Literacy

Professional Development

July 9, 2017

Teaching Expectations vs. Rules

Before the school begins our rooms are set up, copies are made, and our teacher hearts are ready to begin the year strong. Even with the best of intentions and preparation, our classroom will begin to struggle without an effective plan in place to communicate our expectations.

Teaching students expectations at the beginning of the year and forming those powerful words together helps your classroom become a community.
*Amazon affiliate links used below.

Begin the year by allowing your students to be a part of the classroom management process. Instead of a teacher made list of the things our students should not do, let them be a part of creating classroom expectations as a group.

Our natural tendency is to have our rules posted and walls filled with useful decorations before the year begins. Not quite yet!

Blank wall space leaves room to grow! Leave a wall available for your chart paper or posters once your classroom expectations have been created.

Rules are simply a list of the things we should not do. Expectations communicate the desired behavior using a positive framework and encouraging responsibility. Simply put, it is a positive reframe that sets the tone for your room.

We must actively think through a few key things before jumping into our class meeting and creating expectations together with our students.

Consider this:

  1. What would be age appropriate expectations for my students?
  2. What top 3 character traits do I want to focus on this year?
  3. What expectations do I feel like are essential for my classroom?

These three questions give you a great starting place to begin leading your students into a productive brainstorming session on classroom expectations. Even my kindergarten students did this, I promise!

Sweet and simple does the trick. Keep the wording to a minimum and create expectations that are easy to remember.  You can always elaborate as you model and practice throughout the school year.

For example:

  • We are responsible
  • We are respectful
  • We are safe
  • We will grow from our mistakes

Read alouds, video clips, and other resources are a great starting point to launch into a class brainstorming session on classroom expectations. One of my favorite books to read aloud as we work on this together as a class is Officer Buckle and Gloria.

Teaching classroom expectations is made simple with this popular read aloud during back to school time!

Once you have created a list that both the classroom and teacher agree on, then edit it, make a final copy. and post in the classroom for all to see throughout the entire school year.

Teaching classroom expectations is made simple with this popular read aloud during back to school time!

Enjoy this time with your students and use it as a tool to learn more about what they value in a safe classroom. That’s right! I’m suggesting you ditch the list of pre-made rules that you already had laminated and launch into a creative meeting with your students on what your classroom should look and sound like! You never know until you try!

Teaching students expectations at the beginning of the year and forming those powerful words together helps your classroom become a community.

pin it

Happy Teaching,

Amanda

EASILY PLAN YOUR K-2 READING SMALL GROUPS​

Want to use the latest research to boost your readers during small groups? This FREE guide is packed with engaging ideas to help them grow!

Hi, I'm Amanda

I’m a K-1 teacher who is passionate about making lessons your students love and that are easy to implement for teachers.  Helping teachers like you navigate their way through their literacy block brings me great joy. I am a lifelong learner who loves staying on top of current literacy learning and practices. Here, you’ll find the tools you need to move your K-2 students forward!

Topics

Literacy
Math
Science
Writing
Digital
Soc St

You may also enjoy...

2 Responses

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Which type of professional development interests you?