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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.

Engrade

Engrade is an excellent Learning Management system and it is free. https://www.engrade.com/ It can help with alot of aspects in the classroom for the instructor, administrator and student.

Guide and Controller

I find that the guide and controller are the best styles, especially in combination.  Throwing in a little buddy in there doesn't hurt either.  The guide helps with being able to guide students that are struggling with class and the controller helps with reigning in class that wants to get out of hand.  I play the guide most of the time and that seems to help me keep the students interested and engaged.

Stress Relief Methods

I am teaching a Career Success Class, which teaches good stress relieving techniques to our students. I had my students create videos using their IPads on good and bad stress relieving techniques. One of their recurring ideas for a good stress relieving technique was spending time with their pets. If you own an animal, quality time with a pet is a great stress relieving technique.

Discussion

What do you think abot apathete

Class room management

Which classification would you consider yourself?

Discipline

How do you maintain discipkine in the classroom

Students

Did anyone else find this informative

How to deal with stress

Stress in the work place is usually not from work it is your everyday schedule and bills and friends and families that actually cause the most stress in your life. if you could figure out a way to make these stressful items alot smaller your life would be a lot smoother and you can relax more and enjoy the time you have with your friends and family. for instantance the bills they will always be there you just have to learn how to manage your money. if you sat down and wrote out a list of the on going bills in your life and then counted every day that you spent one single dime and if you really needed that. eventually you will  find that you actually have more money in your account than you actually  have had in the past and if you paid some of those useless bills off. slowly your stress will be less due to now you have an account that is in the positive instead of the negative balance. just a little amount of money in your account actually relieves you of so much stress due to money in our lives stress us out. good luck it worked for me.

how do I save my progress

A controller

Funny how I never anylized how I do things in this manner, I can not wait to become a Guide.  

Syllabus?

I'm a current professional in an automotive technical career school and looking for some advise on how to create a more engaging syllabus without make it cartoonish.

Managing stress

How to manage stress at work? if anyone have ideas to share.

dhg

Input from inattentive students

After about the 2nd or third day of class, I ask my students what is working for them and what is not. By this time, they should have a good idea of how the class is run, taught and managed.  So when students respond, I typically get one of two responses - 1) everything is great  or 2)  I cannot learn the way you are teaching me.  When I ask for what would halp them, they do not or cannot give specifc examples of what wwould help them.  Any ideas on how to approach this?

Hustle & Flow: Classroom Style

My philosophy of creating a good learning environment is use ten guiding rules, which are:

1. Address students by name. Our names are our identity and we should use them as much as possible. Learn your students’ names, and the correct pronunciation immediately!

2. Use “please” and “thank you”. We take these words for granted but we need to keep in mind how important giving respect is in order to earn respect. Put these words to daily use on tests, homework, worksheets, presentations, etc. Saying “thank you” for an answer shows you hear them and appreciate them, even if the answer is wrong.

3. Listen. Students crave our attention and focus. We should be extremely careful that in listening we are NOT physically turning away, sighing, frowning, rolling our eyes, talking to someone else, or looking away. We show people they matter by our body language, whether we mean it or not. Body language can create a division in the classroom.

4. Don’t allow bullying/teasing/put downs. Students need to know that they are entering a safe environment. They need to be comfortable and know they fit in before they can learn and take risks in their learning. This needs to be implemented from the very beginning. No bullying from students or from teachers! We are responsible for what we allow in the classroom. For every put down, require two put ups (that person now has to say two nice things.) The put ups don’t mean anything; what matters is your consistency in protecting life and creating a level playing field for everyone.

5. Make Eye Contact. Making quick eye contact is important in creating a culture of trust. Students matter. They aren’t lifeless objects just sitting in our room (although they may look like it) and we should we treat them as the valuable people they are. Recognize them.

6. Accept more than one answer. Instead of students reading their own mind, we want them to read ours. Don’t set kids up for failure by only asking for one right answer. Don’t damage the students in the process of learning. When kids get all the wrong answers, they start to think something is wrong with them. Ask open-ended questions to encourage divergent thinking. Ask “What do you think?” instead of “Why?”. Say “That’s not exactly what I’m looking for” instead of “Wrong answer.”

7. Allow for anonymous positive feedback. Pass out blank papers with each student’s name at the top. Every student has to write a honest, positive comment about every other student. Read and discuss. Have students sign their name next to the comment to check for participation and being positive.

8. Do a lineup. Ask the students to line themselves up in order from who contributes/participates the most to the class to who contributes the least. This can be controversial as students try to explain their behavior. Once in order, give each student a chance to pick another student who should get to move up in the order.

9. Use a variety of inquiry methods. Students need at least 6-8 seconds wait time after a question is asked. While you are anticipating their answer, they are processing the question, thinking about what they already know or have experienced, and deciding the best way to answer your question out loud. That takes time.

Give students silent time to reflect, ask them to discuss with a neighbor, write down a few words, etc. This gives students long enough to think of answer or learn what their partner is saying. Now everyone has an answer and is prepared if you call on them.

And probably the most important classroom management technique ever is….

10. Greet students at the door. This creates a welcoming environment from the very beginning. For a better explanation, read Dan Meyer’s view on this technique.

Aggressive students?

I had a situation in wich a student and a lab tech entered in a heated discussion and threatened each other. I had to intervene. I went to the tech first and reminded him that we are in the Mature side that i appreciate his help but that i will handle the student complain personally. So i did. He had been frustrated because the tech will not do something for him. But he was also confused and unprepared for a test the tech was performing.It escalated from there. Any ideas on how to deal with agressive students?

Styles of Classroom Management

It does seem that there are more than thse four styles or combination of thse four styles.  And it also seems that a teacher who leans towards a certain style (buddy - for example) might be very effective in certain types of classrooms (more hands-on, etc.) and the controller more effective in certain classrooms, etc.  

Taking Control of Your Time

By taking this course, it showed me that you can overcome any obstacle by not putting it off for another time. By using good time management will allow us free time in the future, which will allow us to to do what we want to do later. Having free time on how hands will reduce stress.  

Managing the Class & Students

What are some of the better methods of handling cellphones in class other than ban them? You mention about walking around by the person and maybe by your present they will quit. You did not go into detail enough.

How do you convince the student that their action may rely on their g

Cheating is more than the act, it is the character.