“They lack background knowledge or confidence.”

Use forced-processing techniques like “think-pair-share” before whole-class response, anonymous exit tickets, or “two stars and a wish” feedback on your own directions. Trap #3: Correcting Dialect in Ways That Shame When a student says, “He don’t have no pencil,” a common response is to correct grammar publicly. Oneal-Self notes this damages trust and ignores the legitimacy of the student’s home language.

“You cannot navigate what you cannot name. Most classroom communication breakdowns occur because teachers mistake a relational or cultural issue for an instructional one—or vice versa.” Part 2: Common Communication Traps (and How to Avoid Them) Drawing from her readings, Oneal-Self identifies four recurring traps that even experienced educators fall into. Trap #1: The “Initiative-Response-Evaluation” (IRE) Overload The classic IRE pattern (Teacher asks question → Student responds → Teacher evaluates “Correct!”) dominates many classrooms. While efficient for recall, it shuts down exploration.

Amy Oneal-self Navigating Classroom Communication: Readings For Educators _verified_ May 2026

“They lack background knowledge or confidence.”

Use forced-processing techniques like “think-pair-share” before whole-class response, anonymous exit tickets, or “two stars and a wish” feedback on your own directions. Trap #3: Correcting Dialect in Ways That Shame When a student says, “He don’t have no pencil,” a common response is to correct grammar publicly. Oneal-Self notes this damages trust and ignores the legitimacy of the student’s home language. “They lack background knowledge or confidence

“You cannot navigate what you cannot name. Most classroom communication breakdowns occur because teachers mistake a relational or cultural issue for an instructional one—or vice versa.” Part 2: Common Communication Traps (and How to Avoid Them) Drawing from her readings, Oneal-Self identifies four recurring traps that even experienced educators fall into. Trap #1: The “Initiative-Response-Evaluation” (IRE) Overload The classic IRE pattern (Teacher asks question → Student responds → Teacher evaluates “Correct!”) dominates many classrooms. While efficient for recall, it shuts down exploration. “You cannot navigate what you cannot name