A VYL classroom. Part 1: Our little pre-school kingdom

This is my beloved classroom, mid-planning

I have decided to write this article inspired by my trainees on the IH VYL course and to collect, in one post, everything that I have learnt about a classroom that is appropriate for the lessons with the EFL preschoolers.

This post was meant as a short, one piece (emotionally-loaded, perhaps) description of a classroom. But then, as soon as I started writing, I realised that there is a lot more to say and that I myself have worked in so many different places that were made into VYL classrooms that, abracadabra, three posts came out of it. The other two can be found here: about the regular classroom that becomes a VYL classroom and about teaching in kindergartens

Well, enjoy! And if you have any other ideas to add, there is the comments box!

Case A: Our pre-school kingdom

This is a classroom in a language school that was set aside for the lessons with pre-schoolers. The furniture has been bought for the little people and there are no big tables or chairs. There are no other classes than those with pre-schoolers.

Advantages

  • The classroom is used only by the pre-primary students and teachers and all the furniture and the design can be adapted to the needs of the students.
  • The classroom is safe.
  • The room can be fully decorated in a child-friendly way, even if it is not all done at once, the elements can be added to it step by step.
  • There is plenty of room to display the kids’ work
  • It is easy to store resources and they are all at hand which gives the teacher a lot of flexibility while already in class.
  • The students feel comfortable in class and it is much easier to build up the routine.
  • With some investments, there is a lot of potential for some interesting solutions such as educational carpets (yes, in English!), lines painted on the floor that help to divide the classroom into sections (or just a hop-scotch grid that is always there, l saw it once in a classroom at IH Bucharest), wall hangings that now come with some of the coursebooks and can be left on the walls and so on.

Disadvantage

  • I cannot think of any, sorry)

Solutions

  • Have a look at the classroom before the lesson and figure out how you can make it fit your aims and ideas. Do not worry if at the start of the year you do not have a clear idea of what you want your classroom should be like. There is always room to experiement, to try new ideas and to improve the classroom, based your research, ideas or the group that you currently work with.
  • Make sure that the classroom is safe. Look out for the sockets, sharp edges, anything that is not stable or sticking out. There are easy ways of making the place child-proof ie moving out the furniture, swapping the classroom, getting the socket plugs etc.
  • The routine and the classroom go together and one can influence the other. They can also change through the year.
  • My dream classroom actually does exist and everything that I am going to include in this section of the post is based on a real experience.
  • My classroom is a rectangle and it has been divided into three sections: the carpeted area with a set of small chairs in a circle, a circle of small triangular tables arranged in a circle in the middle and another carpeted area by the window.
  • We start the lesson outside of the classroom. I am a huge fan of lining up. Kids walk in one by one, they put their books on the table, at their seats and then take a place on one of the chairs in the hello circle.
  • Afterwards, we move to the carpet by the window and this is where we study, we revise and play the flashcards games and this is also where we get up to do our movement games. We used to spend more time in the circle but then, last year, my students started to suggest, more and more frequently, to go to the carpet and that is exactly what we did. Now we spend there a lot more time. One of the reasons for that might be the fact that we got a big TV that hangs on the wall by the window. In order to make sure that we don’t sit too close to the screen, I put a piece of painter’s scotch onto the carpet and this is the line behind which we always have to sit while we are watching anything on the screen. Here we also do all of our movement games.
  • Afterwards we move to the tables in a circle and this is where we work with the book or the handouts. This is where we write and this is where we do craft.
  • The lesson finishes on the carpet that is also our storytelling corner. Sometimes our story is a video and in that case we sit in front of the TV. Sometimes it is a storybook with me sitting on a small chair and the kids sitting in a semi-circle on the carpet.
  • We finish the lesson on the carpet, too. We sing a song, talk about the homework and choose stickers.
  • In the corner of the classroom, there is a bookcase and on the shelves we keep the most immediate resources such as markers, scissors in a closed box on the top shelf, glue in another box, crayons, our notebooks and two big boxes with dice, blocks, plastic toys. I don’t have to share them with anyone else, these are just used by the little kids. Outside of the classroom we have to cupboards, too and a chest of drawers for flashcards and all the other things we might need.
  • My resources for the lesson, for my groups are kept in three different baskets. I keep there flashcards we are using currently as well as few other sets we revise as well as our favourite games, dice, etc. The children do not touch them, mostly because they are too big and we have learnt on developing the idea that this is Anka’s basket and we do not touch it. Keeping things in a basket also makes it very easy for us to be moving around from the circle to the carpet and to the table etc. In the past, we would move between two or three different classrooms in one lesson and the basket was superuseful then, too.
  • I have three little tricks, too. First of all, since our table is made of small triangular tables, I have some room in the centre and this is where I put a stool. This is where I leave all the materials for the focused task for the lesson. The small tables are also very easy to be moved apart which makes it possible for me to enter the centre and sit there, having all my kids around and all the resources at hand.
  • There is also a small cupboard under the table and I use it to keep a selection of storybooks, coursebooks and posters which I can use in class.
  • And since the same cupboard has a small section underneath, a section that I can close and that is why it is used to hide all the secrets and surprises
  • I display the kids’ work on two noticeboards in the classroom but also on the noticeboards in the hallway.
  • There are no toys in the classroom. We are lucky enough to have another small room where kids can play before or after the lesson and this where we keep all the toys.

Happy teaching!

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