Culturally Responsive Classroom Planning Worksheet Expectations & Routines
Culturally Responsive Classroom Planning Worksheet Expectations & Routines
Identify some things it will be important to know about your students and their families to
be an effective teacher for all of your students.
I want to know what my students are interested in and their cultural background. I want to know
what food, sports, books, music that they enjoy to do on there free time. I want t to know what parents
attend an open house or what parents are involved in the school. As a teacher, I would like to send a
letter about myself and who I am would be a great way to connect with kids and the parents. I would
like to do a fun worksheet hand out to the kids with questions about them, strength, and interest,
something they want to learn this upcoming year.
_________________________
2.
Describe a plan for getting to know your students and their families.
I would design a game that we played to start the year off trying to get to know my students.
There would be a beach ball with 5 to 6 different questions for example, what is your favorite food? Or
where did you go on vacation? I would do fun little questionnaire to get to know my students.
A
plan I would do with the parents is send out a letter about who I am and my goals for the school year. I
would write some personal things but keep it professional.
__________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________
3.
Describe how you plan to establish a positive connection with your students and their
families from the start of the school year.
I feel like a great way to start some positive connections with your students is to share some personal
appropriate information about myself. Maybe share why I went into education my expectations for
the year and some academic goals I want for the students and myself.
_________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
DEFINING & TEACHING BEHAVIORAL EXPECTATIONS & ROUTINES
Borgmeier (2008). Portland State University
4.
Identify the primary behavioral expectations to teach to your chosen instructional group
that will set your students and you up for success in maximizing instructional time.
Make your behavioral expectations Specific, Concise and Comprehensive.
Rationale
Respect/Safe
Respect
Respect
Responsible
5.
Develop a poster or table tent to use as a visual reminder to post your behavioral
expectations as a prompt and reminder for students (attach a copy of your visual).
6.
Identify five high priority procedures/routines to teach to your instructional group that will
set your students and you up for success in maximizing instructional time.
Procedures/Routine
1. Grab a seat
2. Materials out
3. Work on warm-up
4. Go over warm-up
Rationale
Maximize time of instruction, no need to
remind students to take a seat when the bell
rings
Easy transition from bell ringing to start of
class
Students practice what they learned last
period
Teacher goes over warm-up questions with
the students model first question, lead the 2nd,
rest of warm up students do alone for test.
5.
7.
Select 1 routine from above to task analyze (identify each specific step in the sequence
students will need to complete to do the routine successfully)
Identify one of the behavioral expectations or procedures/routines above and complete the
lesson planning form on the next page and teach that expectation or routine.
(As a beginning teacher, you may want to complete a lesson plan for each expectation/
routine until you are fluent with the process of planning and teaching behavioral lessons.)
Borgmeier (2008). Portland State University
9.
Describe your schedule (minutes per day & how many days) for teaching behavioral
expectations & classroom procedures/routines during the first days/week you are with your
students to ensure they master the targeted expectations, procedures and routines.
I will set aside about 3 to 7 minutes a day for about the first 2-3 days of implementing my behavior
expectation and classroom procedures. I will have a visual reminder on the overhead of my
expectations. I will model the exspecation to the student my expectations with a 5:1 ratio of the right
way to do it and the wrong way to do it. The students and I will practice the expectations together as
a whole. Next, I will test the students by calling on them and asking them to show me independently
what the expectation is and praise the students who do it correctly. Example (Wow I love how
(name) is grabbing his notebook and going right to work on his Math warm-up!)
After explicitly teaching behavioral expectations and procedures/routines during the first
days/week you work with them:
10.
Describe the process you will use to quickly review/revisit the expectations & routines on a
daily basis at the beginning of your instructional group each day.
For the first couple days of implementing this I will keep up the expectation visually on the
overhead while the kids come into the class. I will maybe test them and reward/ praise the kids who
show me they can do the expectation independently without a reminder from teacher (Me).
would answer the question. Then I would do something like a 5:1 ratio of correct to incorrect ways to
answer the question.
Test/Independent Practice: I would test the students by having prompt easy questions on the overhead
and ask them to show me how smart intelligent students would answer this question? I would praise the
students who do it correctly and correct the students who need a little more practice with this expectation.
Have each student go through this expectation.
Step 6: Responding to Behavior in Classroom & Role Play
Reinforcement for Expected Behavior
Corrective Feedback for Misbehavior
Give specific examples of what to say/do
Give specific examples of what to say/do
I love how ____ is raising his/her hand
Ask students to look at our expectation
ready to answer the question. Wow great
job!
wall and ask them to repeat the
expectations
Give out some type of physical gesture like
Adapted by C. Borgmeier, from Langland, S., Lewis-Palmer, T., & Sugai, G. (1998). Teaching respect in the classroom: An
instructional approach. Journal of Behavioral Education, 8, 245-262 and Walker, H. M., Colvin, G., & Ramsey, E. (1995). Antisocial
behavior in school: Strategies and best practices. Pacific Grove: Brooks/Cole Publishing Company
11.
