Checklist for the Successful Prevention of Behavior Problems--49 Ideas That Can Help
- _____ Change pace of lesson to meet needs of
students
- _____ Provide transition activities between
assignments
- _____ Make sure students know the relevance
of their assignments
- _____ Deliver instructions in at least two
modalities
- _____ Praise good behavior as often as
possible
- _____ Teach and reteach classroom procedures
- _____ Enforce classroom rules consistently
and fairly
- _____ Call a student’s home while a problem
is still manageable
- _____ Contact a student’s home early in the
year to create a supportive relationship
- _____ Stand in the same area of the classroom
when asking for student attention
- _____ Set reasonable and clear boundaries and
help students observe them
- _____ Present yourself in a professional
manner at all times while you are at school
- _____ Be specific when giving directions
- _____ Make sure that your behavior directives
are positive in tone
- _____ Listen patiently when students are
expressing themselves
- _____ Provide a mixture of activities so that
students can be successful
- _____ Celebrate your students’ successes
- _____ Make sure students have clearly
expressed and obtainable goals
- _____ Design and deliver engaging
instructional activities that encourage active learning
- _____ Model the courtesy you want from your
students
- _____ Provide motivational activities to
inspire your students to want to learn
- _____ Use encouragement to make sure that
students know what to do to be successful.
- _____ Establish classroom signals so that
students can seek help appropriately.
- _____ Follow school rules and observe school
policies. Help your students to do the same.
- _____ Try to ignore as much of the small
stuff as you can.
- _____ Make student success as visible as
possible. Let students see their successes.
- _____ Offer appropriate tangible rewards as
often as necessary and effective.
- _____ Encourage students to work together and
help each other learn.
- _____ Move close to a student who is just
beginning to misbehave.
- _____ Don’t turn your back on a class.
- _____ Don’t ever leave a classroom
unattended.
- _____ Pay attention to the signs that your
students are starting to be restless. Change the activity
sooner rather than later.
- _____ Offer plenty of formative assessments so
that your students will know what to do.
- _____ Stop horseplay as you as you can. It
can quickly escalate into trouble.
- _____ Avoid giving students “free time.”
- _____ Carefully monitor your students
throughout class. Move around.
- _____ Start to build positive and caring
relationships with your students early in the year.
- _____ Present yourself as a well-prepared,
knowledgeable teacher who is clearly in charge.
- _____ Never lower your academic or behavioral
expectations for your students.
- _____ Offer help individually and to larger
groups.
- _____ Try offering your students as many
options about their work as possible.
- _____ Set up the traffic flow in your class so
that students can move around easily.
- _____ Say, “What are you doing to help
yourself learn right now?”
- _____ Make it easy for students to be willing
to take a risk by encouraging an atmosphere of tolerance.
- _____ Be so prepared for class that you can
focus on your students .
- _____ Pay attention to the things that tend to
trigger misbehavior and address them early.
- _____ Provide activities where students can
interact productively with each other .
- _____ Arrange the desks in your classroom so
that you can see every student and every student
can see you.
- _____ Have students settle to work as soon as
they enter class by providing them with engaging
and useful bell work activities.
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