Deb~
Thanks for answering! Jason~ sorry I missed this:)!!! The pacing guideline is just that~ I guideline I use with my students when introducing the steps. But as Deb said, each class is different. To be specific, and in answering your questions:
*Class yes is taught almost immediately and is practiced throughout the day.
*Each day I teach one rule and I use the scoreboard to reinforce that rule throughout the day. In kinder, we do have one additional rule. "THE BIG RULE": "Listen (fingers pointed to ears) when your teacher (kids point to me) is talking (talking handmotion wit hands)> SO on the first day we are practicing and rehearsing what a good listening body is.
*Criss cross applesauce is just the way we sit on the rug. We do alot of stand up sit down in kinder and to get them sitting correctly, with a good listening body~ we rehearse like this:
I say "Criss cross" they say "Criss cross" and they cross their legs.
I say "Applesauce" they say "Applesauce" and that is where they sit down on their bottoms in their squares (remember the legs are already criss crossed)
I say "hands and eyes" they say "hands and eyes" and they fold their hands and put them in their laps.
In a WBT classroom "Hands and eyes" is used for important points. In kinder~ we use "Hands and eyes" in carpet land (on the learning rug) to avoid thos little hands getting those kiddos in trouble. IF they have their hands folded, they cant be on their neighbor, or finger vacuuming the floor, or velcro and unvelcroing shoes, etc. Carpet land is a very special place where some very off task behaviors continuously occur so hands and eyes helps:)!
*Deb is correct~ I tell students to put a "Bubble in their mouth" when we are being very quiet~ during learning time, walking in lines, etc. When you are holding a bubble in your mouth~ your mouth is very busy concentrating on that bubble rather than talking.

*Cubbies, cubbies, cubbies, is just another part of our pack up routine and is done in the same fashion as the seats, seats, seats & lines lines lines. Our pack up routine includes "Backpacks backpacks backpacks; cubbies cubbies cubbies; and then seats, seats, seats. You can add these "threepeats" into any classroom routine to make those potentially time consuming tasks into flawless fun:)!
*In general I wait for the second day for the next on the list because I want to build slowly but proficiently and then review the next day and add on. However, there are those classes that are ready for more so I can add more. Kinder is a special world and we can get there~ we just gotta build up. I find that taking the time to really rehearse each strategy and giving the students multiple practices~ and then adding on the next "layer" is our recipe for success. Hope this helps:laugh:
Andrea