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GC's Beh. Mod.($200 in Philly; now $250! $500 if I present!)

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CBAA (Chapman Behavior Analysis and Assessment) I am a retired full-time staff manager, a part-time newspaper reporter with degrees in English and Education, as well as Special Education Early Intervention. I am presently providing training for the numerous behavioral staff in training which I provide as a certified behavior instructor in Ohio. I recently created a module for teacher and support staff that is showing a great deal of interest in large numbers.

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CBAA (Chapman Behavior Analysis and Assessment) I am a retired full-time staff manager, a part-time newspaper reporter with degrees in English and Education, as well as Special Education Early Intervention. I am presently providing training for the numerous behavioral staff in training which I provide as a certified behavior instructor in Ohio. I recently created a module for teacher and support staff that is showing a great deal of interest in large numbers.
Chili's: Pro and Con
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Chili's: Pro and Con

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This Language Arts lesson provides students to 'compare and contrast' individual experiences at a Chili's Restaurant using various parts of speech, Students would then 'compare and contast" the experience two police officers had at a Chili's Restaurant in Kansas City, Kansas, to the experience a disabled vet had at a Chili's Restaurant in Dallas, Texas. Emphasize that the negative experience received more media coverage than the positive one. A good follow up to this Language Arts lesson might be to go to lunch at a nearby Chili's Restaurant with parents and see how many parts of speech could be used to describe the ambience, food, and service.
Straws, Sticks, and Strings
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Straws, Sticks, and Strings

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CCSS for PreSchool*/Kindergarten** 3. Write numbers from 0 to 20. Represent a number of objects with a written numeral 0–20 (with 0 representing a count of no objects). *Typical students **Special Needs The objective of these activities is to help students visualize numbers through instruction and sensory/visual interaction using simple, familiar materials with which they interact and use to create tangible representations of numbers using their tactile, visual, and auditory senses. Typical students in pre-school and students with special needs enrolled in Kindergarten will benefit mostly from this hands-on lesson. However, older students with severe developmental disabilities may be able to learn numeration from this activity, as well.
The First Memorial Tribute to Union Soldiers After Winning the Confederate War
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The First Memorial Tribute to Union Soldiers After Winning the Confederate War

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THE ONGOING DEBATE ABOUT THE ORIGINS OF THE FIRST DAY OF REMEMBRANCE FOR THE UNION SOLDIERS THAT GAVE THEIR LIVES TO PRESERVE THE UNION AND END SLAVERY http://usslave.blogspot.com/2011/05/slaves-started-memorial-day.html DISCUSSION FOR K-2 Explain why the compelling question is important to the student. Read the article to students in K-2, then have them listen to some of the songs mentioned while marching as if they are in a parade. Have them use inquiry to understand the article. DISCUSSION FOR 3-6 Explain why compelling questions are important. Instruct students in grades 3-5 to read the article in pairs and allow time for them to ask inquiry questions to further understanding. Use open-ended questions to assess students. *Use the article to make your own plan for celebrating Memorial Day or reenact the first Students in Grades 7-12 will research two articles that supports one of two debate topics, prepare for debate by developing questioD1.1.3-5. Explain why compelling questions are important ns and prepare arguments, and participate in the debate. COMMON CORE STANDARDS: D1.1.K-2. Explain why the compelling question is important to the student. D1.1.3-5. Explain why compelling questions are important D1.1.6-8/D1.1.9-12. Explain how a question represents key ideas in the field.
Family History for Students with Special Needs
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Family History for Students with Special Needs

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This unit lesson will lessen the difficulty students with special needs have learning about and understanding history. By researching family history, students with special needs will realize that history delves in the past and that everyone has a history that can be passed down to families, friends, and historians. The goals and objectives provide teachers with an outline of this approach. The suggested activities, starting with each student investigating the history of someone in his/her family which will be displayed and presented by the student to the class. This will provide a foundation from which to explore historical events by having each student identify any event in the local, state, national, or world history their relative might have witnessed or with which s/he was involved. The teacher then arranges these historic events into a timeline to acquaint the students with how to research and display historical events.
English vs. Mathematics
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English vs. Mathematics

