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Activities and Resources Bank

Jason Proctor

How to Use This Section

This section collects all ancillary activities included throughout the book into a central resource bank. Activities are designed to be flexible and adaptable, serving both as course-ready assignments for teacher educators and as self-guided learning experiences for independent teachers. Each activity follows a consistent format with purpose, objectives, process steps, reflection prompts, exemplars, and success criteria. Downloadable Word and Google Doc versions are also provided for easy customization or offline use.

For Teacher Educators

You may adopt activities directly into methods courses, adapt them for your learning management system, or use them as models to design your own. Because each activity is also embedded at the end of the relevant chapter, you can assign them alongside readings for immediate application. This collected section allows you to browse activities thematically, making it easy to select the ones that best fit your course.

For Independent Teachers

You can use these activities to extend your learning beyond the main text and apply chapter concepts directly to your classroom practice. The activities are written to be self-contained, with clear instructions and guiding questions. You may work through them sequentially as you read the book, or skip to those that match your current needs. Downloadable versions are included if you prefer to adapt them offline or keep a record of your work.

Classroom Norms & Procedures Activities

📘 Develop a Classroom Management Plan (Self-Guided Module)

📘 Develop a Classroom Management Plan Using AI

Teacher Voice Activities

Classroom Video Analysis

Effective teachers use their presence to assist in developing the classroom environment. A teacher can use multiple strategies to build a presence within the classroom, such as developing a strong voice, non-verbal cues, and teacher radar (Lemov, 2015). Whatever you call it, one thing you must realize is that your posture, facial expression, tone, and actions all influence the learning environment. To gain a better understanding of what your presence looks like, record a classroom session and track how you interact and communicate with your learners.

As you watch the video, note how you use gestures, voice, presence, and directions. Use the questions below to guide your observation and to help you organize/track what you notice.

  • What kind of gestures did you use during the lesson? What are they used for, and what is the effect on learners?
  • How did you use different voice registers at different stages of the lesson? Why was this important?
  • How did you present yourself professionally through your behavior and interaction with learners? What effect was achieved?
  • What overall atmosphere is there in the class? To what extent is your presence and manner contributing to this?
  • What do you notice about the way you provide directions to your students? How did your directions align with the Principles of Key Directions described in the textbook?

* Inspired by the work of Matt O’Leary in Classroom Observation: A Guide to the Effective Observation of Teaching and Learning.

🎭Role Play: Practicing Teacher Presence Through Tone, Posture, and Expression

License

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Activities and Resources Bank Copyright © by Jason Proctor is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.