classroom challenges Archives - Edu-Power-Today https://poweredutoday.com/tag/classroom-challenges/ Maximizing Educational Ideas Sat, 02 Apr 2022 00:50:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 Implementing Structure to Conquer Chaotic Classrooms https://poweredutoday.com/implementing-structure-to-conquer-chaotic-classrooms/ Wed, 23 Mar 2022 00:36:45 +0000 https://poweredutoday.com/?p=9561 11 Powerful Strategies You Can Use Right Now   Chaotic classrooms are a growing challenge for educators across every state in America. Fortunately, however, teachers do not have to suffer from overbearing classrooms once they know how to implement effective structure in the first few weeks of the school year. That is what you will learn about in this article. You’ll find out several successful strategies for transforming your classroom into an outstanding learning environment. So, without further introduction, let’s jump in with a discussion of chaotic classrooms. An Educator’s Nightmare Nothing can drain a teacher’s energy and motivation as

The post Implementing Structure to Conquer Chaotic Classrooms appeared first on Edu-Power-Today.

]]>
11 Powerful Strategies You Can Use Right Now

 

Chaotic classrooms are a growing challenge for educators across every state in America. Fortunately, however, teachers do not have to suffer from overbearing classrooms once they know how to implement effective structure in the first few weeks of the school year.

That is what you will learn about in this article. You’ll find out several successful strategies for transforming your classroom into an outstanding learning environment.

So, without further introduction, let’s jump in with a discussion of chaotic classrooms.

An Educator’s Nightmare

Nothing can drain a teacher’s energy and motivation as quickly as dealing with a room of chaotic students. Such classrooms are filled with disruptive behaviors such as:

  • Yelling
  • Shouting
  • Threatening and Arguing
  • Defiant Behavior against Redirection
  • Wrecking the Room
  • Toxic Language
  • Leaving Room without Permission
  • Deliberate Disruption of Instruction
  • Attacking Teachers

In middle school, high school, and in some lower grades, teachers face intimidation daily by these disruptive behavers and consider quitting the profession in the first week.

This almost happened to me. When I first started my teaching career in one of the biggest charter schools in Milwaukee, many parents had already taken their children out of public schools. But their hope for greener pastors in the charter schools were dashed by the rampant, defiant behavior displayed even in nonpublic schools.

An Intense Classroom Atmosphere

Structure

I broke up daily fights between students in my class. Each day the atmosphere was so intense that security was always at the ready.

I was exhausted the first week and started to return to the career had given up to for teaching. However, because of my love for the students I had enough passion to endure the classroom difficulties instigated by challenging students.

However, the knowledge of implementing structure wasn’t on my agenda until I realized that I had made one of the biggest mistakes when it comes to effective classroom management.

Although Classrooms were chaotic two decades ago, the post pandemic challenges presented by students are on the brink of a crisis.

Fortunately, a structured classroom is the key to effectively discouraging the opportunity for overwhelming chaos in today’s classroom.

You’ll Discover 10 Effective Strategies for Creating Character-Driven Classroom Performance

Structure

 

Class Rules Reign

Establishing class rules on the first day of class is the difference between chaotic classrooms and pleasant learning environments.

Students must know what is expected of them when they leave school the first day of school so that these expectations can sink in before he or she returns to school the next day.

But when establishing rules, a teachers must be firm and consistent in enforcing these rules in the beginning.

One mistake beginning teachers make is letting the first day go by for the sake of just getting to know students. Don’t do this. Challenging students will find a way to exploit this perceived weakness. They will consider you NICE!

Nothing is wrong with being a nice teacher, but a teacher must establish themselves as the authority in the classroom. This means that display a strong degree of firmness and consistency in implementing and enforcing class rules.

Character-Behavior Checklist

One of the most impactful strategies I was taught to implement structure t was a character checklist. I first learned about this godsend as a paraprofessional. This is how it works.

Each student is given a character checklist on the first day of class, regardless of behavioral history. The list includes daily behavior benchmarks that students are required to meet. Every student is responsible for fulfilling the expectations of this list and is held accountable by peers.

The first part of the character checklist consists of established class rules. The second part consists of topics dealing with morning routines, transitions, seatwork, language positivity, peer motivation and encouragement etc.

