
The visual portion of a path-to-incentives type of reward program can take any shape that might appeal to the students in your class. You might use a football field with the 10, 20, 30.... yard lines as stopping points, or a race track with cars speeding along the path, or a cross-country hike, or some other path based on a school theme or your classroom curriculum.
Whatever theme you choose, each stopping point on the path should represent an incentive. Incentives should start out small and get larger as students proceed along the path. Each day that a student makes good choices in work and/or behavior, he or she moves one step along the path and one step closer to the next incentive.
Education World®
Copyright © 2010 Education World
09/14/2010
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