Would any veteran teachers like to advise on how to keep 5th graders from talking back ?
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Review the rules of your classroom. Great teaching starts with great classroom management. Manage the kids well, lessons will be smooth. And stick to your rules! Don;t play favorites.
Offer the appropriate opportunities to talk & socialize. Change up your delivery of the lesson that will encourage the kids to talk and respond in an appropriate way. Then you can encourage a dialogue that can include the talkers. Ask one of them to respond to another student’s answer.
Offer learning opportunites where kids can talk like learning groups/centers. Paired reading. Partner writing.
Finally, respect the students. When you show respect to the class, they honestly respect you in return. They will think you are the world’s greatest teacher and really will do you ask of them-which in your case is to stop talking and disrupting!
Good luck!
EDIT: My mistake. I reread what I wrote and totally skipped the part when you stated this is a concern of your daughter and what is happening in her classrom. My apologies.
Students should be provided with opportunities to converse with their peers – the main thing is are they on task. If they are seeking to abuse this then the teacher needs to work out why they are acting in this manner – then put into place strategies to halt or minimise it first (prevention being better than cure). As any approach based solely on a disciplinary approach will eventually fail if the cause isn’t understood.
Only person who can change the students behaviour is the student. The teachers role is to help them understand the choices they are making are wrong and they have other options – parents can be a great support. With the last resort being a consequence (especially the principal as the student sees the teacher as being unable / unwilling to resolve the situation).
If they are talking back avoid confrontation – state any problems can be discussed at a time that will not interfere with the lesson, say recess or lunch. If they are rude, conduct yourself both professionally and respectfully – as its hard for a parent to side with their child (though many will still try) when it is obvious their child was the only person out of order (so shouting, ridiculing or slamming things wouldn’t be my way to go). You cant expect appropriate behaviour if you don’t model it.
If you aren’t the teacher then any teaching strategies would not be of any real use. You could discuss with the teacher that your daughter is experiencing difficulties learning / concentrating in class, due to being disrupted by other students.
Something that may be overlooked, allow students to vary where they sit each week. They have to earn the right to remain where they are (you are saying you are giving them your trust to being with), so may be more likely to respond when asked to quieten down or stop talking – given the prospect of moving (especially if they have chosen to sit with their entire circle of friends) or being told where to sit in the future.
If still getting the back talk, have the kid call home or work to explain to their parent/s why they cannot maintain at school. Every time they do it. Not after school or recess, right then. Then follow through with something like loss of recess. A couple of phone calls to parents at work outta do the trick.
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