Students check off every fullfed expectation as the school day progresses. At the end of the day, the list is returned to the teacher.

The list is used for the sake of correcting off task behavior, determining who gets incentives, and informing parents of a student’s behavior status.

The most ingenious thing is that parents know about these character-behavior checklist and often collaborate along with the teacher to inspire good character and academic productivity.

Let’s examine some of the particulars of this Character Checklist.

Structure

Morning Duties

If you control the mornings, you will most likely control the entire day. It’s about how students begin their day when they enter the classroom. When you students step into the classroom, do they immediately know what to do or do you allow them to roam around the room and visit their peers because there is nothing to do.

For respectable students this may be an incentive, but for challenging students, the beginning of the day should be guided by some form of morning duties.

Successful teachers require students to complete some type of morning work with accountability attached. Completing morning work should be a prerequisite for receiving various incentives, such as individual awards including free time.

Morning routines drive student focus at the start of the day. There is less time for clowning around and getting into trouble with off task behavior.

Good Transitions: A Priority for Classroom Structure

All hell can break loose in the classroom if transitions are ignored. Moving from one lesson to another, one location to another, or one project to another can wreak havoc on classroom management if not guided by rules and regulations.

Students should be taught to make smooth transitions and why it is important to do so. Keeping focus and order are the two biggest rewards of guided transitions.

When students know what to do during various changes throughout the day and why it is important, they will strive to get it right the first time.

Bad transitions can leave a class is total mess. Books are scattered on the desk, chrome books are left unplugged, chairs and desk are in disarray, lining up becomes supper chaotic with yelling, screaming, pushing, and fighting in line.

Establishing good transition must become a priority.

What is Good Seatwork Performance?

Structure

Unless a project requires two or more students, seatwork performance should be a silent activity, allowing for maximum focus. In fact, silence and focus go together like a flower in the meadows.

When a student isn’t distracted by off-topic conversations, toys, or gadgets, he or she can absorb ideas more effectively.

Allowing students to listen to hip hop music or play on cellphones while doing seatwork will disparage the quality and value of learning.

The significance of seatwork revolves around this activity: the student engages the lesson, resulting in comprehension and greater proficiency. The more silent study, focused engagement, the more knowledge is acquired.

Monitoring Language for Positivity

Educators should monitor the language of their students. One of the most disruptive factors in causing chaos in a classroom is negative language. I have scene classrooms turned upside down due to the rampant use of vulgar words.

Teachers who allow students to use swear words will regret this when emotions boil over and children start getting attitudes and fighting among themselves.

Positive language empowers a classroom and creates a highly favorable learning environment for both students and teachers.

Our duty, as educators, is to establish a positive atmosphere in the place we spend most of our lives with our students. Make this one of your priorities in the first few days of school.

Peer Redirection as Structure

Structure

During my 23 years as an educator, I have discovered that peer redirection is my powerful than the commands that teachers often give redirect students. The sense of belonging that is created among students also provides an intense sense of trust among them.

Have you ever been aware of this behavior? In not, let me create a scenario. Let’s say you redirect a student’s several times, and he doesn’t respond to your attempts to redirect them. However, when other students get involve in the redirection process, then the student responds and does whatever you were trying to get them to do.

This is incredibly significant because it is a sign that a learning environment is trying to emerge. If 70% of the class is redirecting an idling student, then you, as an educator, is fortunate that half the class is on your side.

The student will realize that the attention that he or she is trying to get isn’t appreciated by fellow classroom peers.

So, if the opportunity is there to allow peer redirection, take full advantage of this tool for establishing structure.

Safe and Empowered Teacher-Student Engagement

Educators need to foster a classroom structure where students fill safe and empowered when engaging with the teacher. In fact, teacher-student engagement must be fully encouraged if your classroom is going to be excited about learning.

Structure

Students who are disengaged and rumpling through their desks or around the room, weakens the academic unity that should be a part of every classroom. So, enforce engagement.

According to studies at CSUSB, engagement creates a deeper learning experience and has multiple benefits, including:

  • Learning with peers
  • Developing leadership skills
  • Making friends
  • Learning life skills
  • Higher grade point averages
  • Learning inclusive practices
  • Interpersonal skills
  • Having fun
  • Enhancing ‘their Academic’ experience

 

You must find a way to motivate and empower these students. One of the best things to do is use a powerful incentive system to keep potentially wayward students inspired to become a part of the classroom learning process.

