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An experence that a teacher would have n a classroom problem and how they would've dealt with it

2007-01-14 05:30:12 · 5 answers · asked by tanya o 1 in Education & Reference Teaching

5 answers

Classroom management problems can vary. Some common problems are: the class clown, students talking, sleeping in class, not doing assignments, difficulty settling down to do work.
I teach high school so I see three classes a day. Maintaining order begins with organization. When the students enter the room they have an assignment on the board. While they do this work I am able to check roll and take care of other beginning tasks. I always have more work planned than they can accomplish. Idle students find something to do and it may not be something you approve of. The students are given class rules the first day of class. They sign that they understand these rules. The consequences of breaking any rules are posted on the wall. Some techniques for dealing with problem students include moving the student to a different seat, talking to the student privately to determine why the behavior is happening, parental conferences and counselor referral. Teachers must be firm from the start. Students have friends, they need a teacher and role model, not another friend. Try to be impartial and fair to everyone.
These are just a few of the things I have learned over the years. Hope it helps

2007-01-14 12:44:37 · answer #1 · answered by chltnpeach 2 · 0 0

I'm not sure I understand your question.

Are you training to be a teacher? Surely during your teaching practices, you'll have experienced times when you have incidents or difficulties in the classroom, or potential ones, and have dealt with them, either well or badly. Or if you've observed lessons, you've seen students misbehaving, or not doing the work, or whatever, and the teacher has responded in some way, which has either solved the problem, or not. Or if you haven't taught or observed, think back to when you were at school, and kids played up in lessons.

2007-01-14 13:38:38 · answer #2 · answered by Anna 3 · 1 0

There are endles possibilities here. Name any behavior you can think of and there is a teacher somewhere having to deal with it in the classroom. Some are minor like distractibility or annoying classmates. Then there re major ones from violent outbursts to chronic public masturbation. There are different solutions for each type of problem. I hope this helps. I wasnt sure what exactly you're looking for.

2007-01-14 13:42:31 · answer #3 · answered by baldisbeautiful 5 · 0 0

many many many problems!!!! I have done full time and supply and the 1st day of my new school inc year 5 children throwing chairs at one another. there is no right or wrong way to ease this situation. I believe in gaining the childrens trust at such a young age and even being an adoptive aunt or big sister, whatever the individual child needs. My class is now much calmer and the children respect and like me - as much as they pretend they do anyroad.

2007-01-14 13:40:08 · answer #4 · answered by naughty_miss_moneypenny 2 · 0 0

Every class will present different problems and you have to sort out your own coping strategies according to your own personality. One method that works very well for me is to always try to get the class ringleader on-side. Not always easy, but if you can pull it off then your discipline problems reduce dramatically. Other classes resort to very hard-line discipline - they will object at first, but if you can keep your nerve they will move on to an easier target. One thing to note is that regardless of all the stuff they taught you at college, if you are dealing with secondary school kids, it is open warfare - attack is the best form of defence!

2007-01-15 04:13:24 · answer #5 · answered by Queen of the Night 4 · 0 0

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