CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT INTRODUCTION
As an early educator, you’re shaping the minds and hearts of our youngest learners. However, some days can be incredibly challenging, especially when classroom behavior becomes difficult. You're not alone if you struggle to maintain a positive and productive learning environment. Classroom management is a vital skill that can make or break your teaching experience, particularly in kindergarten, preschool, and elementary settings. This guide is here to help you navigate those challenges with effective classroom management strategies and the power of Social Emotional Learning (SEL) techniques.
SECTION 1: UNDERSTANDING CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT
What do we mean by classroom management?
Classroom management is more than just maintaining order; it's about creating an environment where students feel secure and confident in learning. It involves clear expectations, equitable rules that make sense, and the support children need to successfully meet those expectations and rules. It can include thinking through the flow, the rules, and the room, but many times, it's as simple as the words you use. Children know what to do, and the support they need helps them do it. At the same time, the teachers are also able to do their job with reduced disruptive behaviors and more instructional time.Â
Why Classroom Management Needs to be more than Rules:
When a teacher plans a fantastic lesson and follow-up activity, but the class is derailed by disruptions as minor as repeatedly asking for the same directions to bigger ones, like children fighting, not only is learning not happening, but stress is rising, impacting everyone in the room. Stress causes a release of cortisol, inhibiting the ability to think, listen, and learn. Effective classroom management can prevent many of these frustrations, allowing teachers and students to focus, learn, and build skills. When children and teachers feel less stress, they are both more effective. So, not only are you able to increase learning time, but you also free the brain to learn and create. When students know what to do next and feel safe, respected, and supported, they can participate, and teachers can teach.
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SECTION 2: ESSENTIAL CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT STRATEGIESÂ
Deciding On Your Rules And Expectations And Making Them Clear:
One step is being clear yourself (and with other adults in the room). So often, our lack of clarity makes it difficult. For example, can children choose where they sit? Do they have to wear the jacket they brought, or bring it out? Can children take out art materials? If so, which ones? And is that clear? What about saving seats? How about moving from one area to another, and when should we clean up? Can kids climb up the slide, and if so, when is that ok? Do they always have to raise their hands to talk in circle? And what is the expectation when they want a toy someone has?Â
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The Next Step Is Finding The Words To Make Those Expectations Clear And Concrete:
You have probably heard that saying things in the negative can be, well, negative, such as Stop it! , No! Don’t run!....and you are trying to word things in the positive, like, “Walk!”. That is more conducive to a positive environment and, in fact, more likely to change behavior when children are moving fast, a little impulsive, excited, or stressed, as the child does not have to process the negative and come up with what to do, making them more likely to follow through.Â
However, saying things like, “Be kind,” “Listen,” “Be careful,” or other vague directions are not effective. But saying clear and specific things is much more effective, such as, “Hold the railing on the stairs.” “Wear your jacket outside and put it on the bench if you get hot.” “Sit where your name is.” “Choose a seat and then stay in it regardless of who sits nearby,” or “Call one another by your name."
Classroom management ideas in early education. So start by coming up with that list, either with your teaching partner or even with a student; what are some rules of your classroom, and how will you word them? Know that as issues come up, you will revisit this process. For example, you bring in a new light table for science. Some children are experimenting with many materials at the table. It seems too much, and you’re starting to worry that the table may crack. If you simply start saying, “That’s too much!” or “Be careful,” you end up repeating that daily. What is the rule? Is it clear, or do you need to talk it through? Then how will you make that clear as a positive, concrete, and specific expectation?
Classroom discipline for early educators, when children exceed your boundaries
 While some consequences might be set for all if you push in line, you move to the back. Often, they are more likely to be specific to students or situations. Be sure your consequences are effective. To do so, they must be:
- As related to the behavior as possible. In other words, if a child leaves a mess at their table, they have to clean it up. If they do not give someone a turn, they may lose their next turn.Â
- Adequate in strength but not too strong. This may be different for different children. Losing a few minutes on the playground for tagging too hard may be the right level of strength. Losing all of the recess is too strong and will leave the child more focused on the unfairness than what they did wrong.Â
- As close as possible to the behavior. So, if a child interrupts and is told they may miss the pizza party on Friday or lose an end-of-day reward, this is not as likely to be effective. Conversely, if they continue to interrupt others when asked to wait their turn to speak, they may need to move their seat at the moment next to the teacher.Â
And as a note on consequences, try first giving the clear expectation without immediately linking it to the consequence. In other words try saying the positive expectation…, pick up your art supplies before you go, give him a turn to use the monkey bars before you go again, tag with one finger, talk when I am finished talking…and give them a chance to do it. If they do not, then give one warning (1 is more effective than several or none). In this way, they are more likely to begin to develop self control. Â
Create Systems That Lead To Success, Classroom Management Tips For Educators:
When thinking about classroom management, you want to set your students and yourself up for success. Therefore, any classroom management plan must align with what we know about challenging behavior. Challenging behavior is caused by stress and the students' lagging skills to behave well. So, ideally, when you set the children up for success, consider how your day is structured and whether your room is set up for success. Besides making the expectations really clear, consider the following:
- Do I have a predictable routine that students understand?  Do students have opportunities to move, learn in different ways, and get needed breaks? Do they know the schedule? Is it posted in a way that this age group can understand?Â
- Have I set up the space for success?  Can students access materials, or do they have to ask me for everything? Are things labeled?
