|
Cornerstone Cross-Reference

Find even MORE info about routines and procedures in The Cornerstone book!
Book-exclusive content includes:
Ch. 9: How to Teach ANY Procedure
*Read the full chapter in its entirety!
Ch. 10: Predictable Daily Routines
*Establishing Morning Work procedures and choosing appropriate assignments
*Tips for transitioning back into academics after lunch and special classes: training students to go directly to their seats, look at the board for assignments, and/or wait quietly for your directions
*Ideas for structuring the end of the school day, tracking which students have been dismissed, and getting kids to be SILENT during bus call announcements (it is possible!)
Ch. 11: Tips and Tricks for Difficult Procedures
*Don't deny bathroom permission, but don't allow kids to take advantage of you, either--it's simpler than you think!
*How to handle bathroom requests when it's not feasible for kids to go (such as during assemblies and recess)
*No more thirsty kids constantly trying to get drinks--tips and tricks for letting kids keep water bottles on their desks
*3 different methods for distributing materials to students: teach your class to use one or all of them
*Detailed instructions for inexpensively obtaining and using 'mailboxes' for children's to-go-home papers
Ch. 12: Student Responsibility and Organization
*Strategies for teaching kids how to organize the supplies they keep in their desks
*Showing students how to keep a set number of pencils in their desks and having a consistent
procedure for them to be sharpened
*Establishing routines for cleaning up and rewards/ consequences for when students do or don't meet your expectations
*How to give students the responsibility of keeping the class running smoothly through a genuinely useful class job/helper system
Ch. 13: Teaching Work Habits
*The little-known secret to getting kids to stop talking the second you open you mouth
*How to respectfully and firmly handle interruptions
*Establishing your expectations for sitting at desks and on the rug (and how to handle kids who complain constantly about others touching them)
*Explicitly teaching about QUIET and SILENCE: defining your expectations for the two terms and teaching kids to differentiate between them; how to practice getting and STAYING quiet; and training students how to whisper in a way that's developmentally appropriate
Ch. 15: Teaching Children to Be Self-Reliant
*Show your students how to get your attention appropriately (i.e., without tapping you or following you around the room)
*The beauty of the 3-Before-Me rule: how this guideline will cut 90% of redundant, obvious, and unimportant questions
*Responding to attention-seeking behaviors: specific statements of encouragement (rather than praise) that you can make to foster independence
*Teacher control vs. self-control: How to construct questions that redirect behavior through problem-solving
*What to ask instead of 'why' when it comes to behavior: replace 'Why are you doing that?' with 'What should you be doing?'
*One-liners to help you untangle yourself from petty problems during instruction
*Teaching kids to solve social problems independently: discussing physical confrontations and the claim "If someone hits me, my mom told me to hit them back!"; a sample discussion of the consequences of fighting (no sugar-coating or political-correctness here)
*An example of facilitation using active listening
*The hidden reason why children tattle: once this issue is addressed (and it may take a serious adaptation on your part), you'll see major break-throughs in self-sufficiency
|