Whoa.
When I walked into my room I was like WHOA. This is my room? I have a room. I will have students. My students. Someone is going to pay me to do this. Then I see a smart board, piles of books, class-bathrooms, copy machine, and personal computers.
Whoa.
I had two days to set up my classroom. Now for those of you that are not teachers you are probably no pooing your pants. In fact for those of you that are new to the profession and never had to set up your own room–maybe you’re not even thinking twice. I know I didn’t sweat it—-then the night before my first three days came.
HOLY CRAP!
I don’t have names on the desks, they don’t have cubbies, I don’t have books organized, I don’t have rules printed out, I am going to need to give them folders and paper, —what?! what is that in that cupboard? Which science book do I use for a 6,7, AND 8th grade combined class?!! How do I use the lamination machine? Do I have scissors? What should I put on the walls? Where should I put my word-wall up? What kind of rules should I have? Do I need to do Homework on the first day? Where the hell do I find those Alaska Standards? Shit. Shit. Shit. Yeah, I might have had 600 mini-panic attacks.
Luckily my principal knows what it takes to set up a room. He also knows that the small amount of teachers on staff aren’t super-human–well perhaps some of them are. (not me) He stated that rooms probably wouldn’t be set up. Well, he was right. I thought I did most of the set up—but when the kids actually came into my room I realized how much more I needed to do. I still don’t have everything “golden” and I am on day–seven. I have lesson plans going. I have classroom management magic (and building on this more daily). However, the fact that I have cupboards and bookshelves that need cleaned still drives me nutty.
Here are some of the things that I did do:
Owl Reading Spots: They can place their name in the clear holder when they move to that spot. For some reason my students love the floor way more than their nice desk. I can’t hate though…I never liked to read at my desk either.
Red Light, Green Light, Yellow Light: In a red light they may not move a lesson is in progress, in a yellow light they must stay at desks to work quietly (restroom, water-fountain in room open), green light means they can go to reading spots and whisper. They can’t move if their name is on the board–this is a total bummer for some kids, they love those reading spots!!
Whole body teaching: When I say “class” they say “yes” (however I might say class…and I have so far said it like a sumo-man, a dainty grandma, and shouted it super loud), when I say Freeze they freeze, when I say mirror-words: they mirror everything I do and say. It really sounds silly but WOW. It works great.
Rules: Every time a rules is broken I refer back to the posted rules that they signed, which is also posted. I point out that even I follow the rules in my classroom.
GYM: I find what they like and I use it for reinforcement and redirection. THEY love GYM time. You would think that I am going to take their pet puppy when I take even a minute away from gym time. mwhahaha. I got my entire room clean in under 5 minutes because of this threat. Mostly because they know already that I stand by what I say. I will take their time if they take mine.
Plan ahead: I have an extra set of lessons or ideas for almost every lesson I have. It isn’t anything elaborate but it has already saved me twice. My students are sometimes more advanced than my choice or way less advanced than the book. I have decided to re-do most lessons to create something that works well for them.
The Chaos that was my room above and below.

temporary desk arrangement. my desk.


The students have 1 hour of their home language daily. (I do not teach that!)

First assignment a fake-facebook get to know you.

BOOKS!!

An assignment to make posters of any rules we spoke about.

Reading owl. They love these! 🙂