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Ask a question from your peers to help you in your professional work. Seek different points of view on a topic that interests you. Start a thought-provoking conversation about a hot, current topic. Encourage your peers to join you in the discussion, and feel free to facilitate the discussion. As a community of educators, all members of the Career Ed Lounge are empowered to act as a discussion facilitator to help us all learn from each other.

Don't over-react but be sure to react

The topic that resonated most with me was: "Don't over-react to minor disruptions, but be sure to react." I have learned this with experience in the classroom that there are many situations where students will test the limits sometimes even unknowingly which is why it is so important to have an appropriate measured response to the disruption. I have found that having a disruptive student "table" their discussion for another time, usually makes them acknowledge their disruption (chatting with another student or talking out of term). I will definitely implement the "I" not "you" approach to recognizing the behavior and correcting it. That too makes it less confrontation and as stated before some students do not recognize their behavior as truly disruptive, and it will be appreciated over being singled out negatively.

Not engage but active.

I have teach students that do not engage in the class and look distracted but do very well in test and are excellent and on time in the homework and projects. So I approach them individually to let them know that his contribution and engagement would be of benefit to the rest of the class because they have so much to give.

Adult Education

What is hard to understand is how this students do not comply or try to shortcut what is require from them since they pay or borrow the money to get an education? I always tell them that if it was me I would take as much advantage as I can to make my investment work in my future.

Four Step Model for Successful Classroom Management

In my opinion, the four steps mentioned in this model are maintained and gradually play a vital role in the classroom. These goals are growing steps in any instructors career. I have been in education for 12 years and these are all qualities that have grown and been instilled in me over my experience in the classroom. Does anyone else feel these qualities are attributes that help you grow in education and in the classroom?

managing students

give them an assignment to present to the class as part of the class

Managing Student Dilemmas

If I have two students that are having personal issues that do not actually pertain to school but rather to their personal issues, how do I handle this without letting it affect my relationship with either of them?

The student with their hand always raised

Sometimes these students ask very good questions making you realize you could present the material more clearly. This can also be a good opportunity. Make it a class effort. Ask the class how they could achieve a solution and coax the answer from them. Develop the problem solving and reasoning skills they need. A discouraged student may be inspired by this. It can boost morale and increase participation. It may also decrease the amount of times the chatty student raises their hand.

Class management

I believe Classroom Management is the key component in any educational setting. I believe that if students are in a safe environment, then learning can take place. This doesn’t necessarily mean punishing behavior problems but rather a combination of setting the tone in a class, preventing behavior problems with interesting and engaging curriculums and effectively including all students in the classroom so that their needs are met. Having the right environment for all students to learn is my major goal of implementing good classroom management. Without it the students would not be able to learn.

Organization

Always come prepaired

Stress within

Dont make it over whelming while teaching

Real World

I try to have many real world examples for my students. I tell many of my own professional career stories to help them.

Getting the quiet ones to participate

I find there is always at least 1 quiet student in a class. I teach programming which is a very hands-on skill. It is important to figure out how to help these students. Are they bored because they are already familiar with the material? Are they lost? Are they embarrassed to ask questions? Do they feel helpless or too far behind to recover? This is where the old-time psychology of the master-apprentice come in handy. Work with them side-by-side to show them how it is done. Give them an orderly process to accomplish a task and succeed. I find the "Like this, see!" method works well. This tends to make them a lot more comfortable, draw them out of their shell and begin to build confidence. They can see the complexity level is much less than their anxiety led them to believe. Does anyone have some other tips?

Stress

Stress is the number one factor that needs to be managed and overcome

classroom morale

I taught a class last month and realized that half of the class were getting C's and the other half,B's. Quite a few students approached me and asked why this is so. I made a huge mistake my telling them that the materials covered in this class are abstract and no one usually gets an A. It didn't took me long to realize that my remarks had a negative effect on their morale.

cheating

I have never caught any of my students cheating in an exams. However, school policy dictates that the students automatically gets an F and will have to repeat the course.

Problematic students

I know there isn't a shortage of challenging students in any given class. It can range from being disruptive in class to being a complainer regarding the grades they received for every test.I usually address these issues in the end to avoid taking much needed time away from the class.

Assignments

Majority of my students have a life outside of school-kids, work and in one case; a caregiver. I usually stress the importance of students being able to meet deadlines regarding assignments to better prepare them for the real world. However, I fully understand that situations may occur that may prevent a student from being able to turn in their assignments on time. I am flexible and will deal with every student on a case by case basis.

Preparation is huge

I have been educating for awile now, in many different environments. I have found myself overpreparing before class to calm my nerves and to get instant buy in from the students. I have found that this is of utmost value, even if you do not have mastery of the content you are teaching. It not only establishes credibility, but it gives momentum for the class, making it easier to flow through the rest of the class and build as you go. It is harder to catch up than it is to keep momentum going.

Cheating Students

I have found that in addition to the opportunity to cheat, when students are unprepared and are not getting the material, find creative ways to do this. Not only are we enabling them if we allow them to cheat, we are taking away thier ability to learn in both the class room and in life.

Keeping the disengaged engaged

Keeping the disengaged engaged is a key topic to understand in the classroom. Some key strategies that I implement is by breaking my content up into sections and then getting the students to engage between each segment. In addition, I do alot of pacing in the class and am always finding creative ways to illustrate topics to the field the students are going into.