Welcome to Real World Teacher!

Real World Teacher is Craig Seganti's blogging site for Classroom Discipline and other educational topics. Here you will also find the Real World Teacher Lounge, where member teachers can post questions to be answered by Craig and/or by each other.

PHILOSOPHY

Teachers are professionals who deserve to teach in an attentive, appreciative environment where an education is the reward. The aim is to not waste time in politically correct jargon but to employ those techniques and strategies which work-in the REAL WORLD.

Archive for Teacher's Lounge

 

The default setting on detention time is have the students just sit silently or copy the rules if they had that added on.  There is value in having a student sit silently;  it may be the only time they learn to do so that week, and time alone with their thoughts doesn’t hurt.

I tell them if they talk or distract the clock resets–it is 15 minutes from the time they stop talking.

If they are squirming it makes detention that much more effective because they don’t want to return.  Though sometimes I let them read and/or do homework.  Other times I engage them in a little conversation to indicate how un-evil I am in real life, just that they are merely paying a consequence for a rule broken doesn’t make them a bad student either.

This is all a judgement call–do what you think will help your classroom environment in the long run.  In other words, if a student really likes coming after school to talk to you, then chatting with them isn’t going to help your case.

I never have less than 2 or 3 students in the room for my own protection against any accusations.  There have been cases where students conspire to accuse teachers of various things;  were I wary of that, I would simply stand in the doorway marking papers or reading or keep myself visible somehow.

Comments (6)

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Question: I am a foreign language teacher so there has to be talking and action in my classroom. The students misinterpret this activity as meaning you can talk about whatever you like. I have worked on it and worked on it and told them they may talk only in the target language but many are just first year students. What should I do here?

Answer:  The whole idea here is that there is a consequence for anything that is not contributing positively to the classroom environment that you, as a professional, want.  Most activities that seem like they are a loophole are not at all if you check the rules;  in this case, students not talking about the assignment are off task, and receive detention.  My experience (and I tell students this) is that I can merely look at their body language and listen to the tone of the conversation without knowing exactly what they are saying to know if they are on the assignment or not, so I don’t have to be near them or listen to false protests of  ’We were talking about the work’.   ‘Get on Task or come after school today’.

 

An Example of Good Group Work

An Example of Good Group Work

No!

A More Challenging Group

 

Also, I recommend quiet academic book work for the first week or two to get students accustomed to a focused atmosphere, then slowly breaking them into the group work a bit at a time, and immediately stopping it and going back to quiet work if they are off-task, so that they know group work is a privilege and not for gossip or social networking.

Comments (5)
May
22

1st grade substitute for 3 days

Posted by: Shelleyluvnlife | Comments (9)

Hello Peers, My name is Shelley Crawford and I am a substitute teacher in Baltimore City, Maryland public school system. I have an assignment next week teaching 1st graders for 3 days. How would your approach be modified to help 1st graders maintain classroom discipline? I look forward to hearing your thoughts on this matter. Have a wonderful day as well!

Sincerely,

Shelley Crawford

Comments (9)
Sep
28

Elementary school approaches

Posted by: tlo | Comments (10)

Is anyone out there using this approach in an elementary school setting? (especially if you teach 2nd or 3rd) If so, what consequence do you use?

Have you altered the approach at all based on the needs of younger students?

It is so radically different from the “positive discipline” approaches I’m used to. At times I feel that I’m being harsh, but then at the same time, I notice it works and more gets done. Those days when I don’t follow it consistently (I just recently started), I end the day frustrated and wonder why I allowed so much time to be wasted on warning after warning.

Categories : Teacher's Lounge
Comments (10)
Sep
28

Help

Posted by: Christopher | Comments (13)

I’ve already read through all the material. There’s a lot of interesting information in there.

One question though. At my school we don’t have a full time counsellor who we can send students out to. The role is performed by various classroom teachers who have their own lessons to teach.

The only places to really send a student are to another teacher’s class or to the office.

The office only has two chairs and also serves as an entry point for parents, so it is not really a place where several disruptive students can be sent to.

Also, at my school students are never sent of of class, no matter what they’re behaviour is like. The usual procedure is to give them a demerit (a penalty-point system that operates on a whole-school basis) and afterwards write up a referral to their Year Coordinator.

Is there a way to make the discipline system work with these constraints.

Categories : Teacher's Lounge
Comments (13)