Extras for Early Finishers

All students don’t complete work at the same pace. In any giving classroom, there will be students who finish early and those who finish at the last minute.

In order to discourage chaos, teachers should have extra work for students at all times. The intention is to keep students engaged with something.

Good classroom structure can go up in smoke if idle students do not have anything to do. Therefore, by having a wide range of topics for early finishers to consider, you can prevent students from becoming bored and roaming around the room bothering other students who are focused on completing seatwork assignments.

Extras can include student workbook assignments, reading and responding to topics, fun writing assignments, coloring sheet choices, Chromebook work, make up assignments, and word search challenges.

Establishing extras as a part of structure will go a long way in stopping those early finishers from become classroom distractors.

Establish a Powerful Incentive System

Structure

Imagine working at a job where you got no recognition or reward at all. Will you feel highly motivated by going their everyday? If you are honest, I don’t think you would.

We all want incentives. As teachers, although we intrinsically enjoy our jobs, we want to get paid too. We want bun uses and we want recognition. (Teacher of the Year Award).

Our students are no difference. They have some desires when it comes to receiving recognition for the work.

Of course, they do not get paid like we do, but they do crave to be rewarded for engagement and academic achievements.

Therefore, a highly effective part of establishing classroom structure is a powerful incentive system that will motivate students to achieve beyond expectation.

Intrinsic values are solicited when teachers give students recognition for their behavior as well as their academic milestones.

However, students should have opportunity to a wide range of tangible incentives as well. According to studies, “Incentives, because of their objectivity and concreteness, command attention and interest. The highest types of incentive that will produce the desired reaction should be selected. Incentives, must be used as a means to stimulate interest.”

What type of incentives will stimulate strong interest: Here are a few?

  • Character Behavior Checklist
  • Point Systems
  • Punch Cards
  • Gum Balls Jar
  • Morning Meetings Shout Outs
  • End of the Day Academic Appreciation Tickets
  • Integrity Tickets
  • Supper Friday Classroom
  • Guest Speaker
  • School Shootout
  • Walking Field Trip
  • Extra Recess
  • Movie Afternoon with Popcorn and Cookies
  • Positive Home Phone Call
  • Computer Games for Fun
  • Virtual Reality Adventures

The list could go on and on. The idea is to make achieving educational goals fun and exciting. Many students will not have high interest in a lesson without the pleasure of incentives dancing through their minds.

Besides establishing classroom rules, creating strong incentives is the next best initiative for educators who want to foster a dynamic learning environment in which students prefer to come to school over time out for Spring Break.

Exit Routines: End of the Day Structure

structure

If you think you have made it through the day and school is almost out, you are making a misconception. Some of the most disruptive times happen at the end of a school day when students are about to go home.

You see, students are overly excited at this time. So, it is easy, because of anxiousness, for them to lose control.

I have experience times when students wrecked havoc at the end of the day, leaving the classroom in a total mess. Floors filled with paper, pencils, spilled milk, food particles in seats, chairs turned over, scattered paper on desks, and chrome books left opened.

Therefore, you should have an exit routine. Remember, incentives can play a big part at the end of the day. For example, you have a mystery person in mind as you guide students into end-of-the-day classroom organization. In fact, you can reward two or three students for their participation.

Using this strategy, you simply reward the mystery students for organizing the mess you had in mind when you told them to clean up the class. Each day you can reward different students so that everybody gets an opportunity to get an incentive.

This method works well. Students look forward to cleaning up, stacking chairs, and making the floor nice and clean.

Advantages of a Well-Structured Classroom Environment

Structure

I have tried to convince you of the significance of a well-structured classroom. The benefits of such learning environment offer:

  • Quality teaching and learning
  • Character driven classrooms
  • Peaceful and Safe Learning Environments
  • Peer Encouragement and Motivation
  • Accelerated Comprehension
  • Positive Bonding Among students
  • Opportunity for achieving academic excellence

Consequences of Ignoring Structure

Structure

However, if we ignore the significance of using structure to eliminate classroom chaos and create a highly favorable learning environment, we are depriving our students of the preparedness they will need to successful prosper as the next generation.

We must care about how our students learn. We must try in all our wisdom and knowledge to equip children for excellence.

