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Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida http://teflclassroommanagement.pbworks.co m

Classroom Management for English Teachers Marla Yoshida

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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

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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.