Navigating Classroom Communication: Readings For Educators -

Choose one reading from the list. Read one chapter. Change one sentence in your teaching tomorrow. The echo of that change will be heard across your entire school year. What text has most changed the way you communicate in the classroom? The conversation continues—and that’s the point.

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

“For White Folks Who Teach in the Hood… and the Rest of Y’all Too” by Christopher Emdin. Core Takeaway: Emdin introduces “reality pedagogy,” which requires teachers to learn the communication codes of their students’ homes and communities (call-and-response, cypher-style dialogue, storytelling) and weave them into academic discourse. The goal is not to erase student language but to add teacher language to their repertoire. Choose one reading from the list