Classroom Management
Classroom Management
Classroom Management
By
Michael D. King
digitalsandbox1@gmail.com
Permission Must Be Granted before Using
Overview
Classroom environment represents the organizational function of the teacher. Certain tasks that affect
classroom environment are performed in a variety of settings as a result of the teacher’s individual beliefs.
It is what the teacher does to organize daily learning. It includes setting expectations for behavior,
providing support in the development of a positive self-concept, realizing the individual differences of
each student, and grouping students within the classroom based on prescriptive learning needs. The
classroom teacher makes daily decision on constructing the environment. These decisions can be broken
down into four distinct quadrants that are separated by time, aggregation, achievement and behavior as
represented in (Figure 3-1 The Four Quadrants of Classroom Climate). How teachers construct their daily
decisions on any one of these quadrants can have major effects on student learning and classroom
environment.
For example under aggregate decision making the teacher does not take into consideration the social
make up of the classroom and allows students to set independently on their own. The effects of this
aggregate decision making on classroom environment may result in off task interaction among students,
low engagement for under achieving students, and student dominance during guided practice; giving
much attention to some and less attention to others. Likewise if a teacher fails to consider time decisions
during transitions from one classroom event to another through lack of structuring statements student
academic learning time is lost.
A teacher should be cognizant of classroom climate and the effects on student learning. Evaluators should
also support teachers in construction classroom climates that are focused on maximizing student
achievement. In chapter three each of the four quadrants will be explored, defining the process of
classroom environment decisions and how to assess each one separately. Additionally a full discussion of
the definitions for managing the classroom environment will be outlined as well as methods for assessing
teacher performance. The eight areas within the four quadrants listed below are major factors in affecting
how students learn in the classroom and should become a focus of teacher performance assessment.
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Figure 3-1
The Four Quadrants of Classroom Climate
Classroom Environment
It is the teacher who establishes the classroom environment which is the set norms for students as they
work toward learning goals. The teacher, through skilled decisions, coordinates the pacing of learning
tasks, delegates responsibilities, gives directions for movement within the classroom, enforces the
classroom rules, and allocates resources. A teacher’s ability to run an orderly and academically focused
classroom has direct and immediate effects on the quality of both teaching and learning. Classroom
environment is, therefore, an important method of instruction and should not be treated inconsequentially
by evaluators.
Evaluators are responsible for assessing classroom environment. For instance, one important aspect of
classroom environment is the teacher’s ability to establish a positive climate by designing a clearly
written discipline plan for student behavior that includes both consequences and rewards. Often teachers
design a set of rules with consequences for inappropriate behavior but do not include how they will
reward appropriate behavior. An effective discipline plan supports the development of a positive self-
concept within the individual students. Other areas of classroom management assessment include the
manner in which cooperative learning strategies are implemented, the kind of treatment differential
between students who the teacher perceives as high and low learners, conducting classroom routines in a
business- like manner, the management of transition times and how the teacher sets and maintains the
pace for instruction.
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Arrangement of Furniture and Use of Physical Resources
The arrangement of furniture in a classroom can have an effect on learning and teachers preference on
delivering instruction. Room arrangements, placement of classroom furniture and student seating
provisions reflects the teachers’ style of teaching. By changing the physical space in a classroom teachers
can facilitate student interaction, activity structure, learning centers, and student transitions. The
classroom furniture has a direct relationship in facilitating learning functions and can be identified in
three basic formations, rows, circles, and clusters.
The traditional formation of classroom seating is rows and columns. When classrooms are organized in
rows the teacher wants the attention focused in one direction, usually toward a podium or teachers desk.
This type of formal classroom arrangement indicates less student to student collaboration and more
teacher directed instruction. It is important to note that classroom seating arrangements to encourage
student collaboration has a tendency to decline in secondary settings.
The circle arrangement of student seating is useful for class discussions and independent seatwork. The
circle formation allows students to view each other from across the class and helps teacher monitoring of
seatwork. The downside of the circle classroom seating arrangement is that some students will face the
teachers back during presentations and demonstrations. Semicircles best fits room arrangements for
classroom discussions with the teacher making direct eye contact with students.
