Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Disorganized:Scenario
Student Evan always turns in homework late.…
Disorganized:Scenario
Student Evan always turns in homework late. Sometimes he completes the wrong homework because he does not note down the homework which is required at school. He always lose things in the classroom or outside in the playground. He has messy locker, desk and bagpack. Different objects and school supplies including pencils, rubbers, and folders are stuffed in his area. Sometimes he bring wrong materias to class. After he leaves the school, we frequently see many thing scatter around under his desk and jacks left over on the chair.
One important thing is in the first two months of school, he constantly sleeps during the classtime.
-
tie 1
Frequent home contact
Use a calm neutral tone with parents to avoid arguments, blame games, and power struggles
-
-
Do not dwell on blaming the parent for the child’s behaviors, rather focus on solutions, whether on the child’s part of the parent’s
-
-
Have the child’s grades, behavior records, and the specific data ready in front of you when you call
Break down assignment
strattegies
Take a blank sheet of paper and cover up every item other than what you want the student to complete. After they complete that, teach them to move the sheet down
Determine what might be hardest/easiest for student. Have them do the easy items or the hard items first, which ever they prefer
-
Place one or a couple of items or problems per page. When the student completes a page, they walk up to place it in a tray or folder and retrieve the next page. They continue in this manner until the assignment is compete
Have students lump items, for example writing down questions 5 at a time and completing them, then moving on to the next 5, etc
For items with multiple part questions, have the student separate each part or question of the item into individual lines, having them focus on them one at a time
-
Create a song or rap to go along with how to break down certain tasks or how to approach certain problems
-
Teach Coping Skills
Coping strategies
Have a student, a select group of students, or your entire class organize their materials in their desks and bags once a day
Set up a standard routine and teach your students how to organize, for example using folders and putting work to do on one side and finished work on the other side, etc.
Depending on the situation, need, and child, there are numerous ways to teach kids coping skills
-
when we see a student in trouble in doing any part academically or physcially even mindtally, we need to teach coping skills for them
-
Tie 3
Daily Behavior Form
Provides students with more one on one help, support, and intervention
-
Provides structure, routine, consistency, and organization
-
-
-
-
-
Organizational Tools
strategies
ome basic strategies include keeping a planner or calendar, frequently organizing lockers, desks, and storage areas with the assistance of a teacher or peer
-
-
-
-
-
-
Tie 2
Suspension
Always use a neutral tone and do not allow yourself to be drawn into power struggles. Alternatives may be discussed with a student or students before implementing them.
-
Peer tutoring
Peer tutoring may be done as a structured and routine procedure or on an as needed basis, depending on the students needs and peer tutors
Peer tutors should be those students that are capable of working with others well and who grasp the concepts and ideas well enough to explain to others
-
Teaching coping skills
-
strategies
Depending on the situation, need, and child, there are numerous ways to teach kids coping skills
-
-
-
Use support and resources below for specific lesson plans, ideas, strategies, and skills
-