At PNA we use The Responsive Classroom Approach. It is a way of teaching that fosters safe, challenging and joyful classroom and schoolwide climates for all students. Using this approach we understand that all of a students' needs - academic, social, emotional and physical - are important. This is teaching to the whole child. At PNA we create an environment that responds to all of those needs using practical strategies for bringing together social and academic learning throughout the school day so that your child can do his or her best learning. Key responisve classroom practices include the following: - Morning Meeting - Guided Discovery - Creating Rules - Classroom Organization - Interactive Modeling - Academic Choice - Teacher Language - Collaborative Problem Solving - Logical Consequence - Working with Families The Morning Meeting is an integral part of Responsive Classroom and starts the day of in a positive, engaging and fun manner as well as bringing students together, building peer relations and developing social skills. Each and every morning meeting consists of:
In first grade we have created 2 special boards for the students to use. Our 'How do you feel today?' board is a great tool for students to use to express themselves espically as it can sometimes be tricky to describe your emotions. Students choose where to put their face, on a emotion that they are feeling. This can then be used to prompt a discussion with the student to foster a positive and welcoming class environment. "I notice you have put your face on sad. What has caused you to feel this way?" "Did you speak to your friends about how you were feeling?" "What choices could we have made instead?" "I see you are excited what are you looking forward to?" Our class of Little Monsters has their own Little Monster Helper jobs board. Classroom jobs can help build a sense of excitement, community, and interdependence in a classroom from the very start of the school year. Classroom jobs also teach children responsibility. As Chip Wood has said, “The only way for children to learn responsibility is to have responsibility.” In The Whole Brain Child, Daniel Siegel and Tina Bryson explain how recent brain research explains why this is true—in order to develop decision-making and reasoning skills, children need opportunities to exercise and practice doing those things. Classroom jobs give students such chances, and they also give students a chance to be responsible in a meaningful way: the children know that completing their job helps their classmates or their teacher (or both). It is the students classroom not just the teachers. Comments are closed.
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Hali TuomiMs. Tuomi has over five years experience in ASD, where she taught first and fifth grade classrooms. An avid skier, Ms. Tuomi is a Magna Cum Laude graduate of Alaska Pacific University’s Bachelor of Arts in K-8 Education. Archives
April 2021
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