Student seating cluster furniture arrangements are useful for cooperative learning, collaborative
instruction, group discussions, or project based task where students use learning time to interact. The
cluster seating arrangement is prominent in those classrooms where teachers provide time for students to
work cooperatively on activities and grouping of students is part of the learning structure.
In this case the evaluator would want to address the guided activity by making a reflective statement such
as; “I liked the way you demonstrated each step of the math problem while asking students to give their
own ideas. I noticed that there was a lot of participation with students in the front of the room where the
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desk were clustered into groups of four. How are you including the students who were in the back of the
room as part of the guided lesson?” In Exhibit 3-1 is an example of how to reflective statements are
recorded during a walkthrough assessment on teacher aggregate decisions.
• How do you arrange the room to ensure that it is safe, and learning is equally accessible to all
students?
• How do you use physical resources and furniture arrangement as a resource for learning
activities?
Another factor that can have a big influence on the teacher’s decision to grouping students is the
individual teacher’s style. Teachers who are more comfortable in an authoritarian role tend to group
students less often and to use more lecture delivery strategies. Teachers who implement a more
democratic approach use a variation grouping strategies because they are comfortable with sharing
control and responsibilities with the students.
A factor that should always be considered when making decisions about work groups is students’
perception of their group. Students are well aware of the ways that classroom groups differ and have no
difficulty perceiving the differential or preferential treatment of certain individuals and groups within the
classroom. Once the groups are formed, the teacher should make continuous reference to the value of all
of the work groups as it pertains to their successful completion of the learning task.
The decisions that teachers make to form working groups should always be made cautiously and
skillfully. Each group should be formed on the basis of the performance goal and on how well each
individual functions as a member of a group. Once the teacher has established the groups, they should be
reevaluated regularly to determine group dynamics and the individual progress of each member. The
authors recommend that the assignment to a particular group not be a lifelong sentence. Group
membership should be changed periodically based on a prescription of learning needs.
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Strategies for Assessing Grouping Strategies within the Classroom
The evaluator needs to explore several factors when assessing the teacher’s grouping strategies. Is the
teacher making grouping decisions based on set criteria for group establishment? Do the grouping criteria
include a prescription of learning needs, the goals for student performance, and an explanation of the
various group roles for students? Once groups are formed, what are the structures for how the group is
expected to work together to accomplish the task? The evaluator could ask some of the following
questions during a walkthrough observation or planning conference to provoke a discussion about the
teacher’s grouping strategies:
• Describe or discuss how grouping decisions are based on the learning needs of your students. Are
your group decisions based on achievement levels?
• What criteria do you use to formulate groups?
• Describe how you utilize grouping strategies to reinforce learning.
• How often do you utilize grouping strategies?
• How often do you change the groups? Do you use any criteria for how the students are moved
from one group to another?
• What rules have been established to set expectations for student performance while in groups?
• How are students evaluated for group participation and group assignments?
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Exhibit 3-1
Example of Aggregate Assessment
Walk-Through Assessment
CLASSROOM ENVIRONMENT
Reflective Statement:
1. I liked the way you demonstrated each step of the math problem while asking students
to give their own ideas. I noticed that there was a lot of participation with students in
the front of the room where the desk were clustered into groups of four.
2. I also liked the way you have setup your cooperative groups of four students per group.
I did notice that groups two and four needed some structuring statements after the
activity began.
Reflective Question:
1. Have you established a set of expectations for student performance while they are in
groups?
2. How are you including the students who were in the back of the room as part of the
guided lesson?”
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Monitoring Student Behavior
Disruptive behavior in classrooms is one of the leading causes for the decline in academic performance.
In today’s schools, teachers are often forced to deal with continuous disruptive behavior, which detracts
from the learning climate and results in ineffective learning. Learning cannot take place in classrooms
where students are disrespectful, defy authority, and have little or no regard for classroom rules. Teachers
must manage classroom behavior where learning becomes the central focus of daily activities.
Classrooms where students are engaged in facilitated learning events are less likely to create distractions
and it is the teacher who provides the structured environment.
