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Uncategorized   |   Aug 16, 2012

Giveaway: 5 copies of The Cornerstone!

By Angela Watson

Founder and Writer

Giveaway: 5 copies of The Cornerstone!

By Angela Watson

cornerstone-front2

I’ve got lots of amazing book give-aways scheduled for the coming months, but since everyone’s thinking about classroom management right now, I thought August’s feature should be The Cornerstone: Classroom Management That Makes Teaching More Effective, Efficient, and Enjoyable. And since it’s my own book, I can give away multiple copies!

This book was born out of the need for PRACTICAL information for teachers.  So many educators are drowning in paperwork and overwhelmed 
by student behaviors, but don’t have a sufficient support system within their school district. These teachers spend their ‘spare time’ scouring 
for resources on the Internet and in bookstores, hoping for solutions from someone who can relate to their struggles and offer guidance. And 
unfortunately, most of the resources they find focus on WHAT to do and not HOW to do it.

The good news is that these dilemmas are very normal for teachers–every single one of us can relate at one time or another in our careers! And the even better news? There are solutions which get results quickly. You can easily gain, regain, or maintain control of your classroom once you understand the keys to strong classroom management. Once you’ve 
developed the right mindset and created a realistic vision for your classroom, you can teach for it! The Cornerstoneuses actual 
classroom photographs, forms, and dialogue examples to show you how to create procedures and routines that facilitate learning. It will guide 
you through every step of reinforcing your expectations.

The Cornerstone is an expansion of the ideas presented on my website, and provides a more comprehensive resource for teachers to 
keep and reference in the classroom. In The Cornerstone, you’ll learn how a positive teaching philosophy plays out practically in the 
classroom to create a calm, supportive environment that balances predictable routines with unpredictable teaching strategies and lessons. It is 
a comprehensive guide to making this school year the very best possible, whether it’s your first or your thirty-first.

This book will guide you to 
reflect on why you teach, what type of students you want to produce, and ways to run your classroom that fit well with your personal teaching 
style…all within the context of planning for specific procedures and routines. From the first minute you spend with your students in August to 
the final hectic week in June, The Cornerstone will show you how to stay focused on what’s really important, maintain your enthusiasm, and 
utilize all the resources you have available:

* Turn needy, disorganized children into self-reliant, responsible students
* Develop and teach ANY classroom procedure
* Train the class to follow along, stay on-task, and work together
* Use fun teaching techniques that help you assess student learning
* Eliminate homework hassles and parent miscommunications
* Prevent burnout by enjoying and growing with students
* Construct a self-running classroom that frees you to teach

To get this book in the hands of more teachers, I’m giving away eBook copies of The Cornerstone to FIVE readers! The book is available in Kindle, ePUB, and PDF formats (so even if you don’t have an eReader, you can still win a PDF version to read on your computer.)

Just leave a comment on this post telling us one tip you’ve learned that makes your teaching more effective, efficient, and enjoyable. The contest will close on Thursday, August 23, at midnight EST. I’ll choose 5 winners randomly and post their names at the bottom of this blog post.

You can also use the discount code SUMMER2012 to buy The Cornerstone eBook at 20% off–that’s just $11.99! If you order multiple eBooks, the 20% discount applies for your entire purchase. And if you buy the eBook now and then win a copy through this give-away, I’ll refund your money.

I hope that The Cornerstone gives you practical suggestions that leave you feeling inspired, rejuvenated, and full of 
confidence that you can handle every task that’s set before you. And be sure to read through the comments below, because I know the teachers who read this blog, and they have some AMAZING ideas! Enjoy the start to your school year!

UPDATE: CONTEST CLOSED!

Thank you, everyone, for sharing your great suggestions! I’m sorry for the delay in selecting the winners. I subtracted the “reply” comments (when one commenter is replying to another commenter) from the total comment count so there were a total of 134 entries. Here are winners:

screen-shot-2012-08-29-at-9-16-17-pm

#15 Shanna D: “The best advice is to get to know your students. What do they like to do, what music or other media do they enjoy, what sports do they play, etc? Getting to know them on a personal level helps prevent behaviour problems!”

#33 Diane Bode: “I have learned to take it slow the first few weeks. I’m looking forward to having the kiddos visit the classroom (preschool) before the first day. Hopefully, they will feel more better on the first day!”

#41 Tammy Skiles: “Teaching procedures at the beginning of the year…making kids actually do them with you”

#55 Tammi Pittaro: “My best tip, in a nutshell, is say what you mean and mean what you say. Set the bar hhigh and practice, practice, practice!” 

#59 Megan: “Do what is best for your students, which may not always be what is easiest for you, but it will feel good in your heart!!”

Angela Watson

Founder and Writer

Angela is a National Board Certified educator with 11 years of teaching experience and more than a decade of experience as an instructional coach. She started this website in 2003, and now serves as Editor-in-Chief of the Truth for Teachers...
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Discussion


  1. I love using poetry as a platform for starting literature class each day. This establishes a cheerful and thought provoking routine, one that involves student interaction or recitation that can be followed up with discussion of all kinds of musical and literary skills even with younger children. From Christina Rossetti’s “Who Has Seen the Wind?” to Alfred Noyes’s ” The Highwayman” they can be taught rhyme and rhythm (prosody), tone, mood, theme, and narrative elements. Besides that, the class enjoys and learns from the beginning of class!

  2. I don’t have a full time teaching position yet, but in all my experiences, I have learned to always have a backup plan in case something doesn’t work the way you want to the first time. On a spiritual aspect, to ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS pray before, throughout, and after each day.

    I am really encouraged by your blog! Thank you for being a blessing!

  3. Routines and procedures to start, definitely. Once the kids are clear about the teacher’s expectations, then real learning can occur.

  4. Establish routines the first week, have a bell or chime that cues the students to give them your attention (GREAT tool to keep from “fading” your voice), and last but not least stay excited! I know it’s sometimes hard around testing time and the end of the year, but if you remain excited about learning so will they!

  5. After a thorough research for my diploma paper, I’ve discovered that in order to make teaching more effective and enjoyable one must resort to strategies that prevent the occurence of disruptive behaviour and I found and put together 8 preventative strategies: 1. curiosity (If one can get the students with curiosity s/he does not have to force them to be engaged in the lesson), 2. relevance (‘Lessons should have relevance to a pupil’s life. If they can’t see the point in learning a topic, or are totally uninterested in it, they won’t sit quietly and attentively.’(Plevin, 2008/9:25)), 3. humour (Humour helps students be more relaxed, for stress and fear are significantly reduced, and receptivity increased), 4. mini-tests – many short announced or unannounced written/oral tests (Students learn better bit by bit, as the information imprints better and for a longer period of time than when they learn everything at once for a final exam. The more information a student accumulates at once, the faster s/he forgets it. Mini-tests might determine students to pay more attention during the instruction time, instead of playing foolishly about. To a certain extent, mini-tests discourage disruptive behaviour and determine students to become more responsible.),
    5. short activities (When a certain activity lasts too long, their attention scatters towards things they consider to be more interesting, thus perturbing the lesson. I believe that many short activities will visibly enhance the learners’ engagement in the learning process and decrease misconduct to some extent. The more a certain activity prolongs, the more their enthusiasm subsides.), 6. clear instructions, 7. clear procedures and routines, 8. praise (which has to be specific). Probably there are even more useful preventative strategies, but I thought these were the most important. If anyone has in mind other preventative strategies, feel free to reply. I would appreciate that because I am a novice in the teaching field. That is why I entered this contest, because as a newcomer I really, reallyyyyy need this book! It would help me a lot!

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