Prioritize 5 specific statements you will use to regularly acknowledge students for the
behavioral expectations you identified above. Be sure to specifically label the desired
behavior within each statement.
Match w/
Expectation or
Routine above
(E3 or R1)
R1
E2
c. I like how (name) has his/her materials out and working on the warm
up
R2
d. I love how (name) is sitting square in his chair and not bouncing
around
E1
e. Thank you (name) for having your materials out and grabbing your
notebook and writing down the math problems.
R3
12.
If you or your students require a more formalized group system for consistently
acknowledging desired student behavior describe the system you will implement (e.g.
Student/Teacher Game, handing out tickets/stickers for positive behavior, Point Cards)?
Right now at our school we hand out splash cash when a student exhibits good behavior or
positive behavior (helping putting down chairs, tutoring another student, on task when not ask to be
on task, reads when done with homework) When students have enough splash cash they can go to
the splash cash store to buy candy, gum, scarf and supplies.
13.
What would be potential incentives for the group or for individual students.
The students love playing an academic game called kahoot. So if the students are working hard and
being good students like I know they are, they can play kahoot for a couple times and maybe have
splash cash or sugar free gum as an incentive.
14.
With the system described above what would be the criteria for the group of students to
earn the incentives?
If the students show the behavior that I am looking for, raising hand, quiet, working hard on lesson
or homework. I would give them splash cash and maybe have them leave early for lunch.
Identify 3 problem behaviors you anticipate seeing most often in your classroom
Plan your responses in advance
1. Verbal Redirect What to say in response when the identified problem behavior
occurs provide a clear redirection stating clearly what the student should be doing
instead -- (see handouts 9 variables & Sequence of Steps)
2. Pre-planned consequences the consequence/response you would provide when a
student refuses to comply following the verbal redirection (consequences should
strive to re-teach or have student practice the expected behavior & limit loss of
instructional time)
Example Consequences practice the expected behavior, time owed, loss of
privilege (recess, computer time), write a problem solving form, contact parent,
time-out
Andres Estrada
October 11,2016
Dr. Chris Borgmeir
Reflection
On October 11th I implemented this behavior plan and went through the expectations and
routines I wanted to see out of my students. What went well for me was when I visually showed the
students what I wanted to see out of them throughout class and having them repeat my mnemonic
SEAT. I modeled what I wanted to see right when I walked through the door and did five positive
examples and one negative example. What really helped me was explicitly teaching the routines and
expectations then having the students come back to that visual aid to help them remember what I
wanted to see out of them while I was implementing this behavior plan. Praising the students seemed
like a really good strategy and tip for teachers. I have seen my teacher do this a couple times with
students who are doing a great job at grabbing their notebook and pencil and working on their warmup. When a teacher praises a student who is exhibiting the correct behavior the other students seem
to want to follow that student. There were a couple changes I would do being this was my first time
implementing the behavior plan, one is going over and over the positive way I expect them to come
into the classroom. This was a little time consuming but with middle schoolers I thought more
exposure with positive examples would be good practice for them. In reality, I think the students just
got kind of bored seeing me go through each thing over and over again. A couple of students seemed
disengaged in my instruction and off task when I was around the 4th positive example. For myself, I
felt like I was too jokey with the students and made the environment pretty relaxed. I need to be
stern with the students when providing or teaching my expectation. When I tried to be more serious
with the student, they seemed confused with me and wondered why I changed so quickly with my
own behavior. Since I teach in the morning right now, my students behave pretty well. I have not
seen them after lunch or break time when they have more energy but my lesson went pretty well
Borgmeier (2008). Portland State University
overall. I had my visual aid, SEAT, where the students can see there expectation if they forgot or I
can redirect them easily by pointing it out and having one of the students read it for me. At the start
of class, the students came in and grabbed their notebook and started to copy down the warm-up. I
did get some blurting out or some students not raising their hands so I would model raising my hand,
and then when a student exhibit the correct behavior I said, Thank you (name) for raising your hand
and looking like a brilliant student. Some of the students didnt really see me as an authority in the
classroom, a little more as an aid. So at times they wouldnt listen to my instructions when I asked
them to sit down or stay in their seat or square in the chair. I think as a teacher I need to be careful
being too jokey with the students because they will just see me as a friend not as a teacher and I am
trying to find a fine a line between those two roles. At the end of each lesson I will go over a review
with my students, what they learned. What they need more clarification on. Then rate how
comfortable they feel with the instruction or content I just provided with them that day. The lesson
plan form was very helpful to me. I felt pretty prepared to teach my expectations and routines to my
students and I was not scattered or lost during my instruction. The plan is a great road map for
teachers, they can visually see and write what they are going to do to teach a certain routine or
expectation. I honestly wouldnt change a thing with the behavior plan.