What is Classroom Management?

Classroom Management involves teacher actions to create a
learning environment that encourages positive social interaction, active
engagement in learning, and self-motivation.
Successful classroom management involves not only responding
effectively when problems occur, but preventing the frequent occurrence of
problems. The most effective decisions in classroom management are based on a
clear concept of the goals and intended outcomes that a teacher wishes to
accomplish.
Strategies for Classroom Management

Organization
Rules and procedures should be developed in conjunction with
teaching strategies that help students meet their personal and academic needs.
- Arrange seating in a U-shape, rows
or a circle, so that you can see and easily move close to students.
- Post a daily schedule and
discuss any changes each morning.
- Engage students until you have
given clear instructions for the upcoming activity.
- Encourage students to take
responsibility for their learning by determining not to do tasks that can
be done by students.
- Establish routines for
collecting homework, distributing papers, etc.
- Move around the room and attend
to individual needs.
- Provide simple step-by-step
directions.
- Remind students of key
procedures associated with the upcoming lesson.
- Use group competition to
stimulate more orderly transitions.
- Develop transition
activities--Implement structured activities that help students make
transitions between active periods and quieter learning activities.
Communication
Effective communication is the foundation for good classroom
management. Communication skills can be divided into two categories: sending
and receiving.
Sending Skills (skills used when speaking
to someone):
- Deal in the present.
Information is more useful when it is shared at the earliest appropriate
opportunity.
- Talk directly to students
rather than about them. When teachers do this, students are shown respect,
and receive accurate information about adults' feelings.
- Speak courteously. This creates
positive role models for students.
- Take responsibility for
statements by using the personal pronoun ``I.''
Example: ``When I'm interrupted, I get distracted
and have difficulty helping other students.''
- Make statements rather than
asking questions. When dealing with students' behaviors, questions often
create defensiveness.
Receiving Skills (techniques for becoming a
more effective listener):
- Use empathic, nonevaluative listening. This makes the speaker feel
that he or she has been clearly heard and that the feelings expressed are
acceptable.
- Use paraphrasing, active
listening, or reflecting in order to make the speaker feel heard. This
allows the listener to become involved in the dialogue.
- Make eye contact and be aware
of nonverbal messages.
- Suggest strong leadership by
using body carriage, facial expressions, and gestures.
Monitoring
Often misbehavior occurs because students find “acting out''
more interesting than a boring lesson or more rewarding than another failure
experience. Students may also misbehave when they are not involved in the
learning activity, do not understand the task, or cannot obtain assistance when
it is needed. Following are useful techniques for responding to minor classroom
disruptions:
- Scan the class frequently in
order to notice and respond to potential problems.
- React calmly and quickly to a
student's disruptive behavior in order to create a positive ripple effect.
- Make positive initial contact
with students by praising the positive behavior that competes with the
negative behavior.
- Remind students of the
classroom rule or procedure that they are not demonstrating.
- Make students clearly aware of
the rules and procedures and the consequence for violations.
- Give students clear cues
indicating that continuation of a behavior will evoke the specified
consequences.
- Employ consistent consequences
for misbehaviors.
- Inform students that they are
choosing the consequence of their behavior.
- Use consequences which are
educational in nature.
- When one or two students
are being very disruptive, focus other students in the class on their
task. Then find a time to talk quietly with the disruptive students.
Delivery of Instruction
Leading educators over the past several years have emphasized
that quality of instruction is a key factor influencing students' behavior and
achievement. Response to student misbehavior is most effective when it
maintains or enhances the student's dignity and self-esteem and encourages the
student to be responsible for his or her own behavior.
- Involve students in evaluating
their own work as well as your instruction.
- Hand out an outline,
definitions, or study guide to help students organize their thoughts and
focus their attention.
- Ask the question and give ample
wait time before calling on the student.
- Vary style as well as the
content of instruction in order to address diverse student learning
styles.
- Provide work of appropriate
difficulty to complement varying ability levels.
- Relate materials to students'
lives whenever possible.
- Be animated, create
anticipation, and use activities to catch student interest or increase
student motivation to participate.
Engage student learning through cooperative group work,
competitive teams, group discussions, debates, and role playing.