asked you to consider the following question and took up a few responses:

“Which of the techniques we worked with today will you add to your repertoire on practicum?”

That’s a wrap.

– Lawrence