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Creating a Learning Environment for Young Children

Source: Excerpted from Teaching Our Youngest: A Guide for Preschool Teachers & Child Care & Family Providers, U.S. Department of Education.

Effective preschool classrooms are places where children feel well cared for and safe. They are places where children are valued as individuals and where their needs for attention, approval, and affection are supported. They are also places where children can be helped to acquire a strong foundation in the knowledge and skills needed for school success.

  • Young children need teachers who welcome all children to their classrooms, including children from various cultures, whose first language is not English and children who have disabilities.

  • Young children need teachers who take time to work with them individually, in small groups, and with the entire class to help them develop cognitive and social skills, language abilities, and an interest in learning new things about the world.

  • Young children need instruction to develop the thinking, language, and early literacy skills needed for continued school success.

Effective preschool teachers and child care providers:

  • Know when children can figure out new ideas and concepts on their own and when it is important to explain things to them step-by-step.
  • Encourage children to participate in classroom activities and to honor the classroom rules.
  • Listen to what the children say and expand upon their language, building their vocabulary and background knowledge.
  • Know when to teach directly, when to provide time for exploration and discovery, when to practice skills, and when to encourage creativity.
  • Plan activities that have a purpose and that challenge children.
  • Know how to help children learn to work together and to resolve their conflicts.
  • Encourage children to respect each other's time and personal belongings.
  • Provide many opportunities for conversations between and among children and with adults.
  • Know how to establish and maintain order in a classroom but in a manner that permits the children to learn how to participate in and enjoy learning.
  • Arrange the classroom in a way that enhances their work with children and how the children spend their time.

A Classroom to Enhance Learning

Ms. Coleman was unhappy with her classroom layout. In her classroom, furniture was lined up along the walls, leaving one big open space is in the middle of the room. Ms. Coleman's children spent a lot of time in that open space, and they sometimes made a lot of noise that was hard for her to control. She wanted her classroom to better support the learning of the children. Instead of one big space, she wanted a number of small, quiet areas where children could go to examine books, write and draw, engage in social play, and work with puzzles and other games. Ms. Coleman transformed her classroom to enhance her students' learning opportunities. Today:

  • She uses cupboards, screens, and tables to divide her classroom into children's work areas. She does this to better define the activities that will take place in different parts of the room. She makes and puts up these labels for the areas: Library Corner, Games and Puzzles Table, Writing Table, Blocks Place, Art Studio, Housekeeping Room, and Science Space.

  • She makes sure that all of the children can comfortably sit on the big rug next to the Library Corner. She knows she will have them sit there when she and the entire class read books and do other activities together.

  • She provides dress-up clothes and other props in the Blocks Place and the Housekeeping Room. These will be the areas in which the children engage in dramatic play. She provides writing materials—pencils, crayons, and paper—next to the Writing Table as well as in the Art Studio, Blocks Place, and Housekeeping Room. The children often incorporate writing into their artwork as well as their dramatic play. She encourages them to label their drawings and to write out lists and plans for their dramatic play.

  • She displays many examples of printed materials, yet she does not display excessive amounts of print or print that is not meaningful. The children are able to see labels, signs, and printed directions in the places that count.

  • She displays the alphabet at the children’s eye level on a wall near the writing tables.

  • She displays the children's work throughout the room.

  • She changes the labels as different toys, games, and puzzles came into the classroom. She has the children provide the names and sometimes the signs. As the children learn more about print, the labels that appear in the classroom get longer and more detailed.

  • She places a rug and big pillows in the Library Corner, making it a cozy, inviting place. The children quickly learn that they can go there with several friends to look at and discuss books and magazines.

  • She makes sure that the bookcases contain a variety of books—traditional storybooks, modern storybooks, alphabet books, number books, wordless pictures books, and books about animals, plants, and the peoples who live in different parts of the world. She includes books that portray the cultural and language backgrounds of the children in the classroom. She keeps current issues of magazines for young children on an easy-to-reach shelf.

    Most of the books on the bookcases come from the classroom library, but others are part of a revolving collection of books that Ms. Coleman gets from the public library. She changes the collection of books every few weeks, based on the topics being studied by the children and on their current interests.

  • As the year progresses and the children create their own books, she sets up a special shelf to display the children’s work.

  • She prepares one shelf for cassette players, headphones, and tapes so the children can listen to stories.

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