Tag Archives: high school classroom management

Five High school discipline strategies that work

Like most secondary teachers, I’ve struggled with finding the right high school discipline strategies for my classroom. If I’m honest, discipline has never been my strong suit, but I have learned (sometimes the hard way) some techniques that actually work for me and have made my teaching life easier. I’ll share my insights on these high school discipline techniques below and I’d love to hear feedback from other teachers on their go-to classroom management strategies.



1. Build Relationships – Show You Care

This may be an obvious strategy to most teachers, but I can’t stress enough how important it is to build a positive rapport with your students. When students know you care about them, they respond better to your teaching and classroom rules.

Obviously, this strategy is proactive and will require you to make a daily effort to really get to know your students. I try to walk around every class period and ask personal questions of each student. I try to make the questions specific because teens can be vague and elusive. Instead of asking, “How was your weekend?” I might say, “What was the last good movie you saw?”. I also look for conversation starters based on the student’s possessions. For instance, if a student has a Cubs shirt on, I may ask if they’ve ever been to a game or if they have a favorite player. If they are reading a book, I may ask them what types of books they enjoy reading or would recommend. Showing you care about their interests and value their opinions is a great way to build relationships.

I also make an effort to inject humor into my interactions with students. Whether it’s through funny memes or groan-worthy jokes, I want to make the classroom a space where it is safe to be a little goofy. That also helps students feel relaxed and more willing to open up.

Finally, I make sure my students know I am here to listen to them. I’ve been a shoulder to cry on and an open ear to many of my students who were going through issues from a bad break up to a parent’s passing. I always let them know they have a safe space to talk through these things with me, but I also stress that any serious issues will need to also be shared and followed up with our administration.

Relationship building is so essential to the success of every other initiative in your classroom, but it’s even more than that. It’s also so enjoyable to get to know your students and to build the kind of mentoring relationship that will allow you to help them grow and succeed both in and beyond high school. It’s as rewarding for a teacher as it is for the student.

2. Don’t Jump to Conclusions

You know that old saying about what happens when you assume? Well it can apply to teachers as well. Sometimes we are hard-wired to assume a student is trying to pull one over on us because, often times, they are. Jumping to conclusions, however, can possibly damage positive relationships and create an embarrassing situation for you or the student. For example, one time I heard a digital notification in my classroom that sounded like a phone. I immediately stopped what I was doing, walked to where I heard the sound, and demanded the student turn over their phone. As it turns out, it was not their phone that made the sound, but rather a digital insulin monitor. Even though it was an honest mistake, I felt horrible and I know the student had to be embarrassed.

Here is how I could have addressed the situation better: I could have reminded the students as a whole that phones needed to be off. I could then pull the student aside when the class started to work and ask them if they accidentally left their phone on. This would show that I don’t automatically assume the worst of my students and it avoids the embarrassment of disciplining in front of the other students.

Now, it’s important to note that this doesn’t mean you always believe anything a student says. If you’ve given a student a warning, they are doing something dangerous, or are chronically abusing a rule, they’ve lost the benefit of the doubt. That said, it doesn’t hurt to start from a position of trust.

3. Use Classroom Management that Puts the Student in Charge

This is a strategy that requires a leap of faith, but whenever I’ve implemented it, my life’s gotten easier. This strategy recognizes that students are capable of self-discipline and can handle the responsibilities and privileges that go along with that. This is not to say that there won’t be certain students who still can’t manage themselves and will lose the privilege. It also doesn’t mean that you don’t monitor students. In fact, this strategy can often create more detailed records of student activities and behavior with less work on your part.

You can give students more responsibility in a number of ways but you can get the greatest success through the establishment of classroom norms and routines. It might be as simple as having a work portal on your learning management system that they are responsible for checking daily and can refer to if they missed a day. You may even structure each class period the same with scheduled activities the students need to accomplish before the end of each day (a checklist works well for students to track this). You may flip the classroom and make students responsible for watching instructional videos outside of class before addressing a topic in class. Whatever you do, make sure there is a record that they can keep and that you periodically check.

I’ve found a lot of success from a bathroom pass policy I’ve implemented that allows students to monitor themselves. Even though they fill out a sign-out form, I monitor it to make sure students are gone appropriate amounts of time and aren’t abusing the privilege. Because they can choose to leave at any time it’s made for less interruptions during class time and students like the extra freedom.

4. Allow Emotions but Not Distractions

No one is perfect and we’ve all had rough days. For teens who lack impulse control and may not understand how to process their emotions, this can result in somewhat melodramatic reactions and even anger and lashing out. It’s important as an educator to remember not to take this personally, but still make sure the student knows what is acceptable behavior in your classroom.

If a student responds in an irrational, angry, or rude way, don’t immediately cut them off because it can make them even more argumentative and defensive. Instead, calmly allow them to finish their thought before responding. Then acknowledge that they are feeling frustrated and that is okay, but remind them that it is never acceptable to to be disrespectful, even if they are upset. Once they are calm, ask them why they are upset and remind them that you are here to listen, or offer to contact their counselor if they don’t want to talk to you. If discipline is necessary, follow through, but make sure they know their actions were the problem and not their emotions.

It’s important to remove a student whose emotions cause them to be a distraction or students who are overly rude and aggressive. Depending on the case, you may choose to send the student to guidance or the principal’s office. In less extreme cases, you might just ask them to take a walk to the bathroom to clear their head.

5. Don’t Argue but Do Follow Through

It is pointless to argue with a teenager. Let me say that again. It is pointless to argue with a teenager. If you try, you are just wasting everyone’s time.