Check for issues that can be solved without conflict. If the housekeeping is right where the 3-year-olds line up and they continually play with it in line, cover or move those materials. How might you set up that transition differently if getting ready for lunch creates conflicts near their lockers or cubbies?
Ensure That You Are Consistent And Equitable In How You Enforce Rules:
Consistency in enforcing rules and routines is crucial. When students know what to expect, they are more likely to follow the rules. Inconsistency can lead to confusion and increased misbehavior. For example, what if you tell the class to raise their hands, but you sometimes respond to correct answers when they do not raise their hand? If there are times when they CAN call out, make that clear. Otherwise, keep this guideline for everyone.Â
Check your bias. If your rule is that they have to take turns to be the line leader, but a student who tends to make your life easier is given the role out of turn, this sends the wrong message to your students. Also, avoid systems that are impossible to manage with any accuracy. For example, a teacher who lets the child who “did a good job” during the lesson get the job of passing out papers is inherently unfair. There is no way you have a valid way to rank who did the best job, nor do they.
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SECTION 3: THE IMPACT OF SOCIAL EMOTIONAL LEARNING (SEL) ON CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT BEHAVIOR STRATEGIES
The Role of SEL in Classroom Management
Social-emotional learning (SEL) is critical to an effective and meaningful learning environment. We know that when children have social-emotional competencies, they are happier and do better in academics. If you’re a teacher, this is no surprise. It's hard to learn (or teach) when there are challenging behaviors in the classroom. So, your behavior management plans should be aligned with your social-emotional learning. If you teach children to talk through conflict or share feelings but simply put children in time out when a conflict occurs, there is a disconnect. Children learn social and emotional skills through relationships with emotionally skilled adults in real time and through real challenges.Â
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Building Emotional Awareness requires more than emotion charts
When children develop self-awareness of their feelings and needs, they are more likely to express those needs effectively and ultimately begin to understand others. And they certainly cannot develop skills to manage emotions they don’t yet identify. Self-awareness is the foundation for all other social-emotional skills. It develops through relationships with emotionally skilled adults who can understand, accept, and reflect the feelings and perspectives of children. While books, activities, and emotion charts can build vocabulary and start the conversation, adult’s response to children’s feelings and emotions is genuinely how self-awareness develops.
- Listen to understand the feelings and perspectives of the child, even when the behavior may not be accepted. For example, when a child says, “Math is boring,” listen and observe to understand why this child may be struggling with math and what feeling might be at the heart of this comment.
- Reflect on the feelings and concerns of children without judgment. This can be simple responses such as, “The test did not feel fair to you,” “You wish we were staying outside longer,” etc. This is a lot harder than it seems. It takes skill and practice to develop this ability while still maintaining control and expectations. In our classes, we help teachers develop the skills and language to build self-awareness.
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Fostering Positive Relationships Leads to More Effective Classroom Management Methods
Children who have positive relationships with their teachers are more likely to learn and succeed. Studies have shown that children who have closer relationships with their teachers perform better academically, have closer relationships with their peers, and are more motivated than children who have more conflictual teacher-student relationships. To build those relationships, teachers need to have skills first to understand and accept the feelings of their students, but also to make clear their concerns and feelings without judgment. As such, children develop relationship skills with adults and other children. Effective teachers set up their classroom and day to ensure that children have opportunities to talk, collaborate, play, and help one another. Throughout these opportunities, emotionally skilled teachers can help develop relationships with children and among students when they respond effectively, such as:.