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After watching dozens of adults totally miss the English contribution to this simple little game, I thought this would be a great way to teach students how to recognize the difference between what words describe and what numbers calculate. Toward that end, I created an exercise to show how “English vs Mathematics” solves the puzzle within this game. I’ve also listed activities that can be used at each grade level from PreSchool to grade eight to help students make the distinction between language usage and mathematical language using manipulatables in the lower grades, as well as more intellectual ideas about the differences in language and mathematics which they all unknowingly use every day (another resource to come).
Let Girls Learn STEM: Technology
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Let Girls Learn STEM: Technology

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As part of the U.S. government’s commitment to Let Girls Learn, First Lady Michelle Obama and the Peace Corps have formed a powerful collaboration to expand access to education for adolescent girls around the world. Educating girls is essential to healthy and thriving communities but, globally, 62 million girls are not in school, and barriers to adolescent girls completing school are particularly significant. In some countries, fewer than 10% of teenage girls complete secondary school. This programme will address that challenge by empowering local leaders to put lasting solutions in place. Peace Corps Volunteers who live and work at the grassroots level will serve as catalysts of community-led change, and every American can get involved and make a difference. https://letgirlslearn.peacecorps.gov/ FOR SCHOOLS FOR GIRLS AND OTHER EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMES SPECIFICALLY FOR GIRLS Let Girls Learn STEM: Technology From Ancient Technology to the Technology of the Future Goal: Students will learn that technologies have been developed throughout history and that ancient technologies influenced present ones Objective: Students will learn about ancient technologies, how they created present technologies, the impact of technology on humans and how we live, and develop their own 22nd century technology design and prototype. FOR GIRLS’ SCHOOLS OR SCHOOL PROGRAMS FOR GIRLS This lesson is for students in middle grades and students with learning disabilities in higher grades. Outcomes: 1. Students will understand how ancient technologies influence present technologies 2. Students will identify modern technologies that developed from ancient ones. 3. Students will design and create an artefact of a future technology.
Behavioral Management Training Outline
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Behavioral Management Training Outline

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D****emand for behavioral intervention is at an all-time high. I’ve created my own company: If you are dealing with behavioral problems in your classroom, encourage your school district to contact CBAA (Chapman Behavior Analytics and Applications) at GenevaChapman@gmail.com which will provide your school district with a module for staff and parents, "break-out sessions for teachers and other staff, and assessment that’s fun as well as introduces a researched assessment. Online meetings are also available to answer questions for school districts that use our module and/or presentations. Created for an in-service for teachers in a major city, this behavior management training outline was created by a behavior specialist/special education teacher/gifted and talented teacher/regular student/staff instructor/supervisor was recently asked to prepare a protocol for a school district. This outline includes information about the author and presenter, as well as behavior management tools and examples that will help teachers and support staff (as well as students with developmental disabilities teach and learn how) to create classroom settings that equip and support students of all intellectual levels. The easy to use outline provides a great deal of information and a comprehensive list of sources that provide more detailed information. The attached MAS (Motivation Assessment Scale) which helps teachers and staff understand the cause of maladaptive behaviors. This scale is very easy to understand and use and usually shows the same results for a specific student by the teacher, staff, and parents. I only charge teachers $10, $50 for departments or schools. $250 for districtwide for distribution. Selling far more offline than on Tes.com.
Behavior Management for Teachers
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Behavior Management for Teachers

