“The First Days Are
Critical.” This is a chapter subtitle from Harry K. Wong and Rosemary T. Wong’s
famous The First Days of School
(2005), a book that every new teacher was handed in the first district I ever
taught in. While in retrospect I calmly agree with this advice, when I first
saw it in print as a brand new teacher, I was horrified. Horrified because I
didn’t read that particular chapter until the second week of school, and I thought for sure all hope was lost.
I said that in retrospect
I agree with the advice, and I do. However, I also think we need to pay
attention to the book’s title, The First
Days of School, emphasis on days. Plural. Now, as I type this it is
officially the fourth day of school in the district where I’m an instructional
coach. So, my advice is – don’t despair. Don’t despair if you haven’t set up
all your expectations, procedures, and routines just yet. Believe it or not, we
are still within the first days of
school. Now is the time to dive in to some critical work that will help shape
up how your classroom runs for the entire school year.
(Note: Sometimes we don’t
get off to a wonderful start with our procedures, routines, and expectations.
I’m here to tell you that, although it is honestly much easier to begin such work at the very beginning of the school
year, you can establish such things
at any time during the school year.
But that’s a story for another blog post.)
So, what types of things
should we be focused on establishing during these first, critical days of school?
Procedures &
Routines
Now is the time to
establish with your students how they will pass in homework, where they will
sit – or stand – during certain portions of class or of the school day, how
transitions during a lesson or between lessons will function, how they should
interact with one another and with you, how they should participate in class….
But my biggest piece of
advice is not what your procedures
and routines are, but how you teach
them to your students. Yes, I think you need to teach these to your class, not just tell your class about them.
This means you need to discuss the purpose of routines and procedures with your
students, model behaviors for them, practice (and practice, and practice, and
practice) using a gradual release of responsibility structure. All too often,
we tell our students what the routines and procedures are, and then briskly
move on to the content we’ll be teaching, expecting that they all understand
the routines and procedures and can follow them perfectly. We wouldn’t expect
this kind of super-quick mastery of content knowledge, so why do we expect it
in other areas such as this?
Discipline
I’m going to let you in on
a secret: if you establish really strong procedures and routines, you’ll deal
far less with discipline issues. The same goes for having strong, detailed
lesson planning: if you’ve thought out your lesson, ensuring that, within it,
students have opportunities to actively engage with the material and if you’ve
anticipated any potential bumps along the road, you’ll again deal far less with
discipline issues.
But even in the most ideal
of classrooms, every now and then a discipline issue may crop up. If it does,
it will behoove you to discover ways to deal with consequences without stopping the instruction and
learning that’s occurring in the classroom. Often when dealing with a
discipline issue with one student, a teacher can lose focus on the lesson, and
can find him- or herself losing precious time engaging with this one
misbehaving student. Finding ways to avoid this trap are key. Are there
non-verbal cues or signs you can give to this student? Can you use teacher
tools like proximity to send a message without stopping your instruction?
Consistency is Key
With procedures and
routines, and with discipline when it pops up, we must be consistent. Sometimes
this is easier said than done. Sometimes being consistent requires a lot of
effort and attention to detail on our parts, and some days it just feels easier
or more manageable to slide away from the systems we’ve created. Avoid this
temptation! Our students need to experience consistent procedures and routines,
or they will very quickly get the message that these structures are not really
all that important and they’ll begin to stop adhering to them. Which will most
likely bring up some discipline issues, or at the very least, waste some of our
precious classroom time.
The Structure of
Lessons
Establishing a structure
to your lessons that both you and your students can depend upon can really
enhance the learning that occurs in the classroom. Will there always (or, at
least, quite often) be an activator that will either review previous learning
or that will scaffold students towards new learning? A summarizer that will
help both you and students assess their comprehension of that day’s lesson? A
workshop structure for particular parts of the day that will always allow time
for direct instruction, gradual release, work time, and debriefing?
None of these suggestions
are made with the intent of a stale classroom where everything is the same, day
in and day out. Mixing things up can often engage our students’ minds and
interest levels. But there’s a LOT to be said for consistency within the structure
of our lessons. It can keep us teachers on our toes, determined to stick to a
structure we know works, and it can
be very helpful for students to know what to expect and to establish a pattern
for learning. Rather than “mixing up” the entire structure of a lesson in order
to allow for some variety (it is the spice of life, after all!), try instead,
for example, to vary the types of activators and summarizers you use (don’t get
too stuck in the “ticket to leave” rut, but explore some other options).
All of the above
suggestions are really quite broad, aren’t they?
If you’re looking for more
detail on any of the above, including specific examples and suggestions, let me
know. I’m happy to dedicate future blog posts to this, or to provide one-on-one
coaching in these areas.
Enjoy these first days of
school!
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