The beginning of the year is fast approaching! I thought we could share effective ways we start the year. How do you frame the first weeks... to set up a PBL classroom? What rules and procedures and expectations and rituals do you start constructing? What activities do you assign? What community building activities do you do?

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Thanks! I'll bet there are some connections to s.s. too (that's what I'm teaching :) )
Any feedback or thoughts??

Here's my brainstorm (not finalized by any means!) of potential rules. I want to narrow my rules down to 3-4, tops!:

- seek multiple perspectives/points of view
- communicate from a place of respect
- find solutions that work for everyone
- create a positive learning environment
- act appropriately and maturely


Here's my brainstorm for the purpose of rules:

- to build... communication, collaboration, student independence, growth, reflection, responsibility, creativity
- to set up an environment of learning

What rules set the foundation for the environment outlined in the purpose?
I use a mix community building activities from several books, primarily Tribes by Jeanne Gibbs (Reaching All by Creating Tribes Learning Communities) and Comprehension & Collaboration: Inquiry Circles in Action by Harvey and Daniels.

I don't follow the Tribes format exactly, but the book is full of fantastic community building activities that easily tie into any curriculum.
Thanks! These look great. I just ordered them both.
Jonah, I also just ordered these books. I learn from the master. Thank you to a fellow Connecticut Yankee.
Rachel,
What a great topic!
Here's a team-building idea I've borrowed from the world of design. The Marshmallow Challenge is deceptively simple--but can have profound benefits. Check out the TED Talk about it on the landing page. And here are some additional thoughts.
Thanks! I've actually done this activity before :) Kids will love it. I think it could be explicitly linked with teaching communication, too. hmmm...
Hi again,

The marshmallow activity could connect with teaching/experiencing classroom rules like 'communicate constructively' and 'think from different perspectives' and 'speak your mind and listen to others' and 'take risks.' I'm now wondering how we as a class can explicitly think about these connections.

thanks!
Here's a second draft of rules. I'd love your feedback...

- Think from different perspectives
- Speak your mind and listen to others
- Do the right thing even when no one is looking
- Communicate constructively
- Take risks
Hi Rachel,
I like the positive tone in this list of "rules." Instead of cautions ("don't do this"), you have a framework for how to work well together.
How about something that encourages asking questions, entertaining wild ideas, letting your imagination off-leash?
I like this! :)

How do you do discipline in your room if kids don't follow rules?

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