Welcome back to the Classroom Management Series!
Last week we addressed the issue of students talking when they are not supposed to. This week we are
going to tackle electronics in the classroom.
It never fails,
many students have the most up to date gadget while I am still trying to figure
out my basic Nokia phone. They
have smart phones, personal gaming systems, and mp3 players. And their toys are more interesting
than what is going on in school that day (believe me I know, I can use pinterest on my phone).
Students are using
electronics in the classroom when:
- They are answering and sending text messages and phone calls
- When their phones ring or beep in class
- When students are checking their messages, facebook, etc. on their phones
- Playing with their electronics (phones, iPod, personal gaming system) when instructed not to
Below are
solutions divided into two groups thanks to readers and teachers at local
workshops!
Preventive
Solutions*
- Put all cell phones in a cell jail as they walk into class
- Have students put phones on teacher’s desk as they walk into class
- Students
put phones in a shoe organizer that hangs in the front of the room
The Meta Picture - Absolutely forbid phones on tests days-they go on the teacher’s desk
- Remind students daily of policy
- Make it a game:
- phones are turned off/silent and put on the corner of the desk
- first student who touches their phone during class has to leave the class last, clean the room, deducted participation points, etc.
- Give participation points that include not using their phones
- Put into place a “can’t see, can’t hear it” policy
- students can have their phone on silent and in their backpack/pocket
- Model the behavior-don’t use your phone in class
Responsive
Solutions*
- Ask students to give you their phone and you put it on your desk till end of class
- Ask students to put it in their pocket or backpack
*Some students
may need to have their phones on in class for emergency reasons (someone is ill
in their family, they have a life threatening disease/illness, etc.). Ask them to share this with you and
allow them to keep their phone on silent or vibrate while in class.
Electronics are extremely
distracting. I know this from
experience. It took me two hours
to “check” my email, facebook, and pinterest so I could “focus” on writing this
post. BUT electronics can be
beneficial to learning if used properly!
Methods for implementing
electronics into your lesson plan:
- Using the internet on the phones/mp3 players to look up definitions (and show you the result)
- When students have a question, have them look it up on their phones (and show you’re the result)
- Recording videos for presentations
- Write responses to questions for quick assessment
- Take pictures of notes on the board or picture
- Calculate a math problem
Remember you will probably have to try multiple solutions for each student until you find one that works for you and your class. Remember to try to find the reason, explain your expectations, and be consistent!
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