| Jobs for Teachers |
|
Assessment Writer
Key Data Systems Lake Elsinore, CA |
|
Chicago Teacher Residency
Academy for Urban School Ldrshp Chicago, IL |
|
Teach English in China with Disney English
Disney English White Plains, NY |
|
Activity Specialist (Leader)
ESF Summer Camps Bryn Mawr, PA |
|
teacher
Steps Academy, Inc Arcadia, CA |
|
English Teachers
Golden Overseas ESL Academy Quebec, Canada |
| More Jobs Like These... |
Voice level has a solution but no one does it - least of all
the people who build our schools. Our classrooms have hard
floors usually and no wall hangings or curtains to absorb
sound so the sound of voices bounces - it's science. And the
problem is solved with the simple science of taping some felt
to the bottoms of chairs - duct tape works fine. The felt
absorbs the sound waves.
But people prefer to yell or warn or get frustrated when if
they got some duct tape, scissors and felt it would do
Wonders. I had my kids do it to their own chairs. They cut
the felt and taped it to the bottom of their chairs.
It's bliss.
> Hello! I'm looking for some wonderful ideas to help with
> off task behavior...........this is especially during
> Reading Groups and Reading Centers.
>
> Reading Groups -- They have a sentence to fix on the board
> then they go get books to read while I teach a group. I
> will be teaching AR next week and that might help but here
> is what I see:
>
> Students sitting too close and talk (we've modeled over
> and over again where to sit and how close to be)
> Students not really reading -- either pretending to or are
> just sitting. I'm trying to conduct groups and it's
> driving me crazy. As a whole they are very low and they
> are the ones who need to be practicing the most yet they
> are the most off task. In a way -- I'm sure that's the
> problem. What can I do to help build their fluency and
> decoding so that sitting and reading independently is more
> of a joy then something to be avoided?
>
> Reading Centers -- I allow them to talk to help each other
> on their phonics page and with spelling in their journal.
> Sometimes I wish I could do away with phonics pages
> because many of my students can't read the sentences
> independently anyway. The problem is -- they get off task
> easily. Would I be a horrible teacher if I just did the
> phonics page with them each day on the overhead and gave
> them a chance to read the sentence independently then do
> it with them? Some kids never get to their journal
> because they are struggling with the worksheet. Also,
> during this time I'm listening to my students read so I'm
> not available to help.
>
> We struggle with voice level and on task talking.....what
> do I do to help them? Right now I feel like I'm nagging
> and often I tell them it's a no talking time for a few
> minutes then we try it again. It helps but I still feel
> like I'm nagging all the time which makes it a negative
> feeling for me -- and I'm sure my students!
>
> Help please!
>
>
Posts on this thread, including this one