Classroom management

Episode Twelve

How to Master Classroom Management

jeffrey-hamilton-jrRe6er0pY0-unsplash.jpg

Show Notes

In this week’s episode, we’re talking all about classroom management. First, we share what makes the biggest difference in structuring every lesson you teach: the task cycle. We discuss what it is, how to use it, and how it can revolutionize your lessons to make them more student-centered and create more opportunities for interactive learning. Then we over over additional favorite strategies for managing an adult ESL classroom naturally and masterfully.


In this Episode

  • The task cycle, or the “microstages” within each stage/ activity of your lesson. These include: giving instructions, letting students work alone, letting students check in pairs, and conducting whole class feedback

  • The “burger:” a fun analogy for the task cycle

  • How to make instructions clear using techniques like ICQs (instruction check questions) and demos

  • Anchoring: why your placement in the classroom matters and how to make sure you’re “anchored” in the right spot

  • Minimizing teacher talk: why this is essential and how you can ensure you keep your teacher talk low

  • Language grade: no, we don’t mean assessment- this is how to simplify your language without sounding unnatural

  • Task before text: why you don’t want to hand out papers before you finish giving instructions

  • Monitoring: what you should be doing as the students are quietly working, and how the way you use this time impacts the rest of your lesson

  • Interaction patterns: the whole class should never just be you interacting with the students. How to mix things up to maximize student interaction and communication

  • Nominating: how to handle who’s speaking when during feedback and how to ensure all students get a chance to participate

  • Avoiding echoing: the difference between echoing and “correchoing” and why you should only be doing one of them!


Did you find this episode useful? Do you have questions about teaching you’d like us to answer on the show? Or any additional strategies you use to manage your classroom effectively? Reach out and let us know!

We’d love to hear your comments below. And if you enjoyed this episode, we’d be extremely grateful if you share it on your social media or subscribe here on iTunes and leave us a review. Your support means so much to us! For more teaching tips delivered straight to your inbox, sign up for our weekly newsletter.