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- When there is a conflict or challenge, start by describing what is happening neutrally. This avoids assumptions, bias, and judgment, making room for new understandings and stronger relationships. And helps everyone start with the same awareness. For example, if you see two children trying to get in the same chair, and one child falls, rather than saying, “You are being too rough.” or “See what happens when you push.” simply start with a neutral description, such as “You both tried to sit in the chair at the same time, and Ryan is on the floor.” This decreases defensiveness and gives an opportunity to understand what happened without judgment. This is harder than it sounds. There are so many assumptions and judgments that come through our language and create barriers to strong relationships. Try our mini-lesson on neutral descriptions in our free mini-course.Â
- Offer empathy for how the children might feel before any additional agenda. When children feel understood, they are more likely to be able to hear and understand others. So, in the same situation as the two children, empathy would include statements such as, “Ouch, you ended up on the floor. That must hurt.” and “You both wanted to sit in that same chair.” Empathy is difficult, especially when you also need to set clear expectations and get control. In our course Compassion and Control, you can learn how to offer the empathy and compassion children need AND still set clear expectations and maintain control.Â
- Share your feelings and why. This is hard, but when children can understand your feelings and perspectives authentically without judgment, they can build the social awareness they need to understand you and others. So rather than simply saying, “That is not nice/safe,” try sharing your genuine concern…”I am worried that you are getting hurt, and I want you to have a fair way of choosing a seat.” This skill takes time, and there is a fine line between sharing your concern and a “guilt trip.” Our courses teach parents and teachers the skills and language to do this effectively. So you feel heard, and children understand how their actions impact others.
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Promoting Self-Regulation and a key for classroom management behavior strategies
Self-regulation is both the ability to control one’s behaviors AND develop the self motivation to persist as well. In other words, it requires the ability to first understand how you are feeling and then manage your own response to it to refrain from doing something you should not do OR to persist and do something you don’t want to do but have to. Some strategies that help children develop self-management skills include:
- Reinforcing children very specifically when they demonstrate any small steps that demonstrate self-regulation. Such as:” Even though he took your chair, you came to get help and kept your hands to yourself.” Or “You kept working until all the pieces fit in the puzzle. That took some perseverance!” Remember that children need five forms of positive feedback to each constructive or negative feedback to learn and grow. And yet, how you offer the feedback matters. In our courses, we teach the specific feedback children need to develop their self-management skills.
- State your expectations of what children are TO DO in this situation clearly and specifically. When adults say, “Share,” “Be a kind friend,” or even “Listen,” children are less able to think about what TO DO to meet that expectation and even more so when stressed, excited, or impulsive. When adults give clarity, such as, “Walk in the classroom,” “Raise your hand and wait for me to call on you.”, “Call her by her name and ask her to stop.” children are more likely to follow through and have an opportunity to build self-control. Often, children need more than that, and in our course, Compassion and Control, we teach the specific steps to get control in such a way as to build self-control at the same time.Â
- A note on calm down corners: keep in mind that many children DO need a place to reset and get a break when stress is high. And you might need a break, too, before you can help. Consider this a space to take a break rather than a “calm down corner.” Children develop self-regulation through co-regulation, and any directive to “calm down” sends the message that children can and should calm their emotions independently without support or justice. By offering a way to take a break, the child may feel better or simply get the space they need before resolving the conflict with help.Â
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CONCLUSION: EMPOWERING EARLY EDUCATORS WITH EFFECTIVE CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT
When challenging behavior disrupts your classroom, you often feel like you are simply reacting and not teaching. However, when you have the specific skills and words to respond to children, you will find that you not only avoid power struggles but feel more confident that you can decrease challenging behaviors and lower the stress in your classroom.
Your relationship with the students is the mechanism by which they develop social-emotional skills to behave well. Predictable adult behaviors and skills build social-emotional resiliency, even in the face of stress. At Mariposa Education, we teach those five essential skills and the language needed so you can work smarter, not harder.
Course participant and head start teacher
“My children have learned how to develop the social and emotional skills and abilities to identify the problem articulating their concerns understanding the feeling of each other and making responsible decisions. We are together as a team making executive decisions. I have become aware of how I share my personal feelings along with empathy. No more saying stop that or don't do that, or resolving the behavior too quickly. I am using the 5 Mariposa skills. ….
I wish this could have been provided to us teachers like 20 years ago I would have never reached a high stress level trying to work with challenging students with challenging behaviors.”
EXPLORE OUR OPTIONS FORÂ SEL TRAINING
Social-Emotional Learning That Actually Works: Reducing Stress and Unlearning Misguided Approaches
If you want to build social-emotional skills in your students but typical SEL courses aren’t working, this course is for you.
The teaching field has changed dramatically:
- Challenging classroom behavior is on the rise
- Teacher burnout is higher than everÂ
- Even experienced teachers are at a loss
Most social-emotional learning (SEL) strategies focus on fixing childrens’ behavior without addressing the needs of teachers. At Mariposa, we give you the language, tools, and science behind childrens’ behavior that you can use to inform every student interaction, making SEL a built-in part of your teaching rather than an added burden.
Our introduction to the Mariposa Method is an online, self-paced course created by educators for educators.
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