explore, dream, discover... A Canadian couple living and teaching in Trinidad. Follow us to keep up to date on our latest adventures!
Showing posts with label tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tips. Show all posts
Tuesday, 31 January 2017
Saturday, 21 January 2017
Christmas in Colombia - 19 Day Itinerary
This blog post has moved to https://pastthepotholes.com/best-places-to-see-colombia/. It's now bigger and better so come check us out!
Tuesday, 20 September 2016
Substitute Teaching - What The Classroom Teacher Needs to Know - FREEBIE!
After being a classroom teacher for 14 years, I have just finished my first three days of supply teaching. It is totally different from the other side!
As a classroom teacher, following these suggestions will really help out your supply and make things run a little smoother in your absence.
Entry Routines
Having some sort of bellwork or independent routine that students know to begin immediately after each break is a huge help. I began my first supply day having to wait for five or so minutes while students got settled and announcements finished before I was able to introduce myself and give them instructions. My third day, they knew to enter and immediately begin silent reading - a huge difference! In my class, my students would enter in the morning and complete a simple Language Arts bellwork. After break, they would enter and complete a math 'number of the day' activity.
Click here to buy my Language Arts Bellwork pack for the whole year.
Having some sort of bellwork or independent routine that students know to begin immediately after each break is a huge help. I began my first supply day having to wait for five or so minutes while students got settled and announcements finished before I was able to introduce myself and give them instructions. My third day, they knew to enter and immediately begin silent reading - a huge difference! In my class, my students would enter in the morning and complete a simple Language Arts bellwork. After break, they would enter and complete a math 'number of the day' activity.
Click here to buy my Language Arts Bellwork pack for the whole year.
Seating Plan
My first day students entered and began sitting in what was very clearly their choice of seats. I made it clear that I didn't mind where they sat as long as they were working and listening, and if not I would move them. However, knowing whether or not they have assigned seating is very helpful to know if the class is 'pulling one over on you'. And the students know that you can't be tricked that easily! This way you can make the choice to maintain the seating plan or let them move. In my second class, there was a binder with seating plans and the students were surprised (and dismayed) to discover I knew where they were supposed to sit.
Student Information
This is important for a variety of reasons. The classroom teacher should be providing any special needs or accommodation information for safety reasons. In addition, a note about students who would be great helpers, those that need redirection, any with challenging behaviour etc... is useful information. When the supply is unsure of something, they want to get an answer they can trust. When a child challenges them, it is helpful to know if it is a common issue or out of character. If the sub knows a particular student struggles with self-regulation, they will hopefully react accordingly.
My first day students entered and began sitting in what was very clearly their choice of seats. I made it clear that I didn't mind where they sat as long as they were working and listening, and if not I would move them. However, knowing whether or not they have assigned seating is very helpful to know if the class is 'pulling one over on you'. And the students know that you can't be tricked that easily! This way you can make the choice to maintain the seating plan or let them move. In my second class, there was a binder with seating plans and the students were surprised (and dismayed) to discover I knew where they were supposed to sit.
Student Information
This is important for a variety of reasons. The classroom teacher should be providing any special needs or accommodation information for safety reasons. In addition, a note about students who would be great helpers, those that need redirection, any with challenging behaviour etc... is useful information. When the supply is unsure of something, they want to get an answer they can trust. When a child challenges them, it is helpful to know if it is a common issue or out of character. If the sub knows a particular student struggles with self-regulation, they will hopefully react accordingly.
Finishing Work
Most teachers are great about ensuring there is something to do when classwork is done. However, something that could be missing is what individual students should do while waiting for the others to catch up. My supply notes included information on what the class should move onto if we completed all the assigned tasks. What was missing was that the tasks included worksheets and textbook questions which students, of course, completed at different rates. We of course had to wait for all to finish before we could take up answers or move onto a group component. Knowing that they had books to read, or a test to study for, even an ongoing art project would be really helpful!
School Information
Emergency procedures should absolutely be included in your dayplans with careful instructions as to the protocol and where your class should go. These change from school to school and class to class, as well as throughout the day. Consider how these procedures will change if something occurs at lunch time or during gym or library classes.
Beyond that, as a supply teacher in a new school, my dayplan included information such as where to find the washrooms, when would be a good time to order cafeteria lunch and where exactly to go on lunch duty and who could help me. I may not have thought to include a lot of that information in my own dayplans before but it really was helpful and I most definitely appreciated the thoughtfulness.
Add Some Fun!
I have most definitely been guilty of this time and again! You know you are going to be away, you don't know who will be your substitute, it's too difficult to try to explain complicated activities, you think you are being kind... Your dayplan is filled with quick and easy review activities, worksheets, independent book work. I discovered very quickly my first day of supply teaching that such dayplans make the day very looong, and boring. It also doesn't really help classroom management when the students don't want to do anything you are asking them to do! I'm not saying plan elaborate, movement-filled activities - all the above reasons for not doing so still hold true - but perhaps schedule in a lighter task or even some time for a game. I'm sure your students will enjoy their substitute teacher much more if they see them doing something other than handing out another worksheet.
Most teachers are great about ensuring there is something to do when classwork is done. However, something that could be missing is what individual students should do while waiting for the others to catch up. My supply notes included information on what the class should move onto if we completed all the assigned tasks. What was missing was that the tasks included worksheets and textbook questions which students, of course, completed at different rates. We of course had to wait for all to finish before we could take up answers or move onto a group component. Knowing that they had books to read, or a test to study for, even an ongoing art project would be really helpful!
School Information
Emergency procedures should absolutely be included in your dayplans with careful instructions as to the protocol and where your class should go. These change from school to school and class to class, as well as throughout the day. Consider how these procedures will change if something occurs at lunch time or during gym or library classes.
