An established orderly environment in a classroom that increases academic learning, social and emotional growth.
What is classroom management?
___is the way the mind makes sense of the world.
What is thinking?
A hierarchical system that categorizes the thinking skills of students; used to classify learning objectives.
What is Bloom's Taxonomy?
A teacher’s variability and flexibility in delivering instructional content.
What is instructional variety?
Passive students, agressive students, students with attention problems, perfectionists and socially inept students are classified as these.
What are high-need students?
This strategy for monitoring behavior requires being able to pay attention to more than one thing at a time.
What is overlapping?
____ is a personal opinion not based on evidence.
What is bias?
Questions that have single or limited number of right answers that are commonly associated with the goals of Direct Instruction
What are convergent questions?
Giving students the opportunity to select different paths of increaseing difficulty to show what they have learned.
What is differentiation?
Bits of knowledge that are not well-integrated into the larger picture to facilitate understanding.
What is shallow learning?
It is knowing what is happening in your classroom.
What is "with-it-ness"?
It is the process of making informed, evaluative judgements about claims and arguments without personal experiences or biases.
What is critical thinking?
Questions that have more than one correct answer.
What are divergent questions?
Type of instruction that occurs when the teacher is the major provider of the information.
What is direct instruction?
Planning, Organizing, Arranging, Monitoring, and Anticipating problems
What are the components of classroom management?
These are strategies that stop misbehavior such as talking out, passing notes or combing hair without interrupting the flow of the lesson.
Low profile classroom management
It is a strand of the critical thinking process that means interpretation of information.
What is analysis?
"How do the parts of a bicycle help it to do its job?" is an example of this level of questioning.
What is analysis?
Helping students use their own knowledge and experiences to construct learning.
What is indirect instruction?
The expression of approval of someone or something.
What is praise?
According to Marzano, these are the three essential teacher behaviors for effective teacher-student relationships
What are dominance, cooperation and awareness of high-need students?
Being assertive not agressive in the classroom.
What is dominance?
"How can you design an instructional unit to meet the needs of online students?" is an example of this level of Blooms Taxonomy (2020).
What is create?
Refers to the amount of time a teacher gives a learner to respond and provides all learners time to think about, extend, or modify their responses
What is wait time?
The degree of attention, curiosity, interest, optimism, and passion that students show when they are learning or being taught, which extends to the level of motivation they have to learn and progress in their education.
What is student engagement?