A Note from the Team
Staff who have spent time in classrooms with any age group will be able to tell you that there are more behavior incidents during transition than at any other time. When children do not know what to do next, they invent things to fill the time. Often, these things are not appropriate for the given moment in time!
Transitions also present the perfect opportunity for children to make refusals, for a variety of reasons (tired, enjoying activity, enjoying freedom of choice, etc.). The more transitions across the day, the more opportunities for behavior to arise. Limit the number of transitions across your day. Really think about what transitions are REALLY necessary and which could be eliminated.
Also, always consider the purpose of your transitions and if they are meeting your needs. Before naptime or carpet time, you may need calming transitions. There may be times when you want to review by using educational transitions. Other times, you may just want something fun or invigorating. Make sure your transitions match your needs and the personalities of the children you have. Very active classrooms or children with impulse control may need more calming than invigorating. If you have a child with attention deficit (without hyperactive traits), you may need more invigorating to get them stimulated and focused for a learning experience.
When components of this Practice module are implemented, children will be more engaged in transitions - reducing challenging behaviors during this time. Having warnings, expectations, and other tools will help children to transition without behavior incidents.
~The ECSE Team
Step 1: Reading Assignment
Read pages 32-37 in the IEPm.
IEPm
Step 2: Watch the Video and Take Notes
Open the slides. Click the tab that says "Open With" and click Google Slides. Print the slides with speaker notes. Watch the video of the presentation. Read through the slides and speaker notes. Write comments and questions on the slides. Reach out to your coach or team with any remaining questions or needed clarifications.
Step 3: Review Handout
Please review the handouts. Begin looking for a few transition ideas that are fun and engaging. Ask peers. Google. Read books and articles.
Step 4: Transition Visuals
Create some visuals that represent favorite transitions. These can then be used to prompt children who have limited receptive language and also can be used to allow children some choice in transitions. Templates are below in the resources section in case you want to add to these or simply create your own favorites!
Video yourself doing transitions to and from Centers/Free Choice time. Consider how these went.
Step 6: Reflect Using the Observation Checklist
Watch your transitions using the checklist provided to the right. What did you do well? What do you need to work on more? Do you have a good toolbox of transitions that children know, and you use consistently?
Share your video and checklist with your coach. Have them watch and score as well. Discuss what you both see, and where you might go next.
Implementation Resources
Transition Cue Cards
Calming Transition Template
Educational Transition Template
Invigorating Transition Template