Desks and Seating Arrangements:

Something unique to her classroom desk setup was that her desk also was the main focal point so that she had all eyes on what everyone was doing. I don't know if I necessarily like this... although its structured and easy for the teacher, I feel like the students don't get to interact with one another as much - and in a class with English language learners specifically, student interaction and communication contributes to advancements in their language skills.
Materials and Supplies:


Walls and Decor:

A lot of her students like to draw an whenever they have finished a drawing that they feel great about, she pins it up on her wall to "show everyone their ability and achievement." Most teachers hate when their students draw but in this class's case, drawing is how they learn sometimes and it also is how the escape what terrible things they go home to everyday.
Norms - procedures, and routines:
This class functions because of the norms my teacher has made and without them, it would be utter chaos.
- "I hear voices" signifies she hears who is talking and that it isn't time for that... pretty much their first warning.
- "Voices at zero" is something she says when someone is about to present or when she has something to explain to the class.
- Hands raised mean different things:
- fingers crossed = bathroom, which they then take a buddy with
- "standards" are paragraphs students have to write over the weekend if they were misbehaving in class after 3 warnings.
- After lunch the students come in and the lights are off and they lay their heads down on their desks for 5 minutes with calming music playing in the background so they can calm down and let their minds switch over (the picture above is what she displays for them during this time)

Something I love about her classroom is it truly is student ran, and that is part of the class routine. She gives the students a lot of responsibility. There's a door opener, graders, standard writer, fun Friday tally writer, bathroom buddy, line leader, timer, lights person, etc. It builds a certain decorum in the classroom and instead of the students fighting over who gets to do what, they all know their roles.
I'm not quite sure if this is counts as procedures or routines, but it definitely is a classroom norm. My teacher refers a lot to real world scenarios and whenever the children are off tasks or not completing the assignments up to par, then she will bring up things going on in the world. For example, the procedure for when you first come into class is to sit down and get out the needed materials and then put your backpacks on your chairs. One day there were backpacks all over the floor and she stopped the class and said that if there was a school shooting and the students needed to get out of the room quickly, the backpacks would become road blocks and trip students, making it harder for an escape. At first I thought that was a little too serious for a 5th grade class, but she's right and it's something I'll remember to incorporate in my high school class.
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