Since opening 4 years ago, our school has used PBIS (Positive Behavioral Intervention and Supports) as a school-wide system for setting expectations and managing behavior. (Read more about PBIS whole-class rewards our school uses here.)
What is PBIS? Why?
Tracking Notes Sent Home
On my “A Note from My Teacher” pad, I write the dates so I see how frequently a student received a note. Since a sticky note is a lot smaller (and most of the time written on the fly as I see something great throughout the day), I use checks and dots. Checks are positive notes and dots are “Today ______ struggled with ___________. I know tomorrow we will _________!”
Printing Your Own Notepads
How do you track positive notes? I’m always looking to streamline my systems and would love to hear your ideas! If you are interested in other FREE classroom resources, you can sign-up here for teaching freebies to land in your inbox every month and check out other ways I reach-out to families here.
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Not at this time. Sorry!
Do you have the “Note from a teacher” in an editable form? I would love to add/change some of the things that are already written on the note.
My school also uses PBIS and we have 2 positive interactions. 1 is Gotcha tickets, a small token of appreciation for good behavior and Ranger recognitions (our mascot is Rangers). One of our office ladies keeps track how many and which students receive these on a monthly basis. We as a class keep track how many Gotcha tickets are turned in monthly and when we have met our monthly goal the entire school gets free dress.
Love this! Is there a Spanish version? All of correspondence home has to be in English and Spanish
I love this idea! I am a middle school teacher and this would be so powerful in our school! Thanks for sharing!
I teach 2nd and we do "shout outs" every Friday – the kids LOVE IT! I highlight their name when they get a shout out and try to make sure they get at least 2 a month. Thanks for the template!
This is such a great idea! Thank you so much for sharing!!
Is it a sticky notepad like a post-it note? I notice your roster is stuck on the back of what looks like a sticky post-it note notepad
I do the same but print of my kiddos names/addresses on labels. I have positive postcards that I send home and like Ashley said, I put the label on ahead of time so I can always tell who still needs one sent out. Once I get through everyone once, I start over again. Of course I still send extras here and there as needed.
they say something like "i am a great writer", "i am a kind friend", or "i was a great listener all day". i am handing them out at our closing meeting (which is new this quarter – we need that reflection time!). i wanted to do brag tags, but honestly, that was too much to manage right now (maybe a goal for next year). the bracelets are perfect – easy to manage, easy to keep track of on a checklist, and motivating. i handed out the first ones today and my kids loved them!
Thank you for sharing your idea! I am a new teacher, and I have been looking for ways to address positive behavior. Can't wait to start using these tomorrow!! 🙂
LOVE this. So many times we forget about the good things the kids do.
I love this!! What a great organizational resource for sending home positive notes and I've enjoyed reading all of the replies to get more ideas!! Thanks, Catherine!!
I have a daily sunshine award as part of my afternoon meeting. It is a sunshine notepad and I choose one student who has brought sunshine to our classroom for the day. To recognize students in the moment I have a warm fuzzy jar. Students who show expected behavior earn the class a warm fuzzy and when the jar is full the whole class earns a reward.
This is just perfect! It was very kind of you to share this (for free!!!). Thank you!
Suzanne
Hi Kristi! I actually use the JPG image (linked above) and create a custom notepad. That way the note pad comes bound from the printer!