Thursday, November 16, 2023

Call to Attention

 Fast Llamas,

For many of you, you have realized that classroom management can be one of the biggest challenges you face in your classroom.  There are many parts to the system that is your classroom culture.  The physical environment, the foundational aspects, the design and delivery of your content all work together to create the atmosphere - the climate of your room.  Is it cloudy or sunny today?  When one aspect of this system is out of sync, over-developed or underdeveloped, it affects the other parts.  Such as a reliance and focus on super fun and engaging lessons but missing the training and teaching of the behavioral expectations that occur during this amazing lesson.  Or the flip side of this scenario... Class is quiet and compliant, but no impactful learning is happening.  

One of the easiest to use tools to use to help create a positive culture and help with classroom management is the use of an attention getter (or call to attention).  Using this strategy allows for you to monitor the volume in the class, manage time, increase the chances of everyone listening and monitor and manage your students' states... all while not raising your voice.  

Here are a few to try:

1.  Join me when you can - Teacher starts snapping and students join in, I like the ending to do 5 snap, 4 snap, 3 snap, 2 snap, and 1 snap.  This is a good strategy when you have to be quiet for surrounding classrooms.  

2. Clap - Teacher claps a pattern and students repeat.  The old if you can hear me clap once, if you can hear me clap twice works too. 

3.  Narrate a countdown - Teacher narrates what they want to see as they count down.  "Voices off in 5, pencils down in 4, laptops closed in 3, eyes on the promethean in 2..."

4.  Give me 5 - Sometime you have to have a quiet attention getting, simply raising your hand with fingers extended will fit nicely.

5.  Song - Playing a song to cue a certain task is a great way to notify students when time is up or it is time to line up excetera.

6.  Timers - I am a lover of all things timered.  (wait is that a word?)  Setting a visual timer is a super easy way to maintain an orderly classroom.  

7.  Call and Response - A creative way to get students' attention is to use this strategy.  Students and teachers can work together to create a saying that suits them.  

8.  A sound or tone - not my favorite, but lots of teachers ring a bell or have a sound effect that works to get students' attention.  

For each of the attention getters we just discussed, there are two important points to remember.

1) explicitly teach the students the expectations for their response.  Practice until everyone can perform the attention getter and praise for their effort.  

2) WAIT  and patrol - when you call students to attention, it is VERY important that students know you are patrolling and looking for students who are successfully stopping their conversations and/or whatever they are doing to actually stop and listen.  Hold students for 3 to 4 seconds, pausing and looking at students.  Say Nothing... then once the students know you are serious, then talk... (don't hold them for long lengths of time... this can create a power struggle, the wait I am talking about is brief and subtle, but sends a message you are serious).
 
Praise and reinforce students for being quiet too, great way to continue to build relationships. 

Last thing, I would use my attention getter to manage volume.  When I thought tasks were getting little to loud, I would use my call to attention, wait, and then do a check in.  A very easy way to monitor voice level.  

Until next time!


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