How To Teach At A Rewards-Focused School

Smart Classroom Management: How To Teach At A Rewards-Focused SchoolIf you’re a regular reader of SCM, then you know how I feel about rewarding students in exchange for good (i.e. expected) behavior.

A do-this-and-get-that approach to classroom management is damaging to kids.

It snuffs out intrinsic motivation and turns the student-teacher relationship into a cold-hearted transaction.

It also makes managing your classroom far more difficult in the long run.

I’ve written about this topic extensively in The Happy Teacher Habits as well as in several previous articles.

So I won’t rehash it here.

Suffice it to say, I’ve angered some teachers and educational leaders in the process.

A few have even written bogus reviews of my work in an effort to hurt me. But the future of our children is at stake, so I’m willing to take the heat.

This doesn’t mean, however, that I encourage you to put your own career at risk if you work at a school that mandates the use of external rewards.

Nor do you need to.

The truth is, you can still stay true to yourself and what you know is right for your students while safeguarding them from bribery, trickery, and manipulation.

In fact, used in a certain way, you can turn those tickets, tokens, and stickers into an advantage that actually supports the development of intrinsic motivation.

The key is to offer them to your students without connecting them to any particular behavior.

Here’s how:

Give to everyone.

If you’re required to hand out external rewards, then joyfully give them to everyone in your class at the same time.

Show your students that it’s okay to give gifts, as well as smiles and acts of kindness, just because you care and just because it feels good—or for no reason at all.

It sends the message that the true reward resides with the giver.

Give for fun.

Passing out tokens (for use at a school store or prize box), colorfully designed pencils, or smiley hand stamps is fun.

It makes students smile and adds another layer of specialness that makes your classroom a place your students love coming to every day.

Just pass them out at odd times without explanation, even to the student sitting in time-out. It is, after all, a free gift with no strings attached.

Give as a lesson.

When you give just for the sake of it, it reinforces the lesson we all want our children to embrace that learning, making friends, and enjoying school is reward unto itself.

It is, in fact, the greatest reward you can offer.

Free grace has a remarkable way of softening hearts and reawakening intrinsic motivational engines. It’s also a model for what true giving looks like.

Your expression of unconditional generosity—whether smiles, fist bumps, a kind word, or dinosaur erasers—will deepen your influence and cause your students to take up your cue and give of themselves to others.

A Core Principle

Whether or not you’re at a school that requires you to hand out rewards, there is great value in ensuring that all of your giving is a free act of grace.

Simple and consistent kindness, pleasantness, and friendliness, without expectation of receiving anything in return, is a core principle here at SCM.

It builds easy rapport and likability, strengthens your classroom management plan, and provides the leverage you need to have the well-behaved class you want.

There is a lot to this topic, including how to handle monthly rewards and “caught being good” recess tickets. We’ll be sure to cover these and more in future articles.

So stay tuned.

Give to give.

The rewards are real, profound, and life-changing.

PS – If you’re a high school teacher in need of an effective classroom management plan, click here.

Also, if you haven’t done so already, please join us. It’s free! Click here and begin receiving classroom management articles like this one in your email box every week.

51 thoughts on “How To Teach At A Rewards-Focused School”

    • I used to do the rewards approach but after reading smart classroom management I changed that approach. It makes sense that you should not reward students for something they should already be doing. I have to say it is one of the best things I have ever done. My students know what is expected of them. No rewards for that.

      Reply
  1. Reading this article just validated what I’ve been doing the last few weeks! I recently moved back into a middle school classroom after being an elementary school teacher coach for three years. My new school uses tickets as rewards and after reading everything that Michael has written, I was feeling frustrated with the ticket system. There’s even a raffle ticket for the teacher when they’ve handed out a certain number of student tickets! So I started handing student tickets out to the whole class, just to be nice. And it made them feel good! Thank you, Michael!

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  2. My coworker had a formal observation this week. When it was time for independent work, her entire class was on task and engaged. She got marked down because she didn’t “clip up” any students to reward them for doing their work. The principal rated her as “beginning” in behavior management.

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    • I am so sorry to hear about what happened to your colleague, Katherine. What a ridiculous move on the administrator’s part! Then again, that administrator could’ve been pressured by some idiots at the district office!

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  3. That is ridiculous! We use the Marshall rubric for teacher evaluation. For classroom management the highest grade is for using an intrinsic model. Luckily my P agrees, but I use the rubric to support my stance if needed.