Instead of arguing, have clear and consistent consequences for student’s actions. If they want to argue over those consequences, calmly state that it’s not up for discussion. Don’t take a sarcastic or angry tone, but make sure to model a calm and respectful demeanor. You may have to repeat yourself, but make sure you just calmly reiterate that you will not argue over the issue.

If the student won’t take no for an answer, send them to the office. You can’t take time out of your class to argue. You will hopefully only have to do this a few times before students realize you intend to follow through on rules and it’s pointless to argue about it.

High School Discipline Strategies

So there you go, my top five strategies for managing discipline in my classroom. As you can see, most come down to respect, caring, and consistency. It’s also important to stress that no one strategy will always be successful because we’re working with people and people are complicated. Adjust your techniques and reassess situations as needed.

It’s also important to realize that you’ll probably make mistakes as a teacher because you’re only human as well. Don’t expect perfection from yourself and go easy on yourself if you make a mistake. As long as you keep trying, that’s all that matters. And anyway, the beauty of teaching is you always get another chance each year to improve what you do.

I hope you find some of these tips encouraging. I’d love to hear from you other seasoned teachers about what works best in your classrooms. Feel free to comment below and good luck on another upcoming school year. Hopefully this will be your best yet!

A High School Bathroom Pass Policy that Actually Works

Ask any high school teacher, and they’ll tell you one of the most annoying rituals of the day is students coming up before and during class asking if they can run to the bathroom. Not only is it disruptive, but teachers have to take time away from their work to write out pass after pass after pass. The whole process is frustrating, time-consuming, and tedious. Without a good bathroom pass policy, you can waste class time and lose your sanity.

A bathroom policy for a high school class.
You and your students will be much happier with this bathroom pass policy.

Never Write Another Bathroom Pass

That’s why, about halfway through this year, I decided there must be a better way of handling the bathroom pass situation. As it stood, I was taking on all of the responsibility for the bathroom passes myself. I was the one who decided if the students could leave class, I monitored the length of time they were gone, I wrote out the passes, and I disciplined those students who took too much time to return. It was too much for my A.D.D. mind to track while I was trying to focus on teaching. I decided that, if I wanted my classroom to be more efficient, I should move the responsibility of the bathroom passes from me to my students.

But wait . . . you might be thinking there is no way you could trust most high school students to decide for themselves when they could leave class, and I’m right there with you. How in the world can you monitor them and keep them accountable? Well, after much thought, I found a strategy that does just that, and it has worked so much better than my old plan. Seriously, I wish I had done this years ago.

This bathroom pass policy is simple enough, but it required a slight leap of faith to be able to trust that students would use it appropriately. Basically, I placed a sign-out sheet in my room and I told the students that they could sign out to the bathroom without asking as long as they stuck to the following five basic rules.

Rule #1: They had to take a bathroom pass with them.

This rule made it so that only one student could be gone at a time. I made a simple 3 x 4 inch bathroom pass out of some old watercolor paper. I wrote “Bathroom Pass” in Sharpie, along with my room number and a reminder to the students about signing out before leaving. I put packing tape over the front and back to “laminate” it and then stuck it in a place the students could see it, clipped by a magnet on the white board.

Rule #2: They could only be gone a maximum of six minutes.

I also put a reminder about this rule on the sign out sheet and on the pass. Six minutes is plenty of time for students to be gone, but I also encourage them to let me know if they are having an emergency that might cause them to be gone longer.

Rule #3: They had to sign out legibly and sign back in.

If I can’t read the students names or the times at which they signed out, I’m not going to be able to monitor them. Students also have to sign in and mark the time so that they know I will be checking to make sure they weren’t gone longer than 6 minutes. If they don’t sign out legibly or correctly, they lose their privileges altogether.

Rule #4: No signing out during the first or last 5 minutes of class or during lecture.

This rule keeps students in their seats during times when they need to be paying attention, like during lecture. It also keeps them focused at the beginning of class and less antsy at the end of class.

This bathroom pass policy will make both teachers and students happy.
This bathroom pass policy helps to motivate students to go directly to the bathroom and then directly back to class with no pit stops.

Rule #5: No pit stops

This should be an obvious rule, but many students will try to kill two birds with one stone while they are out in the halls with a pass. If students go anywhere other than the bathroom, they will lose their pass privileges in full.

Since enacting this policy, the classroom experience has improved for myself and for my students. I no longer start each class with students at my desk asking if they can use the bathroom. I can now know that all of the students will be in their seats and ready to hear classroom announcements during the first and last five minutes of class. Also, I no longer have to interrupt my teaching or my work to write endless bathroom passes.

A bathroom pass policy that work for students and teachers.
Use this bathroom pass sheet to print out passes for your class. You can print them on cardstock and then laminate them.

Stop Distractions and Give Students More Responsibility

The students also like this bathroom pass policy because it doesn’t treat them like children. It puts much of the responsibility on their shoulders and gives them more freedom in their own choices and time management. That said, there are enough rules and consequences to make sure they follow the guidelines.

I also love that this bathroom pass policy leaves me with a detailed sign out sheet for my class. It’s much better than when I would just write passes and the students would throw them away upon returning. I now know which students left during class, when they left, and when they returned. It’s just another good tool for tracking what happens in my classroom.

It’s amazing what a dramatic difference a change in something as small as a bathroom policy can make in the classroom. So much of teaching stress stems from classroom management issues so when you find the right technique it can make everything run more smoothly.

What are your thoughts on this bathroom pass policy? Have you tried something similar or better? I’d love to hear any comments or ideas.