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You Can’t Teach Until Everyone Is Listening - Book Cover

You Can’t Teach Until Everyone Is Listening

Six Simple Steps to Preventing Disorder, Disruption, and General Mayhem
By: Marilyn L. Page, Corwin Press, Inc.

Foreword by Bruce A. Marlowe

Six simple, practical, and doable steps for managing your classroom!

In this remarkably clear and concise handbook, teacher-educator Marilyn Page distills years of research, data, and the experiences of hundreds of teachers into six powerful steps to attaining classroom harmony. The author demonstrates how teachers can employ a simple, no-nonsense approach to preventing and responding to classroom disruptions and student misbehaviors. Offering vignettes from a cross-section of schools, this resource illustrates six universal steps for:

  • Establishing your role as a proactive classroom facilitator
  • Creating a safe environment conducive to learning
  • Building a relationship of trust with your students

Full description


You Can’t Teach Until Everyone Is Listening - Book Cover
Product Details
  • Grade Level: PreK-12
  • ISBN: 9781412960151
  • Published By: Corwin
  • Year: 2008
  • Page Count: 168
  • Publication date: May 08, 2008
Price: $30.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

Review Copies

This book is not available as a review copy.
Description

Description

"Page's book is a jewel. Her advice is wise, sound, realistic, and very practical, and the book's main thesis should serve as a focal point of teacher preparation programs."
—Robert Di Giulio, Professor of Education, Johnson State College
Author, Positive Classroom Management, Third Edition

Six simple, practical, and doable steps for managing your classroom!

In this remarkably clear and concise guide, teacher-educator Marilyn L. Page distills years of research, data, and the experiences of hundreds of teachers into six powerful steps to attaining classroom harmony. The result is an easy-to-use handbook that teachers at every level can reference daily for proactive strategies to establish a positive classroom environment.

The author demonstrates how teachers can employ a simple, no-nonsense approach to preventing and responding to classroom disruptions and student misbehaviors. Using vignettes from a cross-section of schools—inner city, rural, diverse, large, and small—this resource illustrates six steps for:

  • Establishing your role as a proactive classroom facilitator
  • Creating a safe environment conducive to learning
  • Building a relationship of trust with your students

Field-tested by novice and veteran teachers in classrooms across the country, these proven steps will help you create a positive and productive classroom from the very first day of school.


Key features

  • The author's credentials and research bring authenticity to the fundamental concepts distilled into the Six Simple Steps
  • The six steps present a no-nonsense, accessible plan to help novice and veteran teachers prevent chaos in their classrooms
  • This how-to book is based on extensive research from K-12 classrooms across the country and fills a gap in teacher preparation programs
Author(s)

Author(s)

Marilyn L. Page photo

Marilyn L. Page

Marilyn Page is author (with Bruce Marlowe) of Creating and Sustaining the Constructivist Classroom (Corwin Press, 1998, 2005) and Creating the constructivist classroom, a six part video series for grades K-12 (The Video Journal of Education, 1999). She began her career in education as a high school social studies and Spanish teacher and has taught in every grade 7 through 12, at every academic level, in rural, suburban, and urban school systems in different parts of the United States. She has taught at the university level and worked with pre- and in-service teachers, grades K-12, for 20 years. She also directed a major and complex research project for the development of K-12 professional certification requirements in the State of Washington. In addition to full time university teaching responsibilities, she has been the technology coordinator for education programs at two universities and developed the first Middle School Teacher Preparation programs in the Vermont State College System. She earned her EdD from the University of Massachusetts in Amherst in Instructional Leadership and in Educational Media and Instructional Technology. She consults on novice teacher, reform, classroom management, and technology issues in education. She lives in State College, Pennsylvania.

 

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Foreword by Bruce A. Marlowe


Preface


Acknowledgments


About the Author


Introduction


1. The Critical Beginning: Knowing and Using Students' Names

Barry

Knowing and Using Students' Names

Your Number 1 Classroom Management Tool

Student Teachers and Interns

Novice and Experienced Elementary Teachers

An Easy Strategy

Other Approaches

Back to Barry

Summary: Step 1

What Comes Next?

2. Avoiding Anonymous and Dangling Questions

Dave

Types of Questions Teachers Ask

Levels of Questions Teachers Ask

Dangling Questions: What Are They and What Was Dave Doing Wrong?

Students Left in the Dark

Worse Consequences

What Can You Do?

The Problems With Hand Raising

A Better Way

An Old Teacher's (or Is It Researcher's) Tale

The Results of These Better Strategies

Anonymous Questions: What Are They?

What's Wrong With These Questions?

How Can a Teacher Fix This?

Did Dave Recover?

The Experiment

The Results

Summary: Step 2

What's Next?

3. Choosing and Using Words Wisely

Mariah

Mariah's Goal

What's in a Word?

The Importance of Tight and Professional Language

What Are Filler Words?

What Happens When You Use Filler Words?

An Unprofessional Word

Mariah's Transformation

Terry

And Danae

Using Words of Civility in the Classroom

The Common Thread

Three Other Powerful Hints About Language

Making These Language and Tone Changes in Your Classroom

Summary: Step 3

Coming Attractions

4. Avoiding Confusion When Giving Directions

Elizabeth

Clarifying Directions

The Results

A Pilot Project: A Different Story

Chris

What Are We Supposed to Do?

Giving Instructions That Don't Lead to Disruption

Why It's Important for Students to Re-explain

Back Up! We Are Missing Two Preliminary Steps

Chris' Plan

The Results

Summary: Step 4

What's Next?

5. Attending to Civility With Reminders and Cues

Seventh Period: A Special Ninth-Grade Class

The First Day of School

What Happened With This Class?

Mrs. Watkins' Advice

The Problem With Classroom Rules

Simple Expectations of Civility

Jeannie

Reminders and Cues

How Often Do You Have to Give Reminders or Cues?

Jeannie's Approach

The Results

The Bottom Line

Summary: Step 5

Coming Next

6. Upgrading Interactions: Can You Feel the Heartbeat?

The Title

Julia

Moving to a Higher Level

Challenging Julia

The Results

Two Challenges for You

How to Begin

What Can Go Wrong Here?

Subtle Classroom Disorder

Jake

Shy Students

Detached Students

National History Day

Phil

The Contest

The Points of This Story

The Results

The Ultimate Goal

Summary: Step 6

Now What?

7. Harry and Clara Reclaim Their Classes

Harry

Harry's Mistake: An Ultimatum

Harry's Meltdown and Recovery

The Letter

The Students' Responses

The Results

Streamlining Harry's Format

Clara

Clara's Approach

The Results

A Bonus: You Learn More Than You Think From Student Letters or Student Drawings

Your Turn

8. Making This Happen

Beginning

Teacher Preparation Courses and Preservice Teachers

University Professors

Student Teachers

Novice Teachers

Experienced Teachers

Bon Voyage

Appendix: Handling Unwanted and Inappropriate Responses


Examples

References


Index


Reviews

Reviews

Price: $30.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

Review Copies

This book is not available as a review copy.