This year has been quite challenging, which is good in a way since I need to continually work on improving my class management strategies. The last two years were so sweetly simple since I had one of those magical groups of students who really bought in to what I was teaching, and I looped with them after their seventh grade year.
But this year? This year has been a challenge. It didn’t matter to these students that I had been teaching for years or that I’d written a book on how to manage student behavior. This group of students acted like so many of our students act – uncooperative, unruly, and not wanting to learn.
This year, for the first time, my original system of class management (which you can find in my videos at HelpingTeachersGrow.com or in my materials at TakeBackThatClass.com) wasn’t enough to encourage the level of cooperation necessary for all of us to have success. For a couple of weeks, I wasn’t sure what to do.
Then it came to me (and I know this isn’t anything new to many of you veteran teachers out there!).
A new system of management that held the entire class responsible to a level of behavior that rewarded their cooperation and withheld that reward for the times students tried to get the instruction off track.
I call it… Teacher versus Student.
And it works like magic.
At the start of each class (I don’t use this with all my classes. Just the ones that need it.) I write a big T and a big S on the board. As class progresses, whenever a student is disruptive, I put a point under the T (for teacher). When the students are, as a whole, on task and working well, I put a point under the S (for student). I make sure to draw attention to the times I make a point, especially since the times the students earn a point is typically when their focused and not necessarily watching the board.
At the end of the class, if the students have more points than I do, we’ll stop a few minutes early, and I let them socialize or go outside for a minute or something else that they really want. If I have more points than they do, no reward.
This has really helped me change my classes around. I love it when the other students tell each other to be quiet or to stop messing around. When the students start to help manage each other’s behaviors, things are really working.
This little trick has turned my least favorite class into the class I really look forward to each day.
Give it a try! And let me know how it goes for you.