Beyond that, as a supply teacher in a new school, my dayplan included information such as where to find the washrooms, when would be a good time to order cafeteria lunch and where exactly to go on lunch duty and who could help me. I may not have thought to include a lot of that information in my own dayplans before but it really was helpful and I most definitely appreciated the thoughtfulness.
Add Some Fun!
I have most definitely been guilty of this time and again! You know you are going to be away, you don't know who will be your substitute, it's too difficult to try to explain complicated activities, you think you are being kind... Your dayplan is filled with quick and easy review activities, worksheets, independent book work. I discovered very quickly my first day of supply teaching that such dayplans make the day very looong, and boring. It also doesn't really help classroom management when the students don't want to do anything you are asking them to do! I'm not saying plan elaborate, movement-filled activities - all the above reasons for not doing so still hold true - but perhaps schedule in a lighter task or even some time for a game. I'm sure your students will enjoy their substitute teacher much more if they see them doing something other than handing out another worksheet.
FREEBIE!
Here is an editable version of my supply binder. This file will give you an outline to include all the items talked about in this post. You will need to make a copy of the file into your own folder and then edit away to make it match your school and class information! Print it and put in a binder to keep available for any last minute absences.
What do you to as a classroom teacher to help your sub have a successful day? What do you supply teachers out there find really helpful or wish was provided?
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Wednesday, 31 August 2016
Back to School - Top 10 Tips for Getting Your Class (and you) Prepared!
This year is a little different for me, I'm actually on leave from my classroom in Canada and will be supply teaching here in Trinidad. So I can't really prepare much... However, after 14 years of prepping a class, I have a few tips and tricks!
1. Begin by thinking about the 'big picture'.
- What general class environment would you like? What spaces are important to you - a carpet or meeting area? an art space? a quiet reading space? small group conference area?
- What hardware and furniture will you need to consider? Do you have a projector or Smartboard? Tables or desks?
2. Now design your physical space. Furniture can be moved throughout the year, one of my favourite things to do, but being happy with an attractive, functional layout will go a long way to creating your students' first impression of how the year is going to go. It also helps me put the other pieces into place a little easier after.
If it's not your first year in a room then this is a little easier but still, think about what areas of your room worked for you last year, which areas were a source of frustration? Or maybe you just want to shake things up a bit and try something new.
3. Decorate the room - but not too much! I want my room to look inviting but I don't want it looking finished: that's for the kids. Have bulletin boards ready for work - background colour, title, border, whatever you choose to do to your bulletin boards EXCEPT actually filling them with premade posters. Leave them blank for a first day name art project, collaborative posters on rules and expectations, student goals,...
4. Plan only the first two days in detail. These are filled with everything but curriculum - getting to know each other activities, lots of routines, rules (although I like to save these for a couple of days), and usually some administrative tasks - names missing from attendance, last minute registrations,... It never goes smoothly no matter how well you planned. My first couple of days I tend to work from a list rather than a timetable as I never know how long something will take or when we will be interrupted. I find my two day plan easily takes up the better part of the first week, so anything else was just a waste of my time!
5. Make sure there is an independent task with CLEAR instructions for students as soon as they enter the class the first morning. Not only does this set the tone that as soon as they enter the expectation is to begin work, it also gives you a chance to deal with the inevitable confusions and problems that crop up that first morning.
5. Make sure there is an independent task with CLEAR instructions for students as soon as they enter the class the first morning. Not only does this set the tone that as soon as they enter the expectation is to begin work, it also gives you a chance to deal with the inevitable confusions and problems that crop up that first morning.
6. Have plenty of time filler games and activities ready to go! Make sure all photocopies you need for the first two days are done, it's easy to say you'll do all the photocopies later and then realize belatedly that you forgot!
7. Loosely plan the first two weeks. I make a general outline on a chart for language, math and beginning of the year 'stuff'. Then, I work out how I would like it to fit in my timetable. This helps me make sure I don't let the kids get too bored on one subject.
Click here for a FREE example of mine from FDK last year!
Click here for a FREE example of mine from grade 6!
Click here for a FREE example of mine from FDK last year!
Click here for a FREE example of mine from grade 6!
8. Keep work a little below grade level to begin with. Curriculum isn't supposed to start right away anyway in case of class changes and we want our students to start the year of positively and feeling success in their new class. Make work about collaboration with new peers, following new (and old) rules and routines and learning skills instead.
9. Break them (and you) in gently. Summer is long and no one has had to sit and listen for a while. End the day with a big chunk of free time, or play an outdoor game together. You can decrease how early you stop working each day.
9. Break them (and you) in gently. Summer is long and no one has had to sit and listen for a while. End the day with a big chunk of free time, or play an outdoor game together. You can decrease how early you stop working each day.
10. Build movement into activities. This will not only help to transition from summer, it will help the kids mix in different groups than they are perhaps used to and start the year off in a fun way. One of my first activities each year requires them to get up and moving: I might do a class BINGO or a scavenger hunt - it doesn't matter, as long as they are up and about and learning something about the class, you or each other.
FREEBIES!!
Click here for a BINGO game
Click here for a SCAVENGER HUNT
11. (OK, I lied about 10 tips) Don't overplan - leave time in your planning to get to know your new group. Chat with them, learn what they like and dislike, hear about their summer, tell them about yours. Building a good rapport will be the most important thing you do for your classroom management all year!
How do you prepare for a new year? Do you have any other tips? Or maybe you do things differently. I'd love to hear your ideas!
How do you prepare for a new year? Do you have any other tips? Or maybe you do things differently. I'd love to hear your ideas!
Like this post? Pin it!
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