Today’s classrooms are incredibly challenging indeed. But if we ignore the significance of structure, the consequences will be evident, which will include:

  • Low Academic Achievement
  • Lack of Motivation
  • Continual teaching and Learning Frustrations
  • Excessive exhaustion and burn out, and
  • Untimely Exits from the Education profession

Therefore, we as teachers, must not minimize the quality of education by giving up on our students or the challenging times in which we are teaching them. The pandemic has taken its toll on the field of education, but we will emerge stronger than ever if we keep the love of our students and their need and dependency on us.

 

 

 

 

The post Implementing Structure to Conquer Chaotic Classrooms appeared first on Edu-Power-Today.

]]>
Academic Visions: The Future of Classroom Instructions https://poweredutoday.com/academic-visions-the-future-of-classroom-instructions/ Sun, 26 Dec 2021 19:01:46 +0000 https://poweredutoday.com/?p=9477 Why Remote Learning Will Become the Norm?   The pleasure of walking in the classroom and enjoying a normal school day with your children is mostly a charitable experience of the past. That is a scary thought, but it is an inevitable, approaching academic reality. Ordinary classroom instructions may be headed for a downward spiral. An average school day once  consisted of positive expectations. Teachers were greeted with plenty of transforming smiles and hugs. In class learning was highly anticipated without the worry of social distancing or masking up. Peer interaction was an after thought as teachers prepared students for

The post Academic Visions: The Future of Classroom Instructions appeared first on Edu-Power-Today.

]]>
Why Remote Learning Will Become the Norm?

 

The pleasure of walking in the classroom and enjoying a normal school day with your children is mostly a charitable experience of the past. That is a scary thought, but it is an inevitable, approaching academic reality. Ordinary classroom instructions may be headed for a downward spiral.

An average school day once  consisted of positive expectations. Teachers were greeted with plenty of transforming smiles and hugs. In class learning was highly anticipated without the worry of social distancing or masking up. Peer interaction was an after thought as teachers prepared students for unrestricted group learning.

Now our days consist of greeting students whose smiles and open hugs hidden due to the anxieties and protocols of Covid-19. There is a sense of uncertainty as to whether everybody is going to get safely through a given day or whether an entire classroom or school will have to go into quarantine.

However, once we understand that will have to embrace these changes and adjust our teaching styles, the academic engine still must ramp up its educational horsepower to the fullest.

Classroom instructions

5 Changes that will affect Future of Classroom Instructions

The modern-day classroom will change dramatically because of covid-19 and its continuous variants which are expected in the coming months and years. (The vaccines are not cures but prevent medicines until a real cure is discovered.)

Covid-19 Protocol: Social Distancing

Social distancing is a major change that prevents social intimacy in the classroom. Students will not longer be able to hug without suspicion that their peers might have the dreaded virus and send everybody home.

Covid-19 Protocol: Masking Up

Teachers will agree that wearing mask all day is highly uncomfortable. But we do it for our students as well as for our peers. Masking interferes with normal breathing. That is the reason schools allow students to remove the mask outside. Two recesses are assigned to a school day: one in the morn and one after lunch.

Hybrid or Remote Learning

The intensity of covid-19 and its variants has forced districts across America to distance learning models, either to a hybrid model or completely remote learning. This academic reality has been a blessing and a curse.

Parents has gotten more involved in their children education. Parents have also gotten more familiar with the function of technology in the role of their child’s education.  These are positive take-aways. However, parents find themselves drenched in added stress.

Not being technologically savvy, parents are unable to operate chrome books or understand how to set them children up for zoom instructions.

Teachers have also become frustrated with distance learning technology, especially when it breaks down and whole classroom are left in limbo. They fall behind in academics or become less interested in instructional learning.

However, this must become a norm for both teachers and parents if education is going to thrive in the coming years and decades. Both teachers and parents must accept the fact that remote, or hybrid learning entrenched in future classroom instructions.

Substitute Teacher epidemic

Another reason districts will move toward hybrid or remote learning is the lack of substitute teacher, post pandemic. Substitute teaching has always been a challenge, even before the pre-pandemic atmosphere.

However, the scarcity of substitute teachers has multiplied. Most substitute teachers fear entering a classroom while many others have retired and do not play to reenter the profession.

