The PINNACLE-Text Only Version
A Continuous Climb Toward Effectiveness

Click here for the full graphics version

  1. In either column, choose a subject (starting at the bottom of either side, and working your way up to the top) to revisit powerful truths that lead to more effective teacher-student interactions, all of which build the foundation for higher achievement in your classroom.
  2. Ask yourself which subjects act as stumbling blocks, preventing you from reaching new heights in your teaching experience. Self-reflect on your growth as an educator with an honest and thoughtful appraisal of your teaching habits, your attitudes toward children, and how they have developed over the years.
  3. Construct a professional growth plan for addressing these areas.
Independent Thinking

Procedures

Likes and Dislikes

Stress and Threats

Desire

Dreams and Aspirations

An Inviting Classroom

Precarious Self-Respect

Basic Needs

Fairness versus Sameness

| TABLE OF CONTENTS | THE PROFESSIONAL EDGE | ON A PERSONAL NOTE | CONTENT COLISEUM | CLOSE |



Basic Needs:

Children need these basics: 1) to feel loved, 2) to feel accepted, and 3) to feel adequate. How do you know that your students' basic needs are met?

I asked Eddie one day why he thought he was doing so much better than last year. "It's because I like myself now when I'm with you," he replied.

(A teacher quoted by Everett Shostrom in Man, The Manipulator)

Click on the "Dream Builder" and the "Trouble Terminator" links (below) for resources your students can use today.

BACK TO TOP



An Inviting Classroom:

How inviting is your classroom? Do your comments, behavior, ways you phrase questions, and physical environment invite students to risk trying and failing? If your students start the day out badly, is it made better when they see you? If your students feel stupid before coming into your class, do they feel smarter when they leave?

For outstanding tips to make your classroom more inviting, see Mychal Wynn's book, Building Dreams: Elementary School Edition. It is full of reproducibles for things like interest/personality inventories, posters with excellent classroom rules, sample "class mottos," sample class pledges, super bulletin board ideas, effective discipline ideas, an outstanding end-of-the-year student survey, and much more!

Click on the "Dream Builder" link (below) for a resource your students can use today.

BACK TO TOP



Desire:

What and how much children learn is directly related to whether or not they WANT to come to school. How do you know if your students want to come to your classroom?

Click on the "Solutions" link (below) if you have some students that dread coming to school because of behavior problems displayed by other classmates.

BACK TO TOP



Likes and Dislikes:

When was the last time you seriously asked your students what they like and dislike about the classroom and the way their days are structured? When was the last time you administered a learning styles and interest inventory? Do you know what interests them and what they want to learn? Ask your class what is the most frustrating thing that happens to them in class every day.

Click on the "Dream Builder" link (below) for a resource your students can use today.

BACK TO TOP



Independent Thinking:

Do you allow time for children to do their own thinking, explore their own ideas, and come to their own conclusions?

When fourth graders in a variety of classrooms (representing a range of teaching styles and socioeconomic backgrounds) were asked what their teachers most wanted them to do, they didn't say, "Ask thoughtful questions" or "Make responsible decisions" or "Help others." They said, "Be quiet, don't fool around, and get our work done on time."
(Alfie Kohn, Punished by Rewards)

What do you think? Are we rewarding children for mindless obedience?

BACK TO TOP



Procedures:

"A smooth-running class is the responsibility of the teacher, and it is based on the teacher’s ability to teach procedures."
Harry Wong

Are you looking for fantastic classroom management ideas and successful classroom procedures? Harry Wong's book, The First Days of School, is a great way to get started! (Your media center probably has a copy somewhere on a shelf.)

Click on the "Classroom Management" link (below) for online teacher resources.
Click on the "Solutions" link (below) for valuable information on managing behavior problems.

BACK TO TOP



Stress and Threats:

Brain researchers point out two cardinal rules to follow in the classroom if we want our students to learn more and retain more: 1) remove THREAT and STRESS from your classroom and 2) enrich like crazy!

Are you conscious of teaching habits that could make your students feel "threatened?" Do you make every effort not to embarrass children in front of their peers, parents, or other adults? Have you been working on ways to enrich your students' learning by increasing the abundance and variety of student options in your classroom and providing choice?

Click on the "Teachley’s Believe It or Not" link (below) to learn a variety of quick and easy teaching strategies, based on brain research, that enhance classroom instruction. You will be amazed at what you learn!

Teaching with the Brain in Mind, by Eric Jensen, is an easy-to-understand book that outlines highly effective and practical instructional strategies that you can use to promote increased learning that is retained longer.

BACK TO TOP



Dreams and Aspirations:

Do you listen to the dreams and aspirations of your students and nurture them toward achieving those dreams and living a full life?

"The mediocre teacher tells.
The good teacher explains.
The superior teacher demonstrates.
The great teacher inspires."
-William Arthur Ward

For outstanding tips to make your classroom more inviting, see Mychal Wynn's book, Building Dreams: Elementary School Edition. It is full of reproducibles for things like interest/personality inventories, posters with excellent classroom rules, sample "class mottos," sample class pledges, super bulletin board ideas, effective discipline ideas, an outstanding end-of-the-year student survey and much more!

Click on the "Dream Builder" link (below) for a resource your students can use today.

BACK TO TOP



Precarious Self-Respect:

Do you assume that pupils come to school with distorted self-images? Are you cautious in situations that affect their precarious self-respect? Do you monitor your comments because you know how they can trigger delicate inner feelings?

Unlike ships, human relations founder on pebbles, not reefs. A teacher can be most destructive or most instructive in dealing with everyday problems. "Good discipline is a series of little victories in which a teacher, through small decencies, reaches a child's heart."
(Haim Ginott, Teacher & Child)

Click on the "Teachley’s Believe It or Not" link (below) to learn more about what happens in the brains of your students when they are subjected to painful or threatening experiences.

BACK TO TOP



Fairness versus Sameness:

Discuss with a peer the concept of sameness versus fairness. Are you working to be more aware of your tone of voice, your body language, and your expectations as you interact with all students (regardless of who their parents are)?


Teachley's
Amazing Talking Brain

Dream
Builder

Trouble
Terminator

Solutions for Handling 117 Misbehaviors

Classroom
Management
Resources


What If Students Gave Pop Quizzes?
POP Quiz 1:
Do you know the true art of questioning?
POP Quiz 2:
How well do you give instructions?
POP Quiz 3:
Do these 4 principles describe our classroom?
POP Quiz 4:
Do these four describe the lessons you taught us yesterday?
POP Quiz 5:
When you plan lessons for tomorrow, will you incorporate these principles?

| TABLE OF CONTENTS | THE PROFESSIONAL EDGE | ON A PERSONAL NOTE | CONTENT COLISEUM | CLOSE |



BACK TO TOP

Home | © 2001-2008 Donna Sawyer. All rights reserved. | Cited Works | Acknowledgements | Contact Us