Showing posts with label Teaching Tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teaching Tips. Show all posts

Saturday, August 1, 2015

Check out this Back to School Round-Up of the TpT Sale, Linky Parties, and Newsletters

August has arrived! That means Back to School bells will soon be tolling for you. Teachers, to ease your classroom return, the next few weeks will be filled with an abundance of personal teaching tips, lesson ideas and suggestions for you to organize your classrooms

Back to School Blog Linky parties, newsletter posts and a secondary teacher collaborative  e-book offer many go-to opportunities for your to enjoy, and which will ease the time you spend planning for the 2015-2016 school year.


TEACHERS pay TEACHERS SALE
Your wallets will love Teachers Pay Teachers Love Back to School  Sale on Monday August 3rd-Tuesday August 4th.  Be sure to use 
CODE BTS15 when you check out.


Up in the morning & Off to School-

Top Secondary Teachers TpT Sale Link-Up

TpT Sale Top Secondary Teachers August 2015

We love back to school time here in secondary! Join us to celebrate with the TpT Sale, August 3rd - 4th and get those lessons you need for up to 28% off! Check out the top secondary teachers below for some great deals on top lessons!

A Space to Create


The Classroom Sparrow

Room 213


Darlene Anne’s ELA Buffet


Danielle Knight (Study All Knight)


Michele Luck's Social Studies


Teaching FSL


Juggling ELA


Making It Teacher


James Whitaker's SophistThoughts


Created by MrHughes


Leah Cleary


Addie Williams


MissMathDork


The Creative Classroom


Mrs. Brosseau's Binder

Pamela Kranz


Getting Nerdy with Mel and Gerdy


ELA Everyday


The Creative Classroom


Kesler Science


Live Love Math


To the Square Inch- Kate Bing Coners


The Classroom Sparrow


Liz's Lessons

For the Love of Teaching Math

ELA Everyday


Chopsticks to Mason Jars

Connie

Charlene Tess
and
Amy Brown 
https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Science-Stuff



My  TpT Sale Poster
In my store, all of my paid items are discounted 20%. That incentive, plus the TpT discount,gives you a total of 28% off!
https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Connie

Teachers pay Teachers Back To School 2015 Sale

Also, you will treat yourself to the gift of less planning time with all of your new lessons and activities.


LINKY PARTIES  

Be sure to check out the following:

The First Day Tried and True Linky Party goes LIVE on AUGUST 2nd at 8:00 A.M. Easter Daylight Time. In it, 47 elementary and secondary teacher/bloggers share classroom teaching tips and First Day Activities that hook students into reading, thinking and writing. I'll post my blog link here tomorrow, after the Linky Party begins.

First Day Tried and True Linky Party

organized by
Chrissie Rissmiller http://undercoverclassroom.blogspot.com/  
Undercover Classroom
and
Sarah Tighe http://educationelectrification.blogspot.com/

Education Electrification

NEWSLETTERS
Weekly, Marjan Glavic publishes his awesome newsletter, The Busy Educator.  It is chock full of articles for teachers on all levels to read, and terrific teaching tips, lessons and activities from a variety of sources, including many teachers.

Here is the link to his newsletter http://news.thebusyeducator.com/. All you have to do to subscribe is type in your email address in the space provide.


The Busy Educator

Also, on August 2nd,  check out  the August Edition of this awesome newsletter http://us9.campaign-archive2.com/?u=d5224951c615ea59a4a31abb8&id=b6d3362c41&e=5cf4aeef71

C.L.A.S.S. Resources for Teachers  http://classresourcesforteachers.blogspot.com/.

As their header explains, this is a "Collaborative Language Arts and Social Studies resources for Secondary Teachers. Articles providing creative teaching ideas for ELA and Social Studies secondary classrooms. To subscribe, go to http://eepurl.com/ba-6I5

This newsletter was founded and is published by two teachers
History Editor~ Andrea Annas and, ELA Editor~ Dr. Heather Barkley.  
They accept submissions from any secondary social studies and ELA teachers.

Check out their TpT Stores:
History Gal                                              ELA Resources from Dr Barkley

Keep coming back- I'll be adding to this post as other opportunities to ease your Back to School entry arise.  with this opportunities, you can rest assured that for the 2015-2016 school year, you will be sure to...

Enjoy a Teach It Now Day, Every Day.



Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Six teaching tips that remove chaos from the classroom


Dear Classroom Colleagues, 

Although I originally wrote this post in August 2014, I find these teaching tips never go out of style. These slightly revised Six Teaching Tips will always offer teachers a workday life that is more calm than chaotic.  Personally, they head my Classroom Management repertoire because they stop off-task and behavioral brushfires from turning into forest fires.

Teaching Tip #1
Stop the Chattering

When a few students are disrupting the lesson with repeated chatting, giggling and other verbal interruptions simply stop talking.  Stand or sit quietly and just stare at the class with blank look.  In a few seconds you’ll hear a few students go, “Shh,” while others nudge each other. Within a minute, the class will be quiet.  Do not address the talking issue at all; just continue from the point where you stopped.  Before long the students will catch on to this method, and will quiet down more quickly.

Teaching Tip #2
Guess Who’s Tardy?