Teacher Shortages

Before the pandemic many teachers were leaving the profession and going into other industries, just escape the stress and pressure of managing a classroom of challenging students.

Introducing the current covid-19 reality, many teachers have retired or given up on the profession all together. The classroom is much more challenging. Students are in the process of adjusting to being back in the classroom, and in many cases, the adjustments are highly stressful and chaotic for the teachers who still love education.

If the classroom environment continues to experience uncertainty, restriction, confusion and chaos, remote learning will become an ever-growing consideration for districts and educators across the United States of America.

Adjustments necessary for Embracing the Future of Classroom Instructions

Now to participate and progress in the future of classroom instructions, teachers, students, and parents must acknowledgement that things will never return to normal and that education in the in-person instructions will be volatile.

However, teachers must recognize that they are more valuable then ever in helping to transform the lives of students. Providing students with a quality education is still our responsibility. The next generation of students must have a firm grip on the direction of education and the success of the nation in the years to come.

Enjoy your students

The best thing that teachers can do is to enjoy their students and peers. Fill the classroom atmosphere will joy and inspiration each day. The students need it. The staff need it. The American education system need it.

The future of classroom instruction does not have to be bleak. Teachers have the power to turn negatives and to positives when it comes to educating the next generation. Love and inspiration conquer all sense of anxiety and uncertainty. We must prevail.

Inspire your peers daily

 

 

 

The post Academic Visions: The Future of Classroom Instructions appeared first on Edu-Power-Today.

]]>
How to Survive a Hostile Classroom Environment: Coping with High Risk Students https://poweredutoday.com/survive-hostile-classroom-environment-coping-high-risk-students/ Wed, 18 May 2016 22:22:20 +0000 http://how2manageaclassroom.com/?p=497 Surviving a hostile classroom can present a momentous challenge to educators, especially for new teachers. Hostility can occur suddenly and without warning. Unprepared teachers may find themselves surrounded by unmotivated, unruly and disrespectful students. Such situations can happen at any time of the year. However, teachers must be trained to cope with these intense moments. A few carefully chosen steps can help you survive the onslaught of angry high-risk students. Things You’ll Need Backup plans Take charge of your feelings and remain calm when you are confronted with a hostile classroom. Don’t react. The wrong thing to do is to

The post How to Survive a Hostile Classroom Environment: Coping with High Risk Students appeared first on Edu-Power-Today.

]]>
Surviving a hostile classroom can present a momentous challenge to educators, especially for new teachers. Hostility can occur suddenly and without warning. Unprepared teachers may find themselves surrounded by unmotivated, unruly and disrespectful students. Such situations can happen at any time of the year. However, teachers must be trained to cope with these intense moments. A few carefully chosen steps can help you survive the onslaught of angry high-risk students.

Things You’ll Need

Backup plans

Take charge of your feelings and remain calm when you are confronted with a hostile classroom. Don’t react. The wrong thing to do is to start yelling, screaming and threatening students. This will only give them a sense that you have lost control. Sometimes a classroom will become increasingly uncontrollable when the teacher has lost his cool, resulting in total chaos.

Stand still and observe the situation with poise and confidence. Look for the students who are not participating in the  chaos These nonparticipants can act as your mental source of stability. Attempt to express concern regarding the situation. You can say something like: “I know you’re disappointed class. I am also, but we can resolve this situation together.” Let them know that the problem can be solved only when they calm down.

Try to understand why these students are so angry. Make sure that you have not directly contributed to the hostility by being insensitive to certain concerns that students may have presented to you. Students have feelings. When something is happening in the classroom that the teacher is ignoring, some students may become hostile because they are not being heard.

Seek common ground. Many times intense stress situations in high-risk classrooms happen because of differing objectives. Some students may want to work on a particular project while the other may not. Some students may think you are showing favor toward the ideas of another group while neglecting their ideas. Obtaining common ground provides the opportunity to discuss and resolve the hostile situation.

Resolve the problem through a heartfelt classroom discussion. Review and create new rules if necessary in order to prevent the hostile situation from occurring again. Thoroughly examine routines and habits that may have contributed to the problem. You may have to change the lesson plans, teaching style as well as the way you engage with the students in general. You may have to become more sensitive and understanding.

