School
started this week, so I’ve been spending some time in my classroom getting ready for
the new year. I decided to completely redo my room so it was quite a lot of
work, but I’m excited for the results! Prepare for a LOT of pictures and
detail. :)
I know many
people have different views on classroom decor, how you should do it and how
cute or finished a room should be. I focus on making my room as functional as
possible, with visual displays to help students remember vocabulary terms. Instead
of a specific theme I chose a consistent pattern (chevron) with clear
color-coding to help streamline the visuals.
At the back
of the room is my word wall. Usually there are instruments set up too, but I
won’t get them out until the third week of school. Each grade has its own
board. The color is coordinated to the displays around the room, so kids can
easily zoom in on their color. Above are smaller movement word walls, organized
by locomotor and non-locomotor movements.
The front of
the room has a thin table for my computer, document camera, supplies, and
serves as my desk. There are steady beat light-sabers, a few chairs (I use them
to teach rhythm, admin use them when they come in to observe) a SMART board,
and my TAD display.
On the front
wall I have a vocabulary display for tempo, articulation, and dynamics. Each
term is color-coded to match the back wall and the grade level the term is
introduced. That way, students can focus in on the terms we will be learning
about.
This is the
question board. My school is big on accountable talk, so the top are some
phrases that students could use in music. Many of them relate to tempo,
dynamics, and preference since that is prominent in the state standards. Below
are essential questions for each grade tied to the concepts we are learning.
On one of my
cabinets I have an audience and performance behavior display. It’s helpful to
have a side-by-side comparison, especially for primary.
I love love
LOVE my musical alphabet display. I used the alphabet found here, and color-coded
them to match boomwhackers colors. I also have chord cards for I IV and V, as
well as examples of what each chord is in the key of C.
Kids love the drum wall. Each are labeled and fit in spots outlined by washi tape. Below are non-pitched percussion instruments in labeled bins that have both a picture of the instrument and the name. On the floor are my two staff carpets.
I finally
redid my library this year. Each bin (from the Dollar Tree, naturally) is
organized by how I use the books within the classroom. Above are the
boomwhackers in cardboard book boxes from Ikea. I copied mini musical alphabet
cards that match the larger display and have those as labels. In front of the
books I have a rest area for kids to use as a cool-down space.
Above the
piano (covered currently with cloth because there isn’t a cover attached and I
don’t want kids kerplunking notes when they walk by) are some staff posters I
made in college. One day I’ll end up redoing them, but it is not this day. :)
The back
cabinet houses my Solfege display and THINK, a strategy for questioning your
own behavior that is really helpful when students work in small groups.
Here are my
tone bar rules. It also included how we move when we rotate instruments.
This is
right above my door. I’m a huge fan of Vlogbrothers, and “don’t forget to be
awesome” is something I say fairly often. My kids love it and have started using it too! I used stickers on top of contact
paper so I wouldn’t have to worry about getting the stickers off the wall.
Outside my
room is one of my favorite boards, the meme board. I’m a huge fan of using
memes in my teaching, and this year used a meme generator to create simple
memes aligned to the specific skills each grade is learning. Again, it’s color
coded to match the word wall. I also use these memes in class; students use
them to review concepts. Above I used the Star Wars welcome banners found here.
The whole set-up!
EDIT: Here's the Rhythm Wall, one of the only things in my room that stayed the same this year. I love this thing. I has the rhythm, name, and number of sounds/beats. (That is how my curriculum defines rhythms.)
Whew, that was a long one! I hope you got some great ideas, and I hope you have a great school year!
Whew, that was a long one! I hope you got some great ideas, and I hope you have a great school year!
Hello! I'm not sure if my original question posted since I did it on my phone (sorry if this is a repeat!)... first off your blog is absolutely WONDERFUL!!! Thank you so much for sharing! I usually focus on making decorations for my classroom that aren't all that functional and then the year starts up and I'm kicking myself. Thank you for the reminder to produce materials for the classroom that are pretty AND functional. I have two quick questions...
ReplyDelete1. Where did you get your non-locomotor movement pictures? They look like Eric Carle? And also, what movements did you assign all of them, if you are willing to share
2. What is the text that follows your rhythm wall from the panoramic picture? I can't quite make out the text.
Thanks SO much!
The non-locomotor pictures are indeed Eric Carle, they are from the book From Head to Toe. I assigned them the same movements that are in the book. That idea is from Thom Borden, who is a FANTASTIC presenter if you ever have the chance to see him.
ReplyDeleteI totally forgot to post a picture of the rhythm board! I will add that now. :) The text lists the name of the rhythm and number of sounds/beats.
Thanks for visiting! I learned last year, when I had short class periods and a LOT to teach, that your room can be a very important resource. I hope you saw something you can take and use with your kiddos! :)