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  4. Thanks again for a great way to implement this topic. My building has now mandated a token system. Once again your articles have given me the tools and insights on how to approach the daily challenges of teaching..

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  5. Thank Micheal! After teaching using SCM strategies last year I can’t go back to the craziness and unfairness of ‘extrinsic’ motivation. I want to do what’s best for the students in my class! But at the end of last year my school mandated this PBL (extrinsic rewards) and they now come and check our rooms to ensure we are using it! This article helped me heaps because I didn’t want to make a fuss as a third year teacher in our school. Thank you for everything you post, it motivates me to be a better teacher each day 🙂

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  6. I just bought the high school management system and am a bit confused because that system supports the points system. Am I missing something or is it a mixed message?

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    • Hi Lilian,

      There are stark differences between the two—making them virtually unrelated, even opposite—the most notable being that the points described in the guide are an assessment, not a tangible reward. There are many others, which I’ll be sure to cover in a future article.

      Michael

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  7. Thanks Michael for creating this website, it saved my life about 2 years ago (and ever since) when I had the toughest class in my 20 year career. This is a very timely article for me. My school just implemented a point system for the whole school. eg 10 points = reward from the teacher, 20 points = reward from the teacher, 30 points = reward from administration and then it keeps repeating… My idea was to reward all children as a ‘team’ instead of individually…Throwing tokens in a jar for random acts of kindness and effort. But I don’t know how I am going to get around the reward from Administration?? They will know I’m not using the system correctly if I never send anyone to the office for their reward!? Any ideas would be welcome. Thanks : )

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  8. A timely post as I start at a new school in Australia that uses extrinsic rewards both in class (peg chart) and on the playground (caught being good). I don’t like to use either but as I’m in an open plan room teaching collaboratively with 3 other teachers I dont feel that I can avoid it. I like your advice to give out many (peg ups) randomly but fear that my teaching partners will not be impressed as this will be inconsistent with their approach. Do you have any suggestions of how I can best manage this as the new kid on the block?

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  9. Hi Michael,

    I was wondering if a strategy I am using is considered, “extrinsic”. I teach kindergarten and on occasion, I will have a child give me a “Star” answer or be a “Star” listener and will give them a Magic Marker star that I draw in their planner with the color of their choice. I tell them to tell their mommy or daddy what they said or did to receive the star. For example, I might give a child a star if we are discussing a story and I ask a question and it’s not until the third child that I pick, knows the answer. For something like this, I will draw a star in their planner and write Star Listener. I sometimes put a star, again with a marker on a child’s paper when after two or more children come up to me to have their work check and missed part of the directions or didn’t complete their paper following the given directions. I am very selective about giving out stars and don’t give them out everyday, only on the occasion when I feel a child has given me star work or a star answer. Thoughts?

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  10. I am so glad that you are posting about the unintended consequences of rewards based management. With educators like you and Dr. Marvin Marshall, at some point the tide will turn. For those teachers who resist and have found a better way, keep sharing your non-extrinsic reward behavior strategies with your fellow teachers and principals. Let’s develop responsibility, not reward based conditioned behavior.

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  11. thoughts on using Mystery Student ? During transitions you choose a mystery student to observe and reward if they are successful . .

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  12. Hi Michael,

    I’ve been a faithful reader of your blog for the last three years, and you have helped me so much with my classroom management. Teaching second grade has been an absolute joy! However, this year our school is following the Positive Discipline program, and I was told by the administration that I cannot write students’ names on the board or send a child to a time-out as it is a punishment masquerading as a consequence. I can only ask a student if they would like to sit in the cool-off area. Needless to say, it’s not going well. Please help me!

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    • Hi Eileen,

      This is a big question that I don’t have the time or space to cover here. It’s already on the list of future topics. I hope to get to it soon.

      Michael

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    • i don’t know about ‘never will’, as it is apparent that there’s more and more support building in favor of Universal Basic Income; long over due in my opinion but better late than never. hopefully enough people will come around to the idea that human rights (such as shelter, nutrition, safety and definitely also health, medicine, and access to legal representation if necessary…!) are simply endowed by reason of being a human. and we can finally dispense with the archaic notion that access to basic necessities should be contingent on one’s labour output, nor should anyone be advantaged more or less by their socioeconomic status at birth or random chance. the brilliant thing about UBI is that given the opportunity to spend one’s time engaging in intrinsically motivated activities, creativity, innovation and hard work are not only rewarded but are removed of much of the risk, stress, and tediousness involved under the current model of working to sustain basic survival.

