Students will watch you closely in your classroom, so you need to ensure that you model the behaviour that you expect from them. In the same way that you would model an activity during a lesson, think about how you can take time to teach behavioural management.
Explicitly teaching behavioural expectations can be supported by:
Showing a clip of school dos and don’ts and pausing for class discussion
Constantly reacting to disruptions is a source of stress and burnout and is detrimental to student engagement. Focus on positively reinforcing the students who are acting appropriately to encourage other students to model their behaviour.
2. Dress Appropriately
Teachers work hard to gain the respect they deserve, not just in their schools, but in their communities as well. How you dress is important because you are a professional and a role model for your students.
Research consistently links teachers attire and grooming to student’s perceptions of their competence.
Casual attire is associated with friendliness, fairness and a teacher seeming interesting.
Moderate attire conveys a greater sense of understanding and organisation.
Conservative attire communicates organisation, knowledge, and discipline.
You demonstrate daily how professional adults look and behave. What you wear sends a message to your students, colleagues, and community about how much respect you have for yourself, your profession and for them.
3. Maintain Professional Relationships
Your state’s Professional Teaching Guidelines (e.g. TAS, QLD, WA, SA) will make it very clear that teachers aren’t supposed to be friends with their students. Full stop.
Maintaining a friendly, but professional relationship means being mindful of:
Social media contact with students (e.g. NSW policy)
Setting clear boundaries with students
Avoiding favouritism and time alone with students
Inappropriate conversation (including jokes)
Talk to your colleagues or executive staff to clarify any concerns about your relationship to a student before it gets out of hand. Keeping your relationships with your students professional means that you can care for them while maintaining the authority and respect necessary for successful teaching.
4. Develop Genuine Rapport
A student once desperately wanted to show me a magic trick during a lesson. It took three minutes to perform, and I was quite impressed. After that, he was settled and able to refocus and complete the activity. Studies continue to highlight that building and maintaining positive relationships with students is fundamental to successful behavioural management in the classroom.
Simple advice for kickstarting your relationship building includes:
Learning students’ names as quickly as possible
Interacting before and after class and on the playground where possible
Supporting their extra-curricular activities
Showing genuine interest when responding to them
Calling home when they have done well or need a boost
Having a sense of humour (as much as humanly possible)
You need to actively seek out ways to connect with your students as individuals with different backgrounds, interests, and needs. Show them that you care and see them respond.
5. Develop Strong Communication Skills
Strong communication skills encompass so much more than speaking clearly. Difficulties in classroom management often stem from unclear or poor communication from a teacher.
To address students effectively, no matter their age-group or class size, think about:
Don’t be embarrassed to stand in front of the mirror and practice what you want to say to your class. A mentor may also be willing to sit in on a class and give you some tips, as well.
6. Have High Expectations
When teachers have low expectations of what a student can achieve, it can affect the student’s self-esteem and influence their behaviour in class. Likewise, by letting students get away with poor behaviour, we’re telling them that we don’t expect much from them. This can result in a self-fulfilling prophecy of underachievement throughout that student’s education.
Communicating high expectations for behaviour involves:
Setting routines for classroom management (e.g. entering/leaving the room, pens and books ready)
Establishing clear rules with fair, consistent consequences
Modeling what constitutes appropriate and inappropriate behaviour
Modifying rules as necessary
Giving feedback and support to students
Having high expectations for achievement involves:
Recognising and rewarding effort
Setting high achievable goals
Providing choice for completing tasks
Teaching the process for reaching their goals
Working through mistakes
Focusing on improvement
They don’t have to be the best but expect them to try their best. Value their input and allow them to demonstrate their skills in a variety of ways. Hold high behavioural expectations for your students because you want them in your classroom and because you believe in them.
7. Focus on the Future Needs of Your Students
The relevance of what we teach is key to the value that our students see in their education. Effective, modern education looks at the evolving nature of skillsets that will be required by the workplace our students will enter.
You can increase student agency and engagement while addressing their future needs by:
Incorporating a range of modern technology for teaching and learning
Asking for and responding to student feedback on lessons and resources
Our comprehensive library allows you direct access to free-to-air programs on the ClickView TV page. You can bring the important issues of the day into your classroom for your students to respond to.
8. Build Community
Realise that a school is a community involving teachers, Principals, executive staff, SLSOs, caretakers, counselors and parents. Ideally you will be able to develop a support network at your school to help your professional development, to assist and support colleagues and to benefit from their assistance and support as well.
Teachers should also look at ways to embrace the cultural influences of the wider community to enrich learning opportunities for their students.
Opportunity for this include:
Speaking to your principal about Community Hubs to reach out to and engage migrants families
Improving communication between families and your school and listening to input from the PTA
Bringing the community in schools helps to alleviate a sense of social isolation for students and their families by promoting a sense of connectedness and belonging.
Critical reflection can help you discover new approaches to behavioural challenges by helping you to:
Reframe classroom situations
View situations from different viewpoints
Reposition negative experiences
Discover positive potential in a situation
Be responsive to student needs
Become more deliberate and purposeful
Sharing your experiences with a close colleague, or maybe in your department meeting is highly beneficial because you can receive feedback and insight on how you can shape your experience to promote growth as a teacher.
10. Take Mental and Physical Breaks from Teaching
Between unmotivated students and workload pressures, teaching can be challenging and stressful. This can lead to burnout. Research has shown that resilience is essential to sustaining a career in education. This means that you have to take care of yourself.
Prioritising your well-being can involve:
Making time for a healthy lunch will fuel you for your classes
Using your holidays to unwind – you have them for a reason
Don’t feel guilty if you need a day off from teaching. Your students and the school can and will survive a day or two without you. Sometimes, a short break is necessary to refocus and refresh and prevent burnout. Just make sure you leave enough work for the casual.
ClickView has an extensive library of educational videos and teaching resources. Discover how the ClickView Team can help your school use video effectively for deeper subject understanding in the classroom.