Google
 
www.interventioncentral.com Web
www.jimwrightonline.com

Strategies to Prepare Classrooms for Substitute Teachers View:
>>
Substitute Teacher Feedback Report [web page; pdf document]

>>Model of Student Apology Letter [web page; pdf document]

View an Adobe Acrobat
file of this page

Substitute teachers have one of the toughest jobs in the world. They are often expected to

Jim's Hints for Using...
Strategies to Prepare Classrooms for Substitute Teachers

Create a Classroom Information Binder. One excellent idea to help substitute teachers to exert greater control in the classroom is for every teacher to prepare an information binder designed explicitly for use by substitute instructors. At a minimum, the binder should include:

  • A student seating chart
  • Building floorplan
  • Copies of hall passes and office referral forms
  • Phone numbers that the substitute should know
  • Updated lesson plan
  • Schoolwide emergency procedures

Check in on the Substitute During the Day. With more and more classrooms equipped with telephones, some teachers exert a bit of extra classroom control when a substitute is covering their room by calling in at several points during the day. Substitutes are likely to appreciate these phone calls greatly! If they have questions about the classroom lesson or need to know what school-wide procedures to follow, the teacher can quickly supply this information. The teacher may also be able to advise the substitute about how to deal with a particularly challenging student's behavior or even problem -solve on the phone directly with the student.

cover a classroom full of unknown students on very short notice. Unfortunately, substitute teachers may find upon arriving at the school that no lesson plans have been left for them, forcing them to improvise on the spot. To make matters even more challenging, substitutes typically show up in the classroom with little knowledge of school-wide procedures for responding to events such as specials, fire drills, and student dismissal.

Schools deal with the disciplinary fallout when substitute teachers do not have access to the information that they need to be effective instructors and classroom managers. Students can be quick to misbehave when they sense that a substitute teacher lacks confidence, is experiencing confusion, and does not know their names. Substitute instructors may be equally quick to react by sending those misbehaving students straight to the principal's office. No wonder so many school administrators and teachers dread having subs cover classrooms!

Teachers can take proactive steps to prepare students to be on their best behavior when a substitute is in the classroom. This intervention (a) provides a group reward if the class as a whole behaves well and (b) provides individual consequences when a particular student misbehaves.


Materials

Preparation

Steps in Implementing This Intervention
Step 1: Introduce the Substitute Teacher Intervention to the Class. Set aside 10-15 minutes of class time to present the intervention.

Step 2: Implement the Intervention: When a substitute is scheduled to cover your classroom:

Step 3: Promptly Follow Through with Intervention Consequences:

 

Troubleshooting
The substitute did not fill out the feedback form.
With all of the demands on their time, substitute teachers may occasionally forget to leave the completed feedback form for you at the end of the day. Tell your students that reminding the substitute to complete the form might earn a child special mention as being helpful and help the entire class to earn a reward. If, however, the form is not filled out when you return to the room, see if you can get the substitute's phone number or email address to check in with him or her about how the day went.

If you cannot get in touch with the substitute, you might collect a little circumstantial evidence about how your class behaved while you were gone. The office, for example, could check whether any students were sent from your room to the principal with disciplinary referrals, while neighboring teachers in the same hallway could describe for you what they observed going on in the room. If this indirect evidence suggests that the class kept its behavior within appropriate bounds, give them the reward!

 

References

A special thanks to Cheryl Wlodarski, a teacher at a middle school in Central New York for contributing many of the ideas in this substitute-teacher strategy!
 

Intervention Ideas

Tools

Downloads

Site Tips

Who We Are

www.interventioncentral.org