      Reply
  13. I teach at a PBIS school. We have to use the clip chart and hand out reward tickets. When we are observed they are looking for us to specifically praise. To clip a student up or give them a ticket and say exactly why, “Susie, you get a ticket because you got your journal out right away the first time I said to.” We get observed often and it is marked negatively if we are not witnessed using the chart and giving out tickets. Once it was only 30 minutes into the day, my observation went great and there were even comments about how engaged and well behaved my class was. But in the suggestions section it said, “Are you using the clip chart? All students are on green.” So how can I implement your ways without the clip chart and tickets? I can’t just give everyone one or clip everyone up during an observation and my clip chart has to have kids on different colors. Also it would be weird for me to all of a sudden hand out tickets with individual praise during observations when I don’t do that normally.

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    • Hi Caitlyn,

      SCM and PBIS are not compatible, hence the article. So, short of refusal or teaching at a different school, other than what is written above, there isn’t much you can do.

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  14. After spending my summer reading your books and articles, and feeling much greater hope about next year being my best year yet, I discovered piles of printed bucks in our team room and see PBIS on our agenda for next week. 🙁
    Thank you for helping me to see a way to navigate it without feeling like I’m a sell-out to something with which I totally disagree on so many levels.

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  15. What method would you use to build community and encourage positive behavior school-wide if you’re not a fan of PBIS? Thank you!

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    • Hi Nicole,

      This entire website represents my answer. A good place to start, however, is the Rapport and Influence category of the website or The Classroom Management Secret.

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  16. So, at the end of class, sometimes I just feel like giving every student a sticker (because they love getting a sticker!) or I give the entire class an “award certificate”, even if the behavior wasn’t exactly perfectly ideal. Is this what you’re talking about, or am I reinforcing bad behaviors?

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  17. I have just recently read your book, The Classroom Management Secret, and I am really excited to start implementing your Elementary Plan. I do have a question that I was hoping I would get an answer from this page. I have several student’s on IEPs or 504s that require me to have them on individual behavior plans based on rewards. These are legal documents that I am required to follow as a teacher, but I find that implementing them takes away from my whole class approach to behavior. Do you have any recommendations on how I can implement these without having it disrupt my whole class behavior plan? Thank you!

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  18. I agree completely with your post as usual! At my school we have a token economy, and I avoid using it to reward expected behaviors for the reasons you have stated in several articles. The solution I came up with is to assign each of my students a class job at the beginning of the year. They have to fill out an application, receive training, and keep the same job throughout the year. The kids enjoy the responsibility and opportunities to help out. Every two weeks, I use the token economy “dollars” as payday for students to simulate having a job in the “real world.” Ideally they would complete their jobs for the pure intrinsic reasons of helping out in the classroom, but since this method isn’t tied to classroom management or behavior expectations I find it works well as a compromise.

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  19. Thanks for a great article. I own some of your books and read your posts so I already give rewards to everyone. I call it “Celebrating Learning”, and it’s random and goes to everyone. In the past I have used your consequences, but this year I have to use Class Dojo. I have been thinking long and hard about how to implement it in a way that is in-line with the system you have taught me. Any suggestions?

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  20. This is exactly what I do. If I have stickers, everyone gets them. If I have to use school-wide incentives, everyone gets them. I expect all of my students to follow the procedures we have in place for a civil, respectful classroom. And if they don’t, it’s on me to figure out why. The last thing any of my students need is to feel shamed or excluded, which is what individual rewards do.

    This year, our principal insists that the school-wide incentives aren’t optional. As teachers, we are required to circle the category that the positive behavior falls under before we hand the child the “buck.” Instead, when I pass out the bucks to everyone, I have students think about their actions and circle their own category. This gives them time to reflect and feel empowered by their choices. Everyone is included and everyone realizes that they have something to contribute.

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  21. First year teacher here. So far every thing that I have read here goes against what my school does. It’s so confusing. I have to start the teacher vs student game tomorrow and I don’t want to do it. What happened to getting good grades and compliments on behavior being enough of a reward in school? I’m too poor to throw a pizza party a the end of the school year for my best behaved class. They are 8th graders, so do they really think about a long term reward every day that they are in class with me? Pretty sure they don’t. I know my own 8th grader doesn’t think about long term consequences. There frontal lobe just isn’t there it. They are in the “yolo” stage of life. LOL. Laugh so I don’t cry.

    Reply

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