3 Great Resources to Help You with Your Classroom Management
1) Free Cheat Sheet
The Cheat Sheet is a free download, each image is hyperlinked to a resource that will help you improve your classroom management.
Download the cheat sheet by clicking here
2) Book
A practical guide for educators to take control of their classroom management. Full of examples, illustrations, reflection questions, actionable steps, and bonus material which will help you develop your classroom management plan, implement it with success, and keep it in place through positive interventions as well as appropriate consequences. Plus, sections on how to deal with difficult students, chatty classes, and parents.
3) Online Course
An intensive training to help you get control of your classroom management, completely online.
Click here to enroll
The issue is classroom management. It limits what we can accomplish academically and it’s wearing out our teachers.
You find yourself struggling to get through your lesson plan because you’re constantly dealing with off-task behavior, excessive talking, or disrespect.
If you could get control of your classroom management, you could rediscover your joy for teaching, reduce your stress, and have a positive impact on your students. But you’ve tried disciplining them, calling home, administrative support, and increasing consequences yet the problem persists.
Hope is not lost. You can take control of your classroom management.
I was once in this boat. I struggled to get control of my students’ behavior, who seemed to delight in watching me lose my cool. I tried so many different strategies, yet nothing seemed to work. My inability to get control resulted in my students making marginal academic progress while they, their parents, and my administrators resented and scolded me for my failed attempts.
I was frustrated, exhausted, and saw no hope of the situation improving.
Thankfully, I discovered the strategies necessary to create a positive learning environment and found great success. I went from a failed teacher who couldn’t get his students to behave, to the dean of discipline at my school and someone who now coaches teachers on effective classroom management.
My students despised me, and actively sought out ways to frustrate me – now we have positive relationships that help cultivate a meaningful educational experience. I learned how to get the parents on my side and how to prevent the majority of classroom issues from ever occurring. But when they did, I was equipped with the tools needed to handle them.
Get your joy back!
Fall back in love again with teaching. When your students are behaving, and you are confident that you can handle any situation that presents itself, you and your students will again be able to enjoy your time together. Since less time will be lost to behavioral incidents, your student will learn more and make greater academic gains.