5 Compelling Reasons To Move Around Your Classroom

How often do you move around your room? Do you stay on one or two spots in the class only?

Do you circulate and work the room just like when a host moves around in a party to talk to everyone?

Do you hang out primarily at the teacher’s desk and sit down and talk?

Do you see an imaginary line between you and the front seats in which there is an invisible barrier that prevents you from stepping over the line?

Circulation is one of the teaching strategies master teachers use according to Doug Lemov’s book, teach like a champion.

Move around the class.

The idea behind Circulation is that throughout your lesson, you should be strategically moving around your room.

Here’s 5 compelling reasons to do so:

1) To show the kids you own the room. Yup, it’s your class, not theirs. This is your universe and you’re in control of that universe. They are parts of that universe and they will comply with your rules. In other words, it’s part of classroom management, a critical component to master to become a great teacher.

2) By circulating and moving around, you show that you don’t only go to the students who are misbehaving and you want to stop the misbehavior.

You move because it’s part of how you teach. It’s all part of the package of being a teacher. 

 Classroom Control

By doing this, you show that the students don’t control any territory in the classroom. You control the territory.

Establish this early in the school year and your students will know they have no safe zone where they can evade your influence and control.

Everything is geared to learning. 

 3) You circulate to engage your students.

Engage them.  This keeps everyone on their toes and makes them focused on the task at hand.

When you move around, make frequent and nonverbal interventions. Did you see Aira making some spelling mistakes, tell her to check her spelling. Is Tom chatting with his seatmate? Tap him on his shoulder to remind him to get back to work.

Engagement also means positive reinforcement. So if you see them doing the right things, acknowledge it through positive feedback and nonverbal communication like a smile or a nod.

Little things go a long way. 

4) To show that you are not always predictable.

Predictable is boring. It does not enchant.

So when you move in your room, do it systematically yet in an unpredictable way. Do not follow the same pattern of movement all the time or else your students will figure it out.

5) Classroom Control

You demonstrate power when you move strategically in your room. Always remember to face as much of the class as possible.

You do know what happens when you turn your back on them. 

Try to face your class often.

According to Lemov, the most powerful position to be in with another person is one where you can see him, he knows you can see him, and he can’t see you.

That’s why sometimes standing at the back of the class where you can see everyone during a discussion builds a subtle yet pervasive control of the entire classroom.

BONUS Reason: Exercise :)

In the comments below, share your thoughts on circulating in your class.

How often do you circulate and how useful is this strategy to you? 

****

Don’t miss exclusive content (unpublished on this site) and other exciting resources. Drop your email below for our mailing list :)

Argee Abadines

Argee Abadines is the founder and chief content engineer of this website. He is a brain based educator and his educational interests are higher order thinking, creativity, and educational technology. He reads up regularly about trends in education and online media. You can visit his personal blog at pinoyminimalist.com

More Posts - Website

6 Brilliant Ways to Stretch the Mind of your Students

In the last post, we talked about the need to provide challenging work to your students. You also know that you should maintain high standards of excellence in your class.

This third strategy in the Teach Like A Champion Series goes a step further from simply getting the correct answer from your students.

This strategy is called STRETCH IT.

Stretch The Minds

 

With this strategy you reward the correct answers of your students with follow up questions. You don’t simply say, “That’s correct, Good Job!” You probe deeper into their answer. You test for reliability. You ask them to defend their answer and apply their answers in a different setting.

When I read this strategy and reflected on it, I realized it’s a very powerful strategy. I personally will want to apply it more in class. Why?

  • Enhances higher order thinking skills of students
  • Brilliant assessment technique for teachers
  • A reward system for students (differentiated instruction)

Let me discuss each point.

Higher Order Thinking Skills

There is established research that tells us that when we ask quality and challenging questions to students, we ignite their higher order thinking skills, which helps students become more creative and be able to handle more challenging work.

Assessment Technique

Yes, it’s an informal assessment technique, but a good one nonetheless. We remove the possibility of guesswork or just partial mastery on the part of students when we ask them follow up questions after they give the correct answer.

When one can defend their answer correctly, no one can assume  that it was luck or tsamba.

Reward System (Differentiated Instruction)

Your students will have varying levels of ability at any one point. This technique will allow you to practice differentiated instruction.

So you can give varying follow up questions of varying difficulty level to your students. You give simpler questions to your weaker students and more challenging questions to those who excel in your class.

Here are 6 ways you can stretch the mind of your students.

Six Ways to Ask Follow Up Questions

1) Ask How or Why: Ask your students how they arrived at the answer.

2) Ask for another way to answer. (This is perfect for questions that have multiple ways to derive the answer, like Math)

3) Ask for a better word. (This helps students develop specific and technical vocabulary and to be aware of the variety of ways to express something.)

4) Ask for evidence. (This is perfect for social sciences and literature) Have them give proof to solidify their opinion and stand.

5) Ask them to integrate a related skill. This reinforces previously learned skills. It helps them connect the different things they study.

6) Ask them to apply the same skill in a new setting or situation. Find connections in your topic and challenge your students to see the connections. Can your topic be applied in other topics?

**

So there, 6 powerful ways to challenge your students. Have you been using this strategy already? How often do you give follow up questions to the correct answers of your students?

Share them in the comments below :)

Also, follow us on Twitter and Facebook Page.

You can also get the Teach Like a Champion Book online.

 

Argee Abadines

Argee Abadines is the founder and chief content engineer of this website. He is a brain based educator and his educational interests are higher order thinking, creativity, and educational technology. He reads up regularly about trends in education and online media. You can visit his personal blog at pinoyminimalist.com

More Posts - Website