Prioritizing Students with Engaging Strategies for the Classroom

This course will focus on prioritizing your students through strategies you implement in your classroom.  Targeted areas for engagement strategies that will be covered in this course include the following: incorporating movement through instructional strategies, incorporating differentiation through choice boards and checklists, incorporating creativity through a makerspace station and student podcasts, incorporating children’s books as an anticipatory set. Specific strategies will be modeled for each area covered that will provide an overview of how to modify for both K-5 and 6-12 classrooms.  If you are looking for a classroom management refresh, this course will also provide strategies that target classroom pace, grouping, partner strategies, and ways to build classroom routine and effective communication between teacher and student.


Students enrolled in this course will 

Know...

  • Adding movement to the classroom.  Strategies and how each can be used in your classroom (all grade levels considered).  How adding movement can support student’s mental health and engagement in your classroom.
  • What differentiation can look like in your classroom and where to start differentiation to maximize student learning.  Ideas for incorporating creativity and challenging students to a higher-level of learning.
  • The importance of good classroom management.  Finding a balance between structure, flexibility and choice for you and your students
Understand...
  • How adding simple movement strategies into your classroom can be beneficial for students and your learning environment.
  • Viewing choice boards and activity checklists that can be used for differentiation while focusing on engagement from all students.  
  • Pace and classroom management. Strategies for good classroom management, engagement and enjoyment for your students


and Be Able To...

  • Reflect on the movement strategies present and generate ways in which these could be implemented into your classroom setting.
  • Identify areas that you can use in your classroom.  Manipulate and design your own learning planners for students in your classes that incorporate areas of focus.   
  • Reflect on your classroom management.  Create tools to utilize for your classroom (partner strategies, group cards, routine and communication examples).


Visit www.nyctd.org to learn more and to register.