Communication: Readings For Educators — Navigating Classroom
“Classroom Instruction That Works” (Chapter on Nonlinguistic Representations) by Robert J. Marzano. Core Takeaway: Proximity, eye contact, and gesture are not accessories to instruction; they are the delivery system. A teacher who scans the room while a student speaks signals value. A teacher who physically moves toward a off-task student without stopping the lesson manages behavior invisibly.
Create a “Peace Corner” in your room with a scripted set of restorative questions. Teach students to use these prompts to communicate with each other before a conflict escalates to the teacher. 4. Non-Verbal Communication: The 93% Rule Albert Mehrabian’s 7-38-55 rule (7% words, 38% tone, 55% body language) is often oversimplified, but its core truth holds: In emotional communication, how you say something dwarfs what you say. A crossed arm, a raised eyebrow, or a crouch to meet a student’s eye level speaks volumes. navigating classroom communication: readings for educators
In the bustling ecosystem of a classroom, curriculum maps and lesson plans are the skeleton of education. But communication? That is the heartbeat. A well-crafted lesson can fail without clear instructions, and a brilliant student can struggle without a safe space to ask questions. For educators, navigating the complex currents of classroom talk—between teacher and student, student to student, and school to home—is the most critical, yet often most overlooked, professional skill. A teacher who scans the room while a