You are in the Free Resources section of The Cornerstone For Teachers website:

Routines and Procedures

 

 

 

 

Having a clear and easy-to-maintain organizational system for classroom materials not only sets the precedence and framework for students to be organized themselves, but lays a foundation for the procedures and routines that make instruction possible.  This page will provide you with resources for organizing all of your materials in ways that are practical, attractive, and easy for you AND your students to maintain.

 

 

 

PDF Pages

 

   

Predictable Daily Routines*

 

  


 

 

Collecting and Distributing Papers*

 

 

 

 

Bathroom, Water Fountain, and Hallway Routines*

 

 

 

 

Teaching Work Habits*

 

 

 

 

Student Responsibility and Organization*

 

 

 

 

Other On-Site Resources

Teaching Techniques That Minimize Off-Task Behavior 

 

Making the Most of Every Moment 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PDFs marked with an asterisk (*) cannot be printed, because they are adapted from The Cornerstone book.  If you'd like to view the complete text with all printing rights enabled, you may purchase the eBook.   PDFs that aren't marked with an asterisk are web-exclusive content or chapter overviews and CAN be printed for educational use.  Please note that the copy/paste function has been disabled on ALL PDFs to prevent unauthorized use.

 

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

 

 

 

   

 

Free Downloads Referenced in the Book

 

 

To Do List (Microsoft Word document)

 

Enlarged photo of 'clean desk' diagram

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FREE EXCERPT from the Book!

 

Chapter 9, "How to Teach Any Procedure: Making Your Classroom Expectations a Reality"

 

In just this single chapter (15 pages!), you'll learn:

 

         -The importance of ongoing (distributed) procedure practice

         - How to form precise expectations and figure out exactly what you want

          -What not to do (how to phrase your expectations so kids will successfully meet them)

          -Why you should be cautious about misusing the term 'we'

          -How to use a variety of signals to facilitate routines

          -The art of replacing nagging and criticism with performance feedback

          -The 8 steps for teaching ANY procedure you want kids to follow

          -How to play the Procedure Review Game as a FUN reminder for kids

          -The key to revising your crtieria without confusing kids or seeming incompetent

          -What to do when kids don't meet your expectations (repeat the practice, not the command)

          -The power of "Go back and try it again" (and how to get kids to do it without attitude!)

         - Ways to accommodate special needs children

          -How to avoid a slow descent into laziness and sloppily-done procedures

          -Ideas for logical rewards and appropriate incentives that foster intrinsic motivation

 

 

Recommended Resources

 

                                      

Using Music to Facilitate Transitions

 

Songs for Teaching: Using Music To Promote Learning is the definitive site for any teacher wanting to use songs in his or her instruction.  This site explains when and how to use music in the classroom, how to create hyour own songs, and includes an unbelievably extensive list of age-appropriate song lyrics and tunes sorted by every theme imaginable.  The best part?  It include lyrics, tunes, SOUND CLIPS (great when you can't read music!), and where-to-purchase info if you want to buy a particular recording.  A tremendous resource worth checking out, whether you are an avid music user or wanting to incorporate songz into your classroom for the first time.  Be sure to visit the Classroom Management Songs page.

 

You don't have to use songs that specifically address procedures or concepts: any song will quiet a group of kids.   

Here's a beautifully-designed printable list of songs (organized seasonally) from Kelly's Kindergarten that are great for early learners.

 

If you don't like your voice, play a song from this extensive list of science concept tunes right on your computer!  

 

There are also sing-along-songs you can play from your computer from Mrs. Jones here.

 

 

 

Books and Websites With Excellent Transition Tips

 

Sponge and Transitition activities from AtoZ Teacher Stuff

 

 

 

 

                           

 

 

 

Yoga and Other Brain Breaks for the Classroom

 

Here are two links that explain the concept in more detail and give photographs and examples of Brain Break exercises: Alite Programmes and Michigan Dept. of Ed.

 

Mrs. Gold shares 3 short yoga lessons you can use with your class (Calming and Focusing, Focusing and Energizing, and Meditative and Calming) along with ways to implement and the benefits of using yoga during transition times.  I have used a similar program provided by my district and the kids LOVE it.

 

CNN's 2007 report on the benefits of yoga in the elementary classroom.

 

 

                                    

 

                 Includes brain break info     Easy-to-read format and practical    Very up-to-date: published in late 2006

 

 

Routines and Procedures

 

Multiple tips submitted by real teachers to AtoZ Teacher Stuff.

 

An awesome classroom procedure form from the school district of Colombia, MO.

 

I love this article by Dr. Fred Jones at Education World.  This guy is no-nonsense!

 

Pro-Teacher has a superb collection of resources for classroom routines.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

All material on this site is copyright 2003-2009 Angela Powell, unless otherwise noted. No information may be used or cited in for-profit projects without the written consent of the author.
You may print and reproduce materials for personal and educational purposes only. If you share materials with others, please include the URL and give appropriate credit.
Please email Webmaster@TheCornerstoneForTeachers.com with questions or requests.