Telling children to be quite and 2. Telling children to settle down. One I observed in my preschool classroom and two I observed in my third grade room. Silencing methods, such as flicking the lights, ringing a call bell, raising two fingers, saying "Attention, class," or using Harry Wong 's Give Me 5 a command for students to: 1. Focus their eyes on the speaker 2. Be quiet 3.Be still 4. Empty their hands 5. Listen. There is also the "three fingers" version, which stands for stop, look, and listen. To calm students down simply start the lesson, even while the children are talking to each other. Start with a statement that would surprise them. For example, if the lesson is about shapes, show a big circle and say, “This IS a square.” Someone will notice that it is not a square, and you can smile and say, “Oh, I tried to trick you. You were paying attention.” A surprise opening, used with any topic, is usually enough to peak their interest. They could play a game called the TWO-THINGS-AT-THE-SAME-TIME game. This game to help children enjoy listening. Say, “I can tap my knee and roll my arms AT THE SAME TIME.” Then ask, “What can you do AT THE SAME TIME?” One child said, “I can rub my tummy and sing.” Then say, “I can NOT roll my arms and tap my head AT THE SAME TIME. What can you NOT do AT THE SAME TIME?” One boy said, “I cannot laugh and cry,” and another, “I can’t hold my nose and breathe.” When the class is chattering before a lesson, ask, “Can you talk and listen to me AT THE SAME TIME?” The association of this question with the fun game they played with these words calms them
Telling children to be quite and 2. Telling children to settle down. One I observed in my preschool classroom and two I observed in my third grade room. Silencing methods, such as flicking the lights, ringing a call bell, raising two fingers, saying "Attention, class," or using Harry Wong 's Give Me 5 a command for students to: 1. Focus their eyes on the speaker 2. Be quiet 3.Be still 4. Empty their hands 5. Listen. There is also the "three fingers" version, which stands for stop, look, and listen. To calm students down simply start the lesson, even while the children are talking to each other. Start with a statement that would surprise them. For example, if the lesson is about shapes, show a big circle and say, “This IS a square.” Someone will notice that it is not a square, and you can smile and say, “Oh, I tried to trick you. You were paying attention.” A surprise opening, used with any topic, is usually enough to peak their interest. They could play a game called the TWO-THINGS-AT-THE-SAME-TIME game. This game to help children enjoy listening. Say, “I can tap my knee and roll my arms AT THE SAME TIME.” Then ask, “What can you do AT THE SAME TIME?” One child said, “I can rub my tummy and sing.” Then say, “I can NOT roll my arms and tap my head AT THE SAME TIME. What can you NOT do AT THE SAME TIME?” One boy said, “I cannot laugh and cry,” and another, “I can’t hold my nose and breathe.” When the class is chattering before a lesson, ask, “Can you talk and listen to me AT THE SAME TIME?” The association of this question with the fun game they played with these words calms them