EDU 6945: Instruction
(2)
Throughout
my internship, I have been researching and implementing various strategies for establishing
an effective classroom structure. As the teacher of record for my classroom, I
have great need in finding strategies that not only worked, but that made my
initial year of teaching less stressful.
Classroom
organization was the first place I needed useful strategies. Having four
periods of Language Arts, a period of Advisory, and a period of Introduction to
Art created a need for specifically designated places for student’s daily
materials, completed work, no-name work, absent work, etc. Pinterest was a
first resource filled with many quick ideas. Coworkers were also sources for
ideas. The first strategy I implemented was a completed work turn-in system.
This came from a coworker by recommendation of my son who had had her the
previous year. It is a simply labeled system of drawers by class period or subject.
Having been in classrooms where teachers use baskets, I like this idea more. It
provided a secure system in which papers could not be easily knocked out and
possibly lost.
The next
borrowed strategy came later in the year through a discussion with yet another
coworker. I was expressing my frustration with students not having pencils. I
had tried a previously read about strategy called pencil upgrades in which the
teacher upgrades a worn-down pencil of a student with a new pencil, and the student
without a pencil gets the old pencil. While this was not a bad system, it did
interrupt the class learning to implement. My coworker shared her system of
providing a cup with student labeled pencils for frequent no pencil students.
Students collected their pencil upon entering the classroom and returned it at
the end of the period. It was a quick, easy, effective system that did not
interrupt the class, and students could collect their pencil when collecting
their class folder.
Perhaps the
best strategy I received was a piece of advice. A veteran teacher shared the
fact that not all work needs to be graded. A teacher can save their time and
sanity by being selective in what they grade. Many activities are best used as
practice and should not be subject to grading or if graded, grade for
participation. This was a powerful idea for a new teacher. Knowing that it was
okay to not grade everything my students did. This advice was further added to
by my ELA coach who related a good practice is to grade for specific areas the
class is working on. For example, if you are working on writing maybe you only
grade on word choice and organization because those are the areas the class is
working on. These are key strategies for
teachers as time management is often an obstacle.
Overall, I
know that finding strategies and systems that work for my classroom will be an
evolving process, but creating a learning environment in which the classroom
runs effectively will go a long way to reducing the stress of being a new teacher.