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Differentiation in public schools can be difficult for teachers. However, teachers that learn how differences in the classroom require differences in how each group learn, teaching in a diverse classroom is easier. Each group has a method of learning. For students with developmental disabilities, the IEP is the tool used to support learning. Along with that behavioral concerns should be addressed. Addressing behavioral problems is usually the job of support staff - behavior specialists, psychologists, therapists, etc. However, the behavior specialist is the one that will probably most involved with helping teachers and children deal with maladaptive behavior exhibited by students with developmental disabilities. In order to help teachers and support staff in a very large, well-known city an in-service with a doctor who has worked miracles with his patients with developmental disabilities. He works mostly with students with autism spectrum disorder but has worked his miracles on students with many types of maladaptive behavior. However, not having worked in a school setting, he tasked this behavioral specialist/classroom teacher (of typical students, gifted students, and students with developmental disabilities in grades 2-12 over two decades, as well training staff in behavior analysis and retiring as a supervisor) to create a presentation for an in-service. The results of that request are here in the form of an outline covering behavioral tools, examples of how those tools work, an understanding of the basic behavior problems and how parents should be part of the process. Added to the “behavior outline” is a “break out” session for various school groups using various materials. Teachers, teacher aides, support staff, and substitute teachers, along with teachers with specialists (art, music, gym, etc.) constitute the groups, each with different learning tasks. Slides are used throughout the in-service ice that have a great deal of information. The slides can be used if requested and can be purchased as a book. Another excellent tool is the MAS (Motivation Assessment Scale) that is almost one hundred percent accurate in determining what is causing a behavior and which behaviors need to be dressed. This author has used in as a behavior specialist and given each of the teachers and aides fill out with almost all coming up with the same score. Also, last but not least are a few games to play at the end of the in-service that you and your peers might like to use to identify various behavior management tools. They include games titled “Faculty Feud” “Name That 'Tude” and “Behavior Jeopardy.” All of the information is useful and easily understood. I am charging ten dollars for the complete program (the MAS is free) but will reduce it by half if your school would like to purchase the program for teachers and other faculty, to use for in-services, parent training. The discount is available for all U.S. schools, groups of teachers, etc. Howe
Flash Mob Challenge For Your School!
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Flash Mob Challenge For Your School!

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GOAL: Help students create their own flash mob dance to an oldie or current song and challenge every classroom to learn the dance and meet in the gym at a specific day and time to perform the flash dance to promote physical fitness. OBJECTIVES: 1.Students will suggest songs for the flash mob based on popularity and rhythm (could be an oldie or current hit song, hip-hop song, or popular jingle). 2. Students will create movement in rhythm with music with guidance from gym, music, and/or drama teacher (if available) using vintage dance move or current ones. 3.Students will rehearse the dance each day until they master it. 4. Students will be recorded on video performing their flash dance. 5. Students as a class will challenge every classroom and all staff to learn the dance by a specific date and time when the school gym or other space is available. 6. Students will continue to perfect their movements every day, increasing physical activity. 7. Students will join with students in other classes that accepted the challenge on the appointed day and time. There are links to flash mob videos. Here's a link one that focuses on bullying: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vmDId5UPhIM
The Nuclear Winter That Killed the Dinosaurs
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The Nuclear Winter That Killed the Dinosaurs

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This curriculum for students. grades 4-8 encourages the study of a series of activities requiring critical thinking, scientific study through research, hypothesizing and testing a hypothesis, encourages scientific study and research based on the video introducing the curriculum and a detailed article: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1iNcRJGzzxs ARTICLE: https://myweatherupdatenow.com/post/asteroid-wiped-dinosaurs-caused-years-long-winter?notifid=10362&cid=998&segid=1&impid=697476bc2e2bf50228434df4ded2abHave students read article in groups of four or less, paying attention to underlined words: GOAL: Understanding how dinosaurs became extinct through research and simulation. OBJECTIVE: Students in grades 4-8 will understand how asteroids can affect the earth and how to reproduce the extinction of dinosaurs due to an asteroid that hit earth 66 million years ago causing a prolonged nuclear winter, and apply what they learn to predict and prevent future extinctions on earth.