Sunday, 20 August 2017

How to Create a Successful Classroom

How to Create a Successful Classroom, Ideas on Classroom Management

Emphasis on student relationships in their classrooms and schools are important for environments where mutual respect and learning flourish!
·         A successful classroom has management that works. Begin the year with setting the tone for your classroom by establishing routines, procedures, and expectations for all students, including the teacher. Students respect the teacher that respects them. With those standards in place, any teacher will have a successful school year.
·         Taking time and being intentional about building a positive and productive learning environment is essential to any successful classroom. Relationships are key! Strong connections between student and teacher, as well as student and peers, provide a strong foundation for growth in social, emotional, and academic learning.
·         Be patient—children will not get to mastery at the same time. Be flexible—know that students learn in different ways, just like we travel in different ways (some people fly and some people ride bikes). Listen—students have a difficult time expressing themselves as it is. Allow yourself an opportunity to hear them (such as through journaling). Love them—showing up at events or giving them a fist bump or a high-five in the hall are ways to let students know that you love them and notice them.
·         In my classroom, I first work to create a classroom community in which I develop relationships with the kids and help the kids develop relationships with each other. We look at it through the lens of “We are a family in this classroom.” A teacher can develop the best lessons and have a variety of amazing ways to deliver it, but when a child knows you care about them, they will work beyond what they think they can for you. Relationships with students are THE key to having a successful classroom.
·         Successful classrooms are built around magic, routines, and relationships. A classroom should be an exciting place where students think anything can hap - pen. The difference between excitement and chaos are your consistent routines for everything from putting away homework to getting the class’ attention to how students’ desks are organized. None of that is possible, however, if the classroom is missing the most important thing: genuine love and personality from you. A hug, a smile, and a note, are powerful tools.
·         A successful classroom has a teacher who believes in every student and instills that belief in each one of them. This room invites risk-tasking, problem-solving, community-building, a place in which everyone works together to achieve each person’s goals. A successful classroom also has a teacher that learns everything he or she can about a student and utilizes that information to create lessons that are engaging and inspiring to all.
·         In order to create a successful classroom, your students must feel loved. No matter what age level you teach, build relationships with them to show you care. Spend some time getting to know your students and take an interest in their lives. Once they feel you genuinely care about them, they aim to please you and learning will take place.
·         What make a successful classroom are the relationships that a teacher can form with students. There has to be that foundation to ensure that your students “buy in” to what you are telling them, and ensure that they value your thoughts and opinions. Kids will do anything for someone who believes in them and puts value into who they are as people.
·         Build relationships with your students and show them that you truly care about them as people and students. When a classroom foundation starts with respect from the teacher for all students, the students in turn respect the teacher and are more willing to put forth effort and make gains in their achievement.
·         For a successful elementary classroom, there must be clear expectations with consistent consequences, because classroom management has been proven to be the No. 1 predictor of learning outcomes. Children must know they are loved and cared for, but also held to high expectations as any good parent would do—tough love! Finally, instruction should be rooted in what is important to children. Activities should be highly engaging and appropriate to their varying ability levels—less is more. As much as possible, let students lead!
·         The elements of any successful classroom include a teacher that is constantly reflecting on his/her craft. When a reflective teacher evaluates his/her daily instructional practices, he/she can quickly diagnosis strengths and weaknesses within the students’ work. By focusing on the areas of need in the students’ work, he/she can develop an individual plan based on the needs of students. This leads to gradual improvement in student achievement—the ultimate goal for ALL teachers.

·         A successful classroom is one where teachers and students respect and trust each other, one where the teacher believes that students have the ability to achieve and students always do their best work. It is a place where we feel safe and welcoming, with a strong sense of community. 

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