Tardy List Notebook
Place a small table by the door with spiral note book. Tie a string around a pen and attach it to the spirals. On the top of the page, write the Day of the Week and the Date. Below that write, “If I have to remind you to sign in when you are tardy, you will stay after the period dismissal bell for 30-seconds.”
Next, make two columns.  The left one should be titled: NAME, and the right one should be: TIME.  On the first day of school, explain to the students that if they are tardy, they must sign in with their name and the time that they came to class BEFORE they sit down. You will have to remind them a few times until this becomes a habit for them. If a student tries to slip past the table without signing in  just say, “Sign in,” and continue with your teaching.  Remember to keep this student after class since you had to interrupt the lesson to remind him/her to sign in.  This gives you a list, in the students’ handwriting, to keep in your Attendance Folder. It comes in handy in parent/student/administrator/teacher conferences.

Teaching Tip #3
Organize With Colored Files

Multi-colored File Folders
This idea saved my sanity and insured that I took home the right folders every time that I had papers to grade. 

  1. Choose two file folders for each period, both the same color. Each period should be a different color. Example: Period 1-Red, Period 2- Green, etc.
  2. Label both folders of the same color with the Period Number and Course Name. Example Period 1/English 12; Period 2/ Journalism 
  3. Working with the two folders of the same color, designate one as WORK DUE; label the other GRADED WORK.
  4. Choose a place close to your desk to line up the WORK DUE folders. 
  5. You want these near to your desk so you can keep an eye on them. If you have a plastic file tray for each folder, this really helps keep the work organized. 
  6. Place ONE folder in each tray. Explain to the students, that the day work is due, each one of them must place his/her work in the proper class folder. Clarify that they are never to hand in their work to you.
  7.  On your desk, place a vertical plastic file organizer with the same number of spaces as you have classes. Place a GRADED WORK folder in each slot.
  8. When you have work to grade for a class, pick up the folder for that period and grade the assignments, tests, etc.
  9. After you have graded the papers, place them into the coordinating colored folder labeled GRADED WORK on your desk, and place the empty WORK DUE folder back in its tray.
  10. This colored folder system makes it easy for you to grab the correct WORK DUE folder quickly.  When it is time to hand back the graded papers, you will have the folder in plain sight on your desk. If someone was absent the day you passed back the work, you will know right where to find this person’s papers.
  11. This method saves you time, and guarantees that the correct papers are in the proper class folder.
  12. Another plus- this method puts the responsibility for turning in assignments on the students-where it should be.

Teaching Tip #4
Students are Responsible for their DUE WORK

Teaching Tip #4 corresponds with Teaching Tip #3. A good way to save the stress of students blaming you for losing their assignments is to never, ever let them hand the completed work to you. The first day of school, show the students the colored WORK DUE folder for their class period. Explain that the day an assignment is due, they are to place their papers in this folder.
1. If a student comes up to you at some point in the class and says, “Here’s my work,” as they shove the paper in your direction, respond by asking, “Where are you to put it?”.
If a student waves the work in your face and asks, “Where do I put this?” don’t say a word, but just point to the correct folder.

When an occasional student repeatedly asked me this, he or she was usually greeted with my raised right eyebrow silent, and “REALLY?” stare. More often than not, this solved the problem.

Although this method took an assignment or two before every student caught on to the system, before long, they all followed it without hesitation.  No one wished to be the recipient of the raised eyebrow frown.
2. Make it very clear that they should NEVER try to hand the work to you.

If a student comes up to you at some point in the class and says, “Here’s my work,” as they shove the paper in your direction, respond by asking, “Where are you to put it?”.
If a student waves the work in your face and asks, “Where do I put this?” don’t say a word, but just point to the correct folder.

When an occasional student repeatedly asked me this, he or she was usually greeted with my raised right eyebrow silent, and “REALLY?” stare. More often than not, this solved the problem.

Although this method took an assignment or two before every student caught on to the system, before long, they all followed it without hesitation.  No one wished to be the recipient of the raised eyebrow frown.

Teaching Tip #5
Remembering to Laugh

For this tip, I’m paraphrasing Randle McMurphy from One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, when he expressed this thought, “Lose you laugh and lose your footing.” On any given day in this wonderful field of education, anything from the sublime to the ridiculous can, and probably will happen. Also, matters best described as nonsensical, unreasonable, and/or preposterous are guaranteed to erupt on the days you feel the least able to deal with them.

This…this is when you truly need to remember McMurphy’s words. Stop, take a deep breath-or two-or three-, turn your back to the class, or walk in the hall if you can, silently primal scream, and then throw back your head, lift your shoulders and remind yourself that someday you will laugh about this incident, and then force yourself to  smile.  Believe me, this works.

Teaching Tip #6
Be Prepared

The House of Comprehension "Unit Structure Chart"
Plan lessons, activities and projects for the whole first month BEFORE the First Day. Being prepared to teach allows you to expend your time and energy on Back To School administrative duties, planning for Parent Night and-most importantly-on getting to know your students’ academic needs, personalities and viewpoints. When students feel that they come first, they are more willing to be engaged in becoming life-long learners. 
Get this and other planning forms:https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/EBook-The-House-of-Comprehension-1557114

We teachers expend so much of our time and energy on our students’ needs-where it should be- and on our professional duties and responsibilities-where it is often required, that little is left for us- and we need it the most if we are going to be the best we can be. I hope that these Six Teaching Tips will work for you.

Thank you colleagues still leading classrooms for creating your magic by so willingly sharing your knowledge, abilities and skills with your students and peers.  Kudos to you all for creating joyful, inspiring and safe classrooms for each and every one of your charges, especially for those who might not experience such pleasures in their worlds.

Have a fantastic school year.
Enjoy a Teach It Now Day Every Day.