How to set expectations for student behavior when substitute teaching.
January 14, 2025
Students at all grade levels have preconceived ideas about what it’s like to have a substitute teacher . Often, students think classroom routines will differ when their regular teacher is absent . One blog calls it the Substitute Teacher Effect which causes student behavior to change. Occasionally, a student tries to take advantage of a new face in the classroom. It's more the exception to the rule. However, as a substitute teacher, it’s important to set expectations from the start of each class—every time. It’s just good classroom management.
Classroom management strategies.
Classroom management refers to a substitute teacher's techniques for maintaining structure, learning, and positive attitudes and behaviors. It involves using strategies to keep students on track, engage in the material, progress toward their academic goals, and help the class stay organized with assigned lessons and activities. Below are classroom management tools for substitute teachers to take control of the class early and prevent behavior changes that are not conducive to a learning environment.Rediscover classroom rules.
The teacher likely reviewed the classroom rules at the beginning of the school year, but some students may not think to apply the regular rules when a substitute teacher arrives. Reinforce classroom rules by discussing them at the beginning of the day. Remind them that the rules do not change just because you are the substitute teacher. Set clear expectations and explain them, so that all students easily understand them.Be prepared.
Substitute teaching requires preparation. Preparation means knowing the class schedule and being prepared with options if you run out of time or finish an activity early. Look for classroom rules or a class behavior point system. Ask if the school has a Whole School Positive Behavior System, where they use a word and make the behavior expectations fit that word. Like Be a STAR! where the S stands for “Student who cares” and the T stands for “Timely”, etc.Be a great communicator.
One of the best ways to ensure your classroom runs smoothly is to be an effective communicator. Communicating with students is different than communicating with your peers.- Use age-appropriate words and sentence structures to match the age and grade of the students.
- Don’t just repeat directions. Provide instructions in various modalities - writing, verbal, even in silly songs or phrases - to ensure that all students have a good way to understand.
- Use a calm tone, even if you are feeling frustrated. If you stay calm, students will too.
- Praise and efforts of students. Remember, you are not praising the student, you are acknowledging the effort or action. That is what motivates them.
- Body language is a form of communication. Don't stay behind the desk all day. Instead, move around the classroom and actively observe and monitor student actions and engagement.
- Always actively listen, help students think through questions, then offer constructive suggestions.
Get students attention.
You don’t want to be the substitute teacher who gets the reputation for having a noisy class. When students arrive in your room or work in groups, the noise level can rise. It’s your job to manage this without raising your voice. There are many attention getters that seasoned educators use.- Visual signals: turning off the lights
- Auditory signals: counting down from five
- Kinesthetic signals: students physically respond to your action -- put hand on head or clap in a pattern