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Better Manage Student Behavior With This Special Reading List

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Mon, Oct 28, 2024 09:59 PM

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A special curated collection of classroom management strategies and advice. NEWS AND RESOURCES FOR T

A special curated collection of classroom management strategies and advice. [ ] ADVERTISEMENT [Advertisement]( NEWS AND RESOURCES FOR TEACHER LEADERS — October 28, 2024 [Education Week]( Teacher Update 🧑‍🏫 Teachers, struggling with classroom management? Check out our special collection of articles where you’ll find practical strategies you can use immediately to make a difference. Plus, read how current teachers manage their classrooms effectively. 👇 [Newsletter image]( [Better Classroom Management Can’t Wait. How to Make Changes Now (Opinion)]( The three “truths” about managing student behavior that every teacher should unlearn today. [READ MORE]( ADVERTISEMENT Progress Monitoring: Resources to Support Student Growth Use the resources in this toolkit to increase your team’s confidence in analyzing progress monitoring data and determining if an intervention should continue, end, or extend. [Get the toolkit.]( [This Teaching Routine Takes Just 5 Minutes. Its Impact Lasts Much Longer]( Morning greetings could be an antidote for bad behavior. [READ MORE]( [My Teachers Were in ‘Survival Mode’ Over Student Behavior. We Had to Reset (Opinion)]( One principal took on a daunting challenge: transforming classroom cultures hobbled by misbehavior. [READ MORE]( ADVERTISEMENT Running an Effective Substitute Teacher Program In this guide, discover best practices to strengthen your district’s substitute teacher pipeline, improve fill rates, and save time and money for your human resources team. [Download Whitepaper]( - How to Give Students More Agency in Class Without Losing Control [Read more→]( - Name Your Glue Sticks, and Other Classroom Management Hacks From Teachers [Read more→]( - 4 Tips to Keep Students’ Misbehavior From Sapping Class Time [Read more→]( - A Classroom Management Training Helps New Teachers Send Fewer Kids to the Office [Read more→]( - How to Fix Classroom Misbehavior (Opinion) [Read more→]( ADVERTISEMENT [Advertisement Image]( The Ultimate High-Impact Tutoring Guide Struggling to improve early literacy rates in your school? Download our free guide and discover how OnYourMark’s evidence-based virtual tutoring program can help you. [Download Whitepaper]( 🗒️ TIPS FROM TEACHERS 🗒️ Education Week asked teachers to share their best classroom management advice. Here are a few responses, lightly edited for clarity: - “I think step one is to have clear expectations and communicate those expectations clearly to students. Those expectations must be consistently followed by every student. When the expectation is not followed, there must be clear consequences. ... One aspect I think a lot of teachers miss is the positive affirmations for following the expectations. ... I always tried to give four positive comments to students for every one negative comment.” - “Be prepared ahead of time for whatever is going to be taught. Have materials in place next to you. Know what happens just before the behavior and be prepared to act on it appropriately.” - “Involve the students in taking turns to teach the class.” What else? Share your best advice! [Submit Here]( EdWeek Top School Jobs [View Teacher Jobs](  🏫  [View Spec. Ed. Jobs](  🏫  [View Principal Jobs]( - [Superintendent]( Working from home - [Special Education Teacher]( Newark, NJ, US - [Online AP Instructor (Various Subjects)]( United States Recruit principals, district leaders and teachers. [Post your job openings today](. Read more when you subscribe! You may read limited stories for free. [Subscribe now]( to access every article. [Find out how your entire organization]( can benefit from access to Education Week. A special curated collection of classroom management strategies and advice. [View in Browser]( | [Contact Us]( | [Advertising]( | [Subscribe]( Want to stop receiving this newsletter? [Update your preferences]( or [unsubscribe from this list](. Copyright © 2024 Education Week 6935 Arlington Road, Suite 100, Bethesda, MD 20814

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