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Summary
In this Season Two opener of Chalk Dust, Rebecca Birch and Dr Nathaniel Swain unpack what it means to start the year “right” through classroom routines that are warm, efficient, and culturally responsive. Drawing on classroom videos from AERO, they analyse entry routines, explicit logistical instructions, and minimally invasive behaviour corrections (the look, gesture cues, deliberate pauses, proximity). Across primary and secondary examples, they emphasise that strong routines aren’t about cold compliance; they are about building trust, reducing chaos, and freeing up attention for learning. The episode closes with a useful tension: aiming high while avoiding performative perfectionism—being yourself, staying firm, and focusing on the active ingredients that make routines work.
Mentioned resources and explainers
AERO (Australian Education Research Organisation)
AERO provides evidence-informed guidance and classroom video libraries showcasing effective practice. In this episode, Rebecca and Nathaniel use several AERO clips as case studies for entry routines, instruction delivery, and behaviour support.
Entry routines
The predictable sequence for when students arrive: greeting, expectations, materials, and immediate settling. Strong entry routines reduce transition friction, increase time-on-task, and communicate calm authority without needing lots of talk.
Checks for Understanding (CFU) in routines
Quick prompts that verify students can repeat or enact steps (for example: “What’s the first thing?”) before movement begins. CFUs prevent students from wriggling and prematurely moving off, especially when there are multiple steps.
Nonverbal corrections
Low-disruption cues (a look, a hand signal, finger to lips, a pause) used mid-instruction to redirect behaviour without breaking lesson flow or escalating attention to the behaviour.
Proximity
A minimally invasive management move: the teacher continues teaching but shifts closer to off-task students. Done well, it communicates monitoring and support without public correction.
Circulation and scanning
The practice of “working the room” with purpose: pausing to scan, moving to hotspots first, keeping sightlines open, and avoiding turning your back on the class.
Cultural responsiveness: shame and psychological safety
The episode highlights that some corrections can inadvertently shame students. Subtle moves (pause, name + “thank you”, neutral tone) maintain belonging and reduce escalation—particularly important in contexts where shame has cultural weight.
Teacher presence
Visible leadership means being positioned well, monitoring, and signalling that learning is the priority. The discussion includes a practical nuance for early years settings where being physically at the students’ level can be appropriate.
“Strong Voice” (Teach Like a Champion)
Nathaniel links self-interruption and deliberate pausing to the idea that teachers can pause mid-sentence to signal “we’re not ready yet” without lecturing or escalating.
“Pastore’s Perch”
A positioning idea: standing at a room edge/corner can improve sightlines and scanning compared with standing in the middle. Rebecca names it explicitly and suggests it as a useful practical heuristic.
Listen or view, and support our work
📨 Substack — sign up
🍏🎧 Apple Podcasts — like, review and follow
🎵💚 Spotify — follow and rate
📺🔔 YouTube — subscribe and like
✍️ Rebecca’s Substack — read more
✍️ Nathaniel’s Substack — read more
Thanks for listening to Chalk Dust! Share with a colleague who enjoys evidence-informed teaching.
Takeaways
* Routines aren’t about being harsh; they create safety, predictability, and efficiency so learning can happen.
* Greeting at the door can do double duty: relationship-building plus immediate, calm expectation-setting.
* When instructions have multiple steps, holding movement until “when I say go” reduces chaos and keeps attention to the end.
* CFUs work beautifully for routines: brief recaps (“What’s first?”) prevent confusion before students transition.
* Nonverbal corrections protect lesson flow and psychological safety, particularly when students are sensitive to public attention or shame.
* Proximity is an underrated intervention: it redirects without stopping teaching or spotlighting a student.
* Scanning and circulation are expert skills that develop with practice and observation; novices often “look” without noticing what matters yet.
* Education support staff are most powerful when routines are genuinely shared and seamless, not “helper on request”.
* Teacher presence matters: being up, positioned well, and visible supports both behaviour and momentum—without needing to raise your voice.
* Starting the year well means balancing high expectations with authenticity; aim for strong active ingredients, not impossible standards.
