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P1252428707RiJGh

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What can I do when I'm becoming turned off to school? ... What the teacher models. Questioning and response strategies. Wait Time. Follow-up Questions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: P1252428707RiJGh


1
Do all the good you can, by all the means you
can, in all the ways you can, at all the times
you can, to all the people you can, as long as
ever you can. John Wesley
2
Class Meetings
  • Building Community in the Classroom

3
Class meetings usually serve one or more of the
following purposes to plan and make decisions,
to check in, and to solve problems or raise
awareness.
4
Both academic and social issues are appropriate
topics for consideration. Depending on their
purpose, class meetings can be a regularly
scheduled part of the school day or week or can
occur as needed.
5
Their versatility makes them a valuable classroom
management tool-one that helps students actively
contribute to their academic and social learning.
6
Why Have Class Meetings
  • Kids are involved in constructive decisions
    making. It is a forum for students to voice and
    directly effect how they want their class to be.
  • It creates a climate of trust and respect between
    kids and kids and teachers
  • It helps build self esteem by having kids
    involved in decisions that affect their world.

7
  • Kids develop a sense of responsibility for their
    actions
  • It enhances speaking, listening, leadership
    skills.
  • It is a forum for students to support each other
    as each person takes charge of their own learning.

8
What is an Effective Class Meeting?
  • The teacher shares the control with students by
    letting them help set the agenda. The focus is
    always on school, not home.
  • Students do most of the talking and the teacher
    acts as facilitator. The teacher teaches
    students to really listen to and respect each
    others ideas.

9
  • Students work together to improve the learning
    environment, friendships and cooperative group
    work through class plans.
  • Individual students with problems or conflicts
    seek help and ongoing support from their
    classmates.

10
Eight Building Blocks for Effective Class Meetings
  • Form a circle.
  • Practice compliments and appreciations.
  • Create an agenda.

11
  • Develop communication skills.
  • Learn about separate realities.
  • Practice brainstorming and role playing.

12
  • Recognize the reasons people do what they do.

13
Questions when setting a topic for a meeting.
  • Is the topic open-ended, inviting participation
    from all children?
  • Is there really room for different ideas and
    viewpoints?

14
  • Do you really want student input? Have you made a
    decision already?
  • Will the children be able to act on their ideas
    or suggestions?
  • Are you willing to support decisions made by the
    children even though you feel they might fail?

15
Sample Topics
  • Relationships
  • What can I do when a person is bugging me?
  • What can I do when Im feeling left out?
  • What can I do when someone hurts my feelings?
  • How can I help my friends do the right thing?
  • What can I do when my friend wont share me with
    my other friends?

16
  • Working in small groups
  • What would help us bring the best out of everyone
    when we work in small groups?
  • What could we do to help from the teacher without
    getting too embarrassed?
  • What could we do when our group inst working
    very well together?

17
  • Attitude toward school
  • What really works for me at school?
  • What can I do when school is not much fun?
  • What can I do when Im becoming turned off to
    school?

18
  • Places and activities that are not routine
  • How can we make a field trip, guest speaker,
    or assembly work for everyone?

19
  • Lunch and Free Time
  • How can we make lunch free-time enjoyable for
    everyone
  • How can we help our friends do the right thing
    during lunch and free time?

20
  • Diversity/teasing
  • How can we help everyone feel welcome and
    respected?
  • What can we do when we see or are targets of
    teasing and harassment?

21
Creating a Comfortable Atmosphere
  • Getting to know you activities.
  • Add-on Graffiti Boards
  • Artifacts
  • Class Data Base
  • Find Your Match
  • Forced Choice
  • I am Thinking of Someone
  • Partner Interviews
  • Photograph Display
  • Webbing

22
Establishing Ground Rules
  • Listening and Getting a Turn to Speak
  • Avoiding Accusatory or Shaming Discussions
  • Even Ground Rules Take Time

23
Duration
  • Depends on age and experience of students
  • Depends on topic(s) and purpose of the meeting
  • Primary concern is not too long or too short
  • Let students evaluate at end of meeting

24
Discussion and Facilitation Strategies
  • What the teacher models
  • Questioning and response strategies
  • Wait Time
  • Follow-up Questions

25
  • How To Manage and Encourage Participation
  • Brainstorming
  • Small-Group Discussions
  • Partner Chats
  • Partner Idea Lists
  • Collected Ideas
  • Individual Reflection and Writing

26
  • Consensus building
  • Definitions
  • Narrowing Choices
  • Benefits and Burdens
  • Unlivable Only
  • Livable Only
  • One Why
  • Three Straws
  • Apply Criteria

27
  • Troubleshooting
  • Nobody talking
  • Side conversations
  • Shocking or funny or stupid statements
  • Someone too disruptive
  • Everybody talking

28
We learn from our mistakes only if we are not
afraid to make mistakes! Rudolph
Dreikurs
29
Planning and Decision Making Meetings
  • Ways we want our class to be
  • Class name
  • Back-to-school night/open house
  • Substitutes
  • Choosing to learn

30
Check In Meetings
  • Is this the way we want to be?
  • What did we learn?
  • How did it go with the substitute?

31
No problem is too difficult once it is recognized
as a common task! Rudolph Driekurs
32
Problem Solving Meetings
33
Problem Solving Meetings
  • My friends wont let me play
  • Cliques
  • Problem Solving

34
Things to Think About
35
When is a problem suitable for a class meeting?
  • Is this an issue that can be discussed in a
    climate of trust, ensuring the safety of each
    child?
  • Can the groups collective energy be directed
    toward finding solutions to problems, not
    consequences for actions?

36
  • Does this issue affect all of the children or
    most of them.
  • If the issue involves specific students, do all
    parties involved agree to have the problem taken
    to the class?

37
  • Is this the best time to address the problem?

38
Developing a Class Plan or helping a Student with
a Problem
  • Identify the question.
  • Brainstorm many possible solutinos/strategies.
  • Discuss a few solutions/strategies.

39
  • Choose a solution or a few strategies and write a
    plan(1-2 meetings).
  • Use the plan during the next few weeks.
  • Check on and change the plan, if necessary, at
    the next few meetings.

40
Ways to Begin Meetings
  • Explain meetings
  • Talk about students hopes for the meeting
  • Record student ideas
  • Have a partner chat
  • Engage students personal experiences
  • Introduce vocabulary or concepts

41
  • Remind students of earlier meeting results or
    topics
  • Read a related story

42
Ways to End Meetings
  • Post a list and ask students to keep thinking
    about it
  • Synthesize what the ideas mean
  • Preview the next meeting
  • Reflect on the meeting process, results,
    learnings
  • Ask for volunteers to create a document about
    what you did

43
  • Establish a timeline for completing activities
  • Celebrate what you have accomplished
  • Add final observations
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