Time and Money:
10 Ways to Make a
Teacher Smile before Winter Break
By: Jessica Zannini
Over the summer,
schools are cleaned, students relax, and teachers start planning for the new
school year. The beginning of the school
year is the time to put excitement to work and start making plans to save time
and money. You will be glad you did it
on those busy weeks when you need to type weekly plans, grade papers, and
inspire learning.
1. Get to know the standards:
Print a copy of your standards and search the textbooks, supply closets, your
cabinets, and the media center to find materials that you can get your hands on
for free. For those standards that need new materials shop around for the best
price or see what you can make.
2. Spending your money right: After searching for materials at the school
talk with the secretary and PTA president to see what money the school will
provide you for supplies. Make a list of
what you still need. Use that school
money to buy consumable products. For
those items you know you want to keep and use wherever your teaching takes you,
use your own money.
3. Shop around at the beginning
of the school year: During tax-free
weekends and Back to School sales you can find great deals. Think through your school year. Do you need class sets of colored pencils,
clipboards, or markers? It is cheaper
now to stock up on paper than to buy more in January.
4. Make copies now: For
those quizzes, notes, etc that you already know you want to put in the hands of
your students, go ahead and make them now.
Be sure you know you copy limit for the year. Maybe you have a friend, family member, or
parent volunteer that has access to a copier and can make some of these for
you.
5. Laminate those weekly folders
and posters: Anything you know you want to keep – laminate it. Create two
folders per student so that you can have fresh ones after the holiday
season. Laminate those store bought and
teacher created posters so they will last over the years. You will appreciate it the following school
year when you already have one thing checked off the list.
8. Make a Wish List: Decide on materials you would like to have
throughout the year such as tissues, snacks, pencils, and copy paper. Put the list on your website. This will eliminate shopping during the
school year and help save a few dollars.
6. Use Parent Volunteers:
Create a list of help you will need throughout the school year. For those parents that can come in during the
school day have them make copies, create bulletin boards, be reading and math
tutors, or study buddies. For those
parents who work full time and can’t get in the room, have them cut out
laminated materials or donate supplies and snacks. If you ask for help, the parents will come
running.
7. Let Students Choose Their Own Seats: Don’t spend time on a
seating chart before you know your students.
You will learn that first day, your talkers, friends, and responsible
students. Let this information guide you
in making seating charts in the future.
You may just find that the students will be able to handle this
arrangement and you don’t have to make time for rearranging. This knowledge can also be used for
cooperative grouping activities.
9. Create Book Lists: Find great read alouds and have them
handy. Look in your classroom and the school
media center. What books do you already
have that match standards and the interest level of your students? Make a list for those units and standards to
pull out when you teach each unit. The
media specialist can pull the books for you or students can use their research
skills to find the books and place them at your fingertips.
10. Go Through Those Permanent Records: Look at past scores. Are there students you could already plan for
reviewing and strengthening skills? Find
out how you school district wants the records organized and go ahead and make
sure they are accurate and have the right materials. Some may get disorganized throughout the
school year, but you will be glad this is done in May.
Side Bar: Want to keep them on track? Research popular songs appropriate for
school and make a CD of the songs to have on hand. Push play anytime you need to motivate the
students. This is also a great
discipline tool to get students on task and working at a pace to get you
through a busy day.
Find a way to
eliminate road blocks you face in a school year, and there will definitely be
more time and money. As one of my former students told me while plopping a
peppermint in my hand, “Keep up the good work and there’s more where that came
from.”
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