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The First Days of School. How To Be An Be An Effective Teacher. The First Days Are Critical. What you do on the first days of school will determine your success or failure for the rest of the school year. You will either win or lose your class on the first days of school. An Effective Teacher.
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The First Days of School How To Be An Be An Effective Teacher
The First Days Are Critical What you do on the first days of school will determine your success or failure for the rest of the school year. You will either win or lose your class on the first days of school.
An Effective Teacher • Can explain the district’s, school’s and department or grade level’s curriculum • Realizes that teaching is not a private practice • Is flexible and adaptable • Listens, listens, listens Director CER Anjum Wasim Dar
3 Characteristics of an Effective Teacher: • positive expectations for student success. • is an extremely good classroom manager • knows how to design lessons for student mastery.
There is absolutely no research correlation between success and family background, race, national origin, financial status, or even educational accomplishments. There is but one correlation with success, and that is ATTITUDE. Positive Expectations
You do not get a second chance at a first impression. It is not what is but what is perceived. You dress for four main effects: Credibility Acceptance Authority Respect Dress for Sucess
Effective Teachers help students by: • Having an inviting personality and classroom environment.. • Addressing students by name. • Saying “Please” and “Thank you.”
Personally greet each student at the door. Students find assigned seat. (All seats should face the teacher.) Have a self starter activity available Introduce self and students. Begin teaching: Discipline Procedures Routines First Day of School
Classroom Management Classroom management refers to all of the things that a teacher does to organize students, space, time, and materials so that instruction in content and student learning can take place.
Discipline Plan • Rules: What the expected behaviors are. • Consequences: What the student chooses to accept if a rule is broken. • Rewards: What the student receives for appropriate behavior.
What about rules? • Rules should be limited to a number that you and the students can readily remember-never more than five. • Should be stated positively. • Should be concerned with behavior; not academic work (writing in ink or pen)
Rules vs. Procedures • Discipline: Concerns how students BEHAVE. • -HAS penalties and rewards • PROCEDURES: Concern how things are DONE. • -Has NO penalties or rewards.
Consequences Consequences are what result when a person abides by or breaks the rules. • Positive consequences are rewards that result when people abide by the rules. • Negative consequences are penalties that result when people break the rules
Teaching Prodcedures • Explain: demonstrate specifically and demonstrate, not just tell. • Rehearse: practice under your supervision • Reinforce: praise or reteach