Classroom management focuses on creating an effective learning environment to support academic achievement and development. Good classroom management emphasizes preventing disruptions rather than just intervening in problems. As a teacher, it is important to develop preventative strategies like meaningful curriculum, motivating instruction, learning communities, and an organized classroom structure. This involves engaging students through hands-on activities, developing social competence among students, and establishing clear rules and procedures to optimize learning time.
Classroom management focuses on creating an effective learning environment to support academic achievement and development. Good classroom management emphasizes preventing disruptions rather than just intervening in problems. As a teacher, it is important to develop preventative strategies like meaningful curriculum, motivating instruction, learning communities, and an organized classroom structure. This involves engaging students through hands-on activities, developing social competence among students, and establishing clear rules and procedures to optimize learning time.
Classroom management focuses on creating an effective learning environment to support academic achievement and development. Good classroom management emphasizes preventing disruptions rather than just intervening in problems. As a teacher, it is important to develop preventative strategies like meaningful curriculum, motivating instruction, learning communities, and an organized classroom structure. This involves engaging students through hands-on activities, developing social competence among students, and establishing clear rules and procedures to optimize learning time.
Classroom management focuses on creating an effective learning environment to support academic achievement and development. Good classroom management emphasizes preventing disruptions rather than just intervening in problems. As a teacher, it is important to develop preventative strategies like meaningful curriculum, motivating instruction, learning communities, and an organized classroom structure. This involves engaging students through hands-on activities, developing social competence among students, and establishing clear rules and procedures to optimize learning time.
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How to manage challenging behaviour?
Classroom management is defined as actions taken to create and maintain a learning
environment that supports instructional goals (Brophy, 1988). The purpose of classroom management is to foster academic achievement, social, emotional and character development. Thus classroom management goes beyond rewarding acceptable behaviour and punishing misconduct. Throughout my research I have observed a strong correlation between classroom management and behavioural issues, good classroom management focuses on the prevention of disruptions rather than the intervention (Snyder, 2000). As a pre-service teacher I now know that instead of worrying and planning for behavioural problems I may encounter in the future, it is important to develop preventable strategies which I will outline. It is vital teachers are equipped with various skills and knowledge which will enable them to establish rules and procedure, maintain engagement in academic activities, structure the classroom environment and develop relationships with students to create and maintain an effective learning environment. Develop and maintain an effective learning environment by: 1. Creating meaningful curriculum and motivating instruction: students have to be engaged and interested in the learning activities being presented to them. As teachers it is good pedagogical practice to plan tasks which are developmentally appropriate and intellectually meaningful (Standard 1.5) this ensures students are attaining appropriate scaffolding. Behavioural problems may arise when the task is too hard or easy resulting in frustration or boredom by tasks which are too basic. How will this look in my class? I hope to engage my students in an interesting hands-on inquiry using concrete materials. This approach is in alignment with research by Brophy (1987) and Lepper (1988) who conclude that a student's interest in academic activities is enhanced when teachers (1) emphasize intrinsic reasons for learning rather than stressing grades or other rewards; (2) relate material to students' lives and experiences or to current events; (3) offer choices about what, where, how, or with whom work is done; (4) assign tasks that are varied and that include novel elements; (5) assign problems for students to solve that are realistic and challenging; and (6) assign work that involves creating a product or provides some concrete form of accomplishment. 2. Develop learning communities In a study conducted by Welsh, Parke, Widaman, and O'Neil (2001) examined the direction of effects between social competence and academic competence over time. The research strongly suggests that social competence typically leads to happier and more academically successful children. The development of a learning community enables teachers to effectively manage the classroom, as it provides a safe environment which stimulates learning opportunities and assistance. In this approach of empowering students to construct knowledge through social interaction in an active learning process is based on theorist Lev Vygotsky's ideas about learning as a social process.
3.Organising the classroom
The structure is important in maintaining an effective learning environment. An orderly classroom arrangement optimizes learning time, whereas inadequate planning causes disruptions and delays (Emmer, Evertson, Sanford, Clements, and Worsham, 1984). When the classroom is thoughtfully arranged it supports orderly movement, fewer distractions, and effective use of available space (Emmer and others, 1984). According to Kounin (1977) there are a number of ways in which a teachers behaviour affects student behaviour and learning. He found that when a teacher terminates one activity, starts another, and then returns to the first activity it disrupts the flow of learning. Teachers may also disrupt the flow when they are pulled away from the activity by unimportant matters, or when they slow down the instruction (for example) by explaining instructions in detail when children already understand. Research indicates that teachers who develop set rules and procedures are effective classroom managers as they had fewer misbehaviour problems than teachers who did not make these clear at the beginning (Evertson, 1997).
Classroom-Ready Resources for Student-Centered Learning: Basic Teaching Strategies for Fostering Student Ownership, Agency, and Engagement in K–6 Classrooms