#1:
I
believe that a classroom environment that is conducive to learning is an
environment in which 1) students feel comfortable, and 2) students are
motivated to do work. In my class,
I want my students to feel as comfortable as possible. I want to provide “a loving and
supportive home environment,” allow students to help make decisions as to what
we do, and provide students with the opportunity to work on age appropriate
activities either on their own or with a group (Omrod claims that these
practices fit into the model of authoritative parenting). Students can also feel more comfortable
in my class if I maintain “good working relationships with students,” create an
environment in which students feel they belong, and “set reasonable limits for
behavior” (Omrod, 2011). Omrod
(2011) mentions that one general management strategy is to take “student
diversity into account in making classroom management decisions” (p.461). I believe this strategy could also do
much to helping create a comfortable, non-threatening classroom environment,
especially if a teacher has an English Language Learner as a student. Often, when ELLs are tossed into an
English-speaking classroom they can become highly intimidated and
uncomfortable. To help alleviate
this discomfort, if I have an ELL student I will engage in what Almaguer and
Esquierdo (2013) call culturally relevant teaching “in which students are able
to see their culture in the context of the classroom” (p.8). In this way, ELL students are better
able to connect the English instruction they are receiving in the classroom to
the culture they already understand and are comfortable with. These are all methods I would like to
exercise that will make my classroom environment more comfortable for my
students.
I
also believe that any classroom environment that is conducive to learning must
be one in which students are intrinsically motivated to complete assigned
work. Encouraging students to
intrinsically value their instruction can be much more challenging than making
a classroom comfortable, but I believe it can be done. I believe that my students are more
likely to be intrinsically motivated if I set realistic goals for them to
strive for, offer them frequent encouragement, and somehow find a way to tie classroom
material back to their extracurricular interests and any mastery goals they may
have. This latter strategy may be
the most important, because I believe that no student will be intrinsically
motivated to understand the material presented if they cannot find a way in
which the material relates to their personal lives and goals. It would be extremely difficult to
relate all class material to each student’s life and goals, but if it can be
done I believe it should be.
#2:
As
I plan to teach high school English, I have used the “High School Case Study”
as my study for which I have developed my following responses.
It
is obvious that most of the students in my music class are no longer
intrinsically motivated, and I can somehow sympathize with them. Many seniors develop a case of
“senioritis” in their final year and especially during the final weeks; they no
longer want to do assigned work in classes, because they cannot see how such
work so near the end of their high school careers can negatively affect them
and prevent them from graduating.
To make matters worse, my class takes place during fifth period, near
the end of the day. I believe this
lack of intrinsic motivation has led to student’s passing notes to one another
once my back is turned.
I
can no longer ignore this misbehavior because it is not a rare occurrence, is
has spread to other students, and it is interfering with classroom learning
(Omrod, 2011). Therefore, to
target this misbehavior in my students, I have planned the following interventions
that may help reestablish a productive learning community in my classroom.
—1. First, I will simply engage in
conversation with those that are passing the most notes. If I notice two students passing notes
during class time, I may pass by them and tap on their desks without saying
anything. Perhaps this physical
cue will let them know that I have noticed their misbehavior, and that they
should stop. If students do not
stop passing notes after my tapping on their desk, I will call each student
individually to my desk or office so that I can privately discuss their
misbehavior with them, and let them know that I will not stand for it.
—2. If engaging in conversation with
students about their behavior does not work, I may decide to arrange the
furniture in ways that encourage certain student interaction while, at the same
time, discouraging others (Omrod, 2011).
For example, since I am aware that there are certain various cliques
among students, I could divide the room into four or five groups of about four
or five students each. Students
will not be arranged into any group with any other student from their
clique. I will assign each group
an activity (composing a short musical piece, transcribing music onto sheets,
etc.) that they must work together to accomplish. Hopefully, this will quench students’ desires to interact
with others, but they will stay on task as they may not have any real personal
topics to discuss with these students they rarely talk to. With this new desk arrangement, I will
display withitness by addressing each group from an angle from which I can see
the rest of the class.
The
biggest threats to my productive, comfortable classroom environment are the
three boys who continually make fun of the other students and who roughhouse
and refuse to follow classroom behavioral procedures. The reason these three boys are so dangerous to my classroom
environment is because they are harming the classroom climate. A classroom climate is the “general
psychological environment that permeates classroom interactions” (Omrod,
2011). In any good classroom
climate students will feel safe and secure from threats (Omrod, 2011). However, with the three boys frequently
making fun of other students, especially the tenors and sopranos, the students
in my class cannot feel safe and secure.
Therefore, the misbehavior of these three boys must be handled
immediately and effectively.
—1. Again, the first step I should take is
to converse with these students, first publicly but subtly (perhaps through
stern eye contact), and then, if the problem progresses, through private
conversations. In these private
conversations, I will try to inform the boys on how their behavior is not only
disrespectful to me but, more importantly, it is disrespectful and threatening
to the other students.
—2. I have a feeling, though, that simply
talking to these students will not alleviate the problem. Therefore, more serious measures may
need to be taken. I liked the idea
that Brian presented this week about requiring a student to write ten positive
things for each negative thing they say about a student. I might try to do that with these boys.
—3. If that doesn’t work, I would rearrange
the seating of these three boys. I
would require that two boys sit on the front row on opposite ends, while the
third boy sits in the middle row in the middle seat. Hopefully, this distance will reduce the amount of talking
the boys can engage in with one another.
—4. If this does not work, I could require
that the boys sit at desks that are completely isolated in each corner of the
room. At their desks, I would
require that they complete some rote activity, such as filling an entire music
sheet with quarter notes, then half notes, etc. I would require that each of the three boys turn in a
specific amount of filled-in sheets before they leave the class. If they do not, I would give them
detention.
—5. If none of these efforts succeed in
deterring the misbehavior and reestablishing a productive learning environment
in my classroom, I would contact each of the boys’ parents and, if need be, the
principal.
Almaguer, I.,
Esquierdo, J. (2013). Cultivating bilingual learners’ language arts knowledge:
A framework for successful teaching.
International Journal of
Instruction, 6 (2), 3-18.
Just so you know, for the CSEL, you will need to modify the music aspects of the case study to English (to make it more relevant). One thing I notice is that only one of your strategies hints at your lesson design, the rest are related to discipline. They say the best classroom management is a well-designed lesson, and I found that to be the case. When you have lessons that require participation from everyone and, as you mention above, work with student interest (doesn't even have to be every day), you often avoid these problems. Senioritis is tough cuz many of them have a fear of the change that's about to occur. Is there anything you would do to specifically address the senioritis?
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