Monday, April 14, 2014

Classroom Management: A Constant Learning Process


            Something I’ve been really nervous about while going through the education process to become a teacher has been classroom management. It has really been taught to me until this class. Listening to the teacher panel speak about classroom management led me to learn some things that I did not know before, however, I still have a lot to learn.
            I think classroom management is something that will always be changing. Something that works for one class may not work for another. It’s something that I will probably always be learning. For example, teachers did not always have to deal with students using their cell phones in class. In this day and age a lot of students have cell phones and many students use their cell phones while in class. Some of the teachers on the teacher panel spoke about what they do when students are using their cell phones. Many schools have their own policy, sometimes even a zero tolerance policy. This policy doesn’t always work. I really liked when one of the teachers on the panel said that she spoke with her administrators and came up with her own policy of having a set number of warnings then assigning community service for the students when they are out of warnings. She said that it really worked this quarter and that she will be using it next quarter. I think that’s great because she thought outside of the box and went to her administrators to see if they would allow her to do this. This proves it’s very important to be in contact with the administrators and that it’s also key to know your students.
            Another point that stuck out to me is something that is obvious but is sometimes forgotten and that is respect works both ways. This includes the way a teacher handles a situation. If a teacher calls out a student in class for the way they are acting, embarrassing them, they will not have respect for you. I agree with the panel that taking the student out of classroom, writing the student a pass to take a five-minute break, or simply giving the student a gesture is more appropriate than yelling at the student. I also think that the students will have more respect for the teacher if this is how the situation is handled. In high school, there were times when teachers called out students in class and at that time everyone in class would stop what they were doing and begin paying attention to that individual student and the teacher, and not class. After this, the teacher had to work to get the entire class back on task. I want to make sure this does not happen by handling the situation in the manners described before.
            Overall, I think classroom management is still something I have a lot to learn about. From the teacher panel I learned some techniques but I will also talk to my cooperating teacher when I teach to hear about some techniques she has. This panel was informative and I am eager to learn more in the future.
           



           




2 comments:

  1. I definitely think respect is a big part of classroom management. I know an elementary teacher who will practically yell at a student in from of the whole class to get them to behave. I was so scared the first time I heard him do that, and I couldn't even imagine how scared and embarrassed the student must have been. You really need to know your students and respect each other in order to create healthy and non-disruptive classroom management skills.

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  2. Hi Tiff,
    Even after the panel, I still worry about how I will manage my classroom! I agree with you in how the new cellphone policy that one teacher created was original and great to work outside of the box.It shows that there is room to be creative with the policies that teachers establish. The first established cell phone policy didn’t work so she had to creatively think of a new way that would work for her students. It all comes down to how it is going to work with the students that you have. We may talk and talk about classroom management and then go into our first classrooms and have the policies we learned about not work. That’s when creativity and communication come into play. Just like the teacher had done with the cellphones.

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