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Classroom management is traditionally a matter of encouraging good
behavior and discouraging bad by doling out rewards and
punishments. But studies show that when educators empower students
to address and correct misbehavior among themselves, positive
results are longer lasting and more wide reaching. In Better Than
Carrots or Sticks, longtime educators and best-selling authors
Dominique Smith, Douglas Fisher, and Nancy Frey provide a practical
blueprint for creating a cooperative and respectful classroom
climate in which students and teachers work through behavioral
issues together. After a comprehensive overview of the roots of the
restorative practices movement in schools, the authors explain how
to: Establish procedures and expectations for student behavior that
encourage the development of positive interpersonal skills. Develop
a nonconfrontational rapport with even the most challenging
students. Implement conflict resolution strategies that prioritize
relationship building and mutual understanding over finger-pointing
and retribution. Rewards and punishments may help to maintain order
in the short term, but they're at best superficially effective and
at worst counterproductive. This book will prepare teachers at all
levels to ensure that their classrooms are welcoming, enriching,
and constructive environments built on collective respect and
focused on student achievement.
The curiosity-stirring, can-do handbook for building inclusive
cultures With one click we can make our camera lens switch from
portrait to landscape, so why can’t we find a simple way to
broaden our perspectives on equity? Because human beings are wildly
complex, for one thing. But this potent guide simplifies, providing
concrete techniques for becoming expansive educators capable of
engaging every student. Chapter assets include: Compelling research
to support why it’s urgent we embrace foundational fairness—and
why even subtle words can have massive effects on students’ sense
of potential Questions and prompts that help you build inclusive
thinking into your expectations of students, your feedback,
grading, and approaches to discipline Activities, discussion
frames, and debate structures that support students’ exploration
of complex topics Ideas for engaging staff, leadership, family, and
the community in ways that reveal strength Social justice work is
not "other;" it’s not extra. It’s student agency work. It’s
what keeps so many of us educators up at night, worried about why
some of our learners aren’t engaged. With this book, they will be
engaged, because they will know you believe in their abilities, and
now know how to show that every day.
Imagine a school with a diverse student body where everyone feels
safe and valued, and all—regardless of race, culture, home
language, sexual orientation, gender identity, academic history,
and individual challenges—have the opportunity to succeed with
interesting classes, projects, and activities. In this school,
teachers notice and meet individual instructional needs and foster
a harmonious and supportive environment. All students feel
empowered to learn, to grow, and to pursue their dreams. This is
the school every student needs and deserves. In Building Equity,
Dominique Smith, Nancy Frey, Ian Pumpian, and Douglas Fisher,
colleagues at San Diego's innovative Health Sciences High &
Middle College, introduce the Building Equity Taxonomy, a new model
to clarify the structural and interpersonal components of an
equitable and excellent schooling experience, and the Building
Equity Review and Audit, survey-based tools to help school and
teacher leaders uncover equity-related issues and organize their
efforts to achieve: Physical integration. Social-emotional
engagement. Opportunity to learn. Instructional excellence. Engaged
and inspired learners. Built on the authors' own experiences and
those of hundreds of educators throughout the United States, this
book is filled with examples of policy initiatives and practices
that support high-quality, inclusive learning experiences and
deliver education that meets critical standards of equality and
equity.
Disrupting the cycle starts with you. No matter how conscientious
we are, we carry implicit bias… which quickly turns into
assumptions and then labels. Labels define our interactions with
and expectations of students. Labels contribute to student identity
and agency. And labels can have a negative effect beyond the
classroom. It’s crucial, then, that teachers remove labels and
focus on students’ strengths—but this takes real work at an
individual, classroom, and schoolwide scale. Removing Labels
urges you to take an active approach toward disrupting the negative
effects of labels and assumptions that interfere with student
learning. This book offers: 40 practical, replicable teaching
techniques—all based in research and best practice—that focus
on building relationships, restructuring classroom engagement and
management, and understanding the power of social and emotional
learning Suggestions for actions on an individual,
classroom, and schoolwide level Ready-to-go tools and
student-facing printables to use in planning and instruction
Removing Labels is more than a collection of teaching
strategies—it’s a commitment to providing truly responsive
education that serves all children. When you and your colleagues
take action to prevent negative labels from taking hold, the whole
community benefits.
While social and emotional learning (SEL) is most familiar as
compartmentalized programs separate from academics, the truth is,
all learning is social and emotional. What teachers say, the values
we express, the materials and activities we choose, and the skills
we prioritize all influence how students think, see themselves, and
interact with content and with others. If you teach kids rather
than standards, and if you want all kids to get what they need to
thrive, Nancy Frey, Douglas Fisher, and Dominique Smith offer a
solution: a comprehensive, five-part model of SEL that's easy to
integrate into everyday content instruction, no matter what subject
or grade level you teach. You'll learn the hows and whys of:
Building students' sense of identity and confidence in their
ability to learn, overcome challenge, and influence the world
around them. Helping students identify, describe, and regulate
their emotional responses. Promoting the cognitive regulation
skills critical to decision making and problem solving. Fostering
students' social skills, including teamwork and sharing, and their
ability to establish and repair relationships. Equipping students
to becoming informed and involved citizens. Along with a toolbox of
strategies for addressing 33 essential competencies, you'll find
real-life examples highlighting the many opportunities for social
and emotional learning within the K-12 academic curriculum.
Children's social and emotional development is too important to be
an add-on or an afterthought, too important to be left to chance.
Use this book's integrated SEL approach to help your students build
essential skills that will serve them in the classroom and
throughout their lives.
Cooking with Dominique is brought to you by At home and hungry
cookbooks division, from the author that brought you Happy
valentine's day. 754 books publishing
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