What you do on the first days of school will determine your success or failure for the rest of the school year. You will either win or lose your class on the first days of school. (Wong, 1991)
The effective teacher establishes GOOD control of the class in the very first week of school.
Control does not involve threats, intimidation, or dictatorship.
(1) what you are doing,
Preparation for the first day.1) Make a seating chart.
You always want to have a seating chart for the first several days of class because it helps you memorize students names efficiently. It eliminates the opportunity for students to sit with friends which will challenge them to stay on task. Once you know the students, you may begin to move their seats around to meet your needs. After a few weeks in school, if students behave throughout the week, you might have free seat Friday. Free seat Friday allows students to sit wherever they would like in the classroom. It is a great incentive and a fun way to end the week.
2) Write names of students on note cards and tape to the corner of the desk.
Writing students names on notecards will help the students know where to sit which will speed up the time it takes for students to find their seat on those first few days of school. It is also very useful to the teacher because when you walk around the room it will also help you memorize their names faster.
3) Create a syllabus for your class.
A syllabus will provide students the following information:
- What they will be studying
- How you plan to grade your assignments
- What tools/materials they will need for your class
- Contact information for parents and/or students
4) Create a management plan that you intend to follow throughout the year.
A management plan needs to short and simple. The main purpose of the management plan is to let students know the basic rules and what will happen if those rules are broken. A management plan will not work if you do not stick to it! ENFORCE, ENFORCE, ENFORCE the plan.
5) Determine the procedures for your classroom.
Make sure you have thought about what, when, where, how you want students to interact in the classroom. Students are no different than adults, they want consistency. If you want students to turn assignments into a basket, ensure that is what they do every time. If you want students to raise their hand to get out of their seat, ensure that is what you expect of them every time. If you want students to wait to ask to go to the restroom until you are done actively teaching, ensure you explain that process to them and expect them to adhere to that procedure. Make sure you think about every detail that could occur and know what you want the students to do every time that situation arises. I strongly encourage you to write all of the procedures down and make sure it is in your substitute notebook. Explain to students that procedures are still in place even when you are absent.
One of the best resources for any teacher especially new teachers is "The First Days of School: How to be an Effective Teacher" book by Harry sand Rosemary Wong. Most libraries have this book and you are more than willing to borrow mine at any time. Remember, "What you do on the first days of school will determine your success or failure for the rest of the school year".