Keywords
classroom routines, entry routines, behaviour management, nonverbal corrections, proximity, circulation, scanning, checks for understanding, teacher presence, psychological safety, culturally responsive practice, AERO classroom videos, explicit instructions, start-of-year teaching, education support collaboration
By Nathaniel Swain5
88 ratings
Summary
In this Season Two opener of Chalk Dust, Rebecca Birch and Dr Nathaniel Swain unpack what it means to start the year “right” through classroom routines that are warm, efficient, and culturally responsive. Drawing on classroom videos from AERO, they analyse entry routines, explicit logistical instructions, and minimally invasive behaviour corrections (the look, gesture cues, deliberate pauses, proximity). Across primary and secondary examples, they emphasise that strong routines aren’t about cold compliance; they are about building trust, reducing chaos, and freeing up attention for learning. The episode closes with a useful tension: aiming high while avoiding performative perfectionism—being yourself, staying firm, and focusing on the active ingredients that make routines work.
Mentioned resources and explainers
AERO (Australian Education Research Organisation)
AERO provides evidence-informed guidance and classroom video libraries showcasing effective practice. In this episode, Rebecca and Nathaniel use several AERO clips as case studies for entry routines, instruction delivery, and behaviour support.
Entry routines
The predictable sequence for when students arrive: greeting, expectations, materials, and immediate settling. Strong entry routines reduce transition friction, increase time-on-task, and communicate calm authority without needing lots of talk.
Checks for Understanding (CFU) in routines
Quick prompts that verify students can repeat or enact steps (for example: “What’s the first thing?”) before movement begins. CFUs prevent students from wriggling and prematurely moving off, especially when there are multiple steps.
Nonverbal corrections
Low-disruption cues (a look, a hand signal, finger to lips, a pause) used mid-instruction to redirect behaviour without breaking lesson flow or escalating attention to the behaviour.
Proximity
A minimally invasive management move: the teacher continues teaching but shifts closer to off-task students. Done well, it communicates monitoring and support without public correction.
Circulation and scanning
The practice of “working the room” with purpose: pausing to scan, moving to hotspots first, keeping sightlines open, and avoiding turning your back on the class.
Cultural responsiveness: shame and psychological safety
The episode highlights that some corrections can inadvertently shame students. Subtle moves (pause, name + “thank you”, neutral tone) maintain belonging and reduce escalation—particularly important in contexts where shame has cultural weight.
Teacher presence
Visible leadership means being positioned well, monitoring, and signalling that learning is the priority. The discussion includes a practical nuance for early years settings where being physically at the students’ level can be appropriate.
“Strong Voice” (Teach Like a Champion)
Nathaniel links self-interruption and deliberate pausing to the idea that teachers can pause mid-sentence to signal “we’re not ready yet” without lecturing or escalating.
“Pastore’s Perch”
A positioning idea: standing at a room edge/corner can improve sightlines and scanning compared with standing in the middle. Rebecca names it explicitly and suggests it as a useful practical heuristic.
Listen or view, and support our work
📨 Substack — sign up
🍏🎧 Apple Podcasts — like, review and follow
🎵💚 Spotify — follow and rate
📺🔔 YouTube — subscribe and like
✍️ Rebecca’s Substack — read more
✍️ Nathaniel’s Substack — read more
Thanks for listening to Chalk Dust! Share with a colleague who enjoys evidence-informed teaching.
Takeaways
* Routines aren’t about being harsh; they create safety, predictability, and efficiency so learning can happen.
* Greeting at the door can do double duty: relationship-building plus immediate, calm expectation-setting.
* When instructions have multiple steps, holding movement until “when I say go” reduces chaos and keeps attention to the end.
* CFUs work beautifully for routines: brief recaps (“What’s first?”) prevent confusion before students transition.
* Nonverbal corrections protect lesson flow and psychological safety, particularly when students are sensitive to public attention or shame.
* Proximity is an underrated intervention: it redirects without stopping teaching or spotlighting a student.
* Scanning and circulation are expert skills that develop with practice and observation; novices often “look” without noticing what matters yet.
* Education support staff are most powerful when routines are genuinely shared and seamless, not “helper on request”.
* Teacher presence matters: being up, positioned well, and visible supports both behaviour and momentum—without needing to raise your voice.
* Starting the year well means balancing high expectations with authenticity; aim for strong active ingredients, not impossible standards.
Keywords
classroom routines, entry routines, behaviour management, nonverbal corrections, proximity, circulation, scanning, checks for understanding, teacher presence, psychological safety, culturally responsive practice, AERO classroom videos, explicit instructions, start-of-year teaching, education support collaboration

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