Classroom management can be especially hard when you’re a supply or substitute teacher. You don’t know the class, so don’t know the malleable students from the challenging ones. What’s more, these students don’t knowyouand some of them are going to test your boundaries. They’re going to find it fun to see how much they can get away with.
So how do you...
This is a very simple classroom management strategy which I use at seminars and workshops to demonstrate the power of giving students responsibility for their own behaviour. Not only can this technique get a group of students quiet in as little as 10 seconds, it also strengthens staff/student relationships, injects a little humour into the session and gives challenging students the attention...
A student who has no interest in lessons (i.e. anything you say and do) can have a terrible impact on the rest of the class. What you must remember however is that this student probably wants to succeed – most do, at heart – but has virtually given up due to a succession of failures, discouragement and low self-image. It may take time to reach this student and help them see life...
A few years ago I wrote a short blog post (on my old website) covering novel ways to get attention from a noisy group of students - you know the kids that just won't stop talking no matter what you do.
Why? Well simply because this would seem to be one of the most frustrating problems teachers face. I get emails about it every day.
Anyway, that post quickly became the most popular on my entire...
Kids...
Here are nine quick ways to de-escalate arguments and serious incidents.
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Defiant behaviour is often a cry for help or an attempt to cover a fear of failure. Nobody wants to look stupid in front of others (except those in the audition stages of the X-Factor) and arguing against authority can be an effective distraction and a way of...
Want a way to connect with your students? Then what better way than learning the names of your new students as quickly as possible. Here are 5 tips to help you achieve just that…
1. Name Chain
Ask each student in turn to share his/her name and the names of people who have already introduced themselves. E.g. Person 1 says their name, person 2 then gives the first person’s name as...
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