Archive for May, 2008

Grab Bag Links 05/30/2008

  • ZAC (Zone for Autistic Children) is developed specifically for children with autism and autism-spectrum disorders. It allows the child to interact with and play the many games and activities, as well as experience independence using it. ZAC also offers a forum for teachers, parents, and caretakers to share resources.

    tags: technology, search, tbot

  • “Red Zebra assures parents of early readers that their little one’s search for, say, a unicorn image brings up only G-rated sites. Results are presented like a fan with images of each screen, so your child can scroll through and click on the site that offers the closest match.” [via Edutopia]

    tags: technology, search, tbot

Grab Bag Links 05/19/2008

  • dida-delivered

    “dida” stands for “Diploma in Digital Applications.” It also stands for awesome interactive training in a wide variety of programs and applications. From word processing and email basics to Video editing and vector graphics, these trainings won’t work perfectly for computer lab busy work, but they will introduce key concepts and procedures without a lot of the typical first-time frustration. [thanks Graham Macleod]

    tags: technology, tutorial, tbot

Grab Bag Links 05/15/2008

  • Welcome

    Mary Garcia runs the extended learning program out in Vail, AZ. I met her and her husband at the Tucson Apple Store just before her students arrived for a showcase of their digital work. Some of the projects are posted on her site. What a cool idea: reserve the Apple Store for two hours on a weekday, invite students and families to view student projects, and then play with awesome computers.

    tags: technology, tbot

Triple A Treatment

One of the most effective methods of classroom management is triple A treatment:

  • Acceptance
  • Approval
  • Affection

Students want to like you as a teacher, but even more, they want to know if you like them.

Acceptance happens as students recognize they belong in your class. Give them this sense by greeting each student at the door every morning and thanking each one at the end of the day, putting their work on the walls around the room, giving them jobs that help the class to run smoothly, and designing class rules and procedures together. A class meeting once a week does wonders for building acceptance in the teacher-to-student relationships and among students.

Approval is communicated first and foremost through your words.

“I’m glad to have you in my class.”
“You add such good ideas to our discussions.”
“Your assignments are always in on time.”
“You’re so good at making your classmates smile.”

Extending extra approval to the students early in the year will give them the sense that you really like them and you really enjoy being around them. Calling a student’s parents to tell them about a good test score or other achievement will go a long way with that student. Students on the teacher’s good side will bend over backwards to stay on that good side. Of course, it helps when you actually like your students. When a student misbehaves, focus on the sin, not the sinner. “You’re a good student, and you made a bad decision this time. I know you’ll do better next time.” Don’t withhold punishment, and don’t punish by withholding approval.

Affection seems difficult to express in school these days. Use strategic touches like a pat on the shoulder or a high five to incorporate affection into your interactions. I give my students the choice of a high five, hand shake, or fist pound every morning as I greet them at the door. Special connections during the year like birthday notes to individual students and stickers on good test scores let a student know that you notice him and care about him. Again, don’t punish by withholding affection. Affirm the student after she completes her consequence so that you end the interaction on a positive note.

Consider a student’s emotions like a gas tank. A student running on empty is a management crash waiting to happen. We have to fill up that tank with positive emotions and experiences, because students (and adults) often make decisions based on emotion. If their tanks are filled up on positive emotions, students will be more likely to make positive decisions, even in tough situations.

Grab Bag Links 05/01/2008