Tips

For all classroom teachers, the bottom line is to strive to create community within the classroom. You may have to make the idea of community a weekly classroom theme. High-risk classrooms will most likely need constant repetition of ideas in order to internalize a message. As much as possible, the sense of classroom community must become a habit for every high-risk student. In addition, you must devise interesting lesson plans as well as backup plans in case of other classroom emergencies.

Warning

Sometimes a teacher’s effort to calm a hostile classroom requires help. Don’t get injured trying to calm a classroom in which the situation has become threatening. Seek and call for the help of other teachers or the administrative office. When high-risk students are aggressively attempting to bully and frighten you, whether they are standing in your face or throwing pencils and books at you, you must seek immediate help. In some instances, you must call the police, especially if you have been assaulted.

The post How to Survive a Hostile Classroom Environment: Coping with High Risk Students appeared first on Edu-Power-Today.

]]>
How To Become a Better Multi-Dimensional Teacher https://poweredutoday.com/how-to-become-a-better-multi-dimensional-teacher/ Wed, 16 Sep 2015 19:44:51 +0000 http://how2manageaclassroom.com/?p=387 My mistake as a first year teacher was to expect that a typical day in the classroom would go smooth without any other distractions or interruptions. I imagined that all the students would sit there quietly and absorb the lessons I presented to them. Boy! Was I wrong! What a rude awakening! In today’s classroom, a teacher must be multi-dimensional in conducting a classroom. She must be a teacher, counseling and an interpreter. She must be able to teach three lessons at the same time, depending on the school’s approach to educating students. Gone are the days when teachers could

The post How To Become a Better Multi-Dimensional Teacher appeared first on Edu-Power-Today.

]]>
My mistake as a first year teacher was to expect that a typical day in the classroom would go smooth without any other distractions or interruptions. I imagined that all the students would sit there quietly and absorb the lessons I presented to them. Boy! Was I wrong! What a rude awakening!
In today’s classroom, a teacher must be multi-dimensional in conducting a classroom. She must be a teacher, counseling and an interpreter. She must be able to teach three lessons at the same time, depending on the school’s approach to educating students.
Gone are the days when teachers could take a one dimensional approach to teaching without any subsidiary lessons, behavior interruptions, communication problems and administrative demands. New teachers quit teaching because they are unprepared to be multi-dimensional. They become burnt out halfway through the first semester. However, if new teachers are trained for this type of reality, they will enter their first year of teaching with confidence in their abilities to handle the various classroom challenges.

The Different Hats of the Multi-Dimensional Teacher

To reach greatness as a teacher, you must wear many hats. First you must be a teacher. You must have an academic vision for each student, an ongoing relationship with parents and a personal teaching philosophy in order to take your students to heights that will empower them for a life of progress and impact in society.

Second, you must be a counselor. I know there is probably a school counselor, but students will spend most of their time with you. When they are down and unmotivated, it is your responsibility to get to the bottom of what is ailing them. A child who is emotionally distraught will sap the excitement out of the learning environment if nothing is done.

Third, you must be an interpreter. Many of your students will come from diverse backgrounds. You may not be able to understand their language at first, but with patient and attentive listening you will grow to understand what they are saying. You may even want to study the basics of several languages in order to better understand the culture of your students.

Fourth, as a teacher, you will have to teach two or three student groups simultaneously. For example, you may have to teach a reading group, while another group works on writing skills and another work on a special project. In addition, you must be able to organize the class in such a way that distractions, interruptions and problems will get resolved without stopping the overall flow of learning. However, have no fear. These are the challenges that make great teachers. Once you get accustomed to this type of teaching it will eventually become second nature.

The Gift of Organization

The best asset of a multi-dimensional teacher is the ability to stay organized. Without this asset chaos and confusion will be the order of the day. Students will be uncertain as to what comes next. As a result, they will be tempted to act out and cause discipline issues. Therefore, teachers must create practical routines that students can independently fall into during the course of the day. For example, students should know what to do and when to do it, whether it is taking out math books at the beginning of the hour, performing Word Sorts during group work or switching classes for WIN time in the middle of the morning. Once students adapt to these routines and patterns, the order of the day will unfold with ease and academic productivity will increase.

Save

The post How To Become a Better Multi-Dimensional Teacher appeared first on Edu-Power-Today.

]]>