• Keep students highly engaged in activities, and set clear expectations prior to the activity.
• Spend a significant amount of time in guided practice, especially in new concept development.
• Be caring, and let students know that their teachers want them to succeed.
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classroom rules should reflect the teacher's attitude of openness, honesty, sincerity, and caring. A
successful learning climate is built upon a positive teacher-student relationship.
• The written plan should explain the roles and responsibilities of the students in the classroom,
how the classroom will be conducted, and why these responsibilities of appropriate behavior are
important.
• The plan should be fair and appropriate for maintaining a positive classroom atmosphere.
• Expectations should be clearly stated, and the plan should include the consequences for
inappropriate behavior.
• The plan should explain how good classroom behavior will be rewarded.
Another factor that can have a big influence on the teacher’s decision to group is the individual teacher’s
style. Teachers who are more comfortable in an authoritarian role tend to group students less often and to
use more lecture delivery strategies. Teachers who implement a more democratic approach use more
grouping strategies because they are comfortable with sharing control and responsibilities with the
students.
A factor that should always be considered when making decisions about work groups is students’
perception of their group. Students are well aware of the ways that classroom groups differ and have no
difficulty perceiving the differential or preferential treatment of certain individuals and groups within the
classroom. Once the groups are formed, the teacher should make continuous reference to the value of all
of the work groups as it pertains to their successful completion of the learning task.
The decisions that teachers make to form working groups should always be made cautiously and
skillfully. Each group should be formed on the basis of the performance goal and on how well each
individual functions as a member of a group. Once the teacher has established the groups, they should be
reevaluated regularly to determine group dynamics and the individual progress of each member. The
authors recommend that the assignment to a particular group not be a lifelong sentence. Group
membership should be changed periodically based on a prescription of learning needs.
The evaluator could ask some of the following questions at the planning conference to provoke a
discussion about the teacher’s grouping strategies:
• Describe or discuss how grouping decisions are based on the learning needs of your students. Are
your group decisions based on achievement levels?
• What criteria do you use to formulate groups?
• Describe how you utilize grouping strategies to reinforce learning.
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• How often do you utilize grouping strategies?
• How often do you change the groups? Do you use any criteria for how the students are moved
from one group to another?
• What rules have been established to set expectations for student performance while in groups?
• How are students evaluated for group participation and group assignments?
Expectations for Learning and Achievement
The teachers’ communications of expectations does have an impact on classroom climate and how
teachers expresses themselves to individuals or groups of students determines academic success. And the
kind of differential treatment of expectations given to high and low students by a teacher has influence
over academic performance in predictable ways. The atmosphere of a classroom reflects the teachers’
expectations, the quality of work preformed, the reinforcement of the importance for learning, and self
confidence to master complex task. In high performance classrooms expectations are built through the
everyday actions of the teachers. Through the teachers supportive expressions to students a message for a
culture of learning is explicitly stated in terms of achievement acceptance. It is the way classroom daily
activities are conducted. Teachers with high expectations on their minds bring an ever-present awareness
to these norms in daily interactions, decisions, and planning that shape the way students perform.
Pacing Decisions
The pacing of instruction concerns the amount of time that is allotted between and within the various
content areas. The decisions that the teacher makes about how much time is spent learning particular
content areas greatly affects student achievement. Pacing is synonymous with content coverage and can
be measured by such tangibles as the number of pages covered, the number of math problems taught, or
the number of vocabulary words assigned.
Therefore, effective teachers communicate high academic expectations; create classrooms that are safe,
orderly, and academically focused; demonstrate sensible management of behavior problems; and create a
pleasant place for students to learn.
The following questions will promote a discussion regarding classroom climate strategies:
• What are the performance standards for your students?
• How do you hold students accountable for their learning?
• How do you reward students for appropriate behavior and achievement?
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• What conditions have you set to ensure that students do not disrupt the learning process?
• How does your classroom discipline plan support the development of a positive self-concept in
individual students?
• What consequences are incurred for inappropriate behavior? How do these consequences encourage
appropriate behavior in the classroom?
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