displays advice

Contents
Lettering for Classroom Displays
Fair Trade Classroom Display Design
Interesting Ways to Make Your Classroom a Sparkly Place to Learn
Classroom Displays – Autism Friendly
Classroom Displays for Learning

Lettering for Classroom Displays

alphabet letters

Ready-made lettering  for classroom displays has improved quite a bit over the last few years. Several companies offer pre-printed, punch-out letter sets that can be very useful. The letters are printed on card and can be re-used several times. Packs of letters usually contain over 200 letters and numbers in quite a good mix of upper and lower cases. There is nothing wrong with using material like this to speed up your displays. You do need to choose carefully though so that your lettering either matches or provides an interesting contrast with any other text on your display.

We all know you can get pdfs to print yourself that seem cheaper or even free but remember you need to take account of the time taken in cutting out and the cost of colour printing them. Drawing  letters using templates is not really free either and also has a cost, often in valuable teaching assistant time. Time that should have been spent working with children.

5 Top Tips for Using Pre-Printed Letters on Your Displays

  1. Use a craft knife for removing the letters from the card. They can tear if you just try to pop them out.
  2. Laminate them for longer life. Not vital but this does increase the lifetime of your letter sets.
  3. Less is more. Use them sparingly on displays, only for main titles. If you need to say more print it out and mount it on an information sheet using a contrasting font. Remember try to stick to 2, or at most 3, fonts on any display.
  4. Choose a letter set that compliments the rest of your display. If it is a multi-coloured letter set try to pick up just one of the colours in the mounts around children’s work.
  5. Watch your letter placement. If they are supposed to be in a straight line do yourself a faint chalk mark first. (Use two drawing pins and a bit of chalked string to create your straight line, then brush it off after.)

Buy Ready Made Lettering for Classroom Displays

Tags: , , ,

Fair Trade Classroom Display Design

One of our readers had a problem. Hannah wrote:

>hiya saw your website with a variety of different classroom displays, and i was wondering if you had any ideas for the classroom display i have to do, i work in a nursery/reception mixed and have to do a fair trade display moulded around the letters in the alphabet, at the moment i am struggling please can you help. thankyou hannah

I love a display challenge so I had a think and a look round at a few Fair Trade resource sites.  Then it was out with my favourite sketching software to mock up a quick design.

The idea is you use a mix of products – some with the fair trade logo & some without. Helps to get past having to find 26 fairtrade products. As it’s for early years you might just use the letter and not the words.

Children then help you decide which ones go in the trolley. Use string to lead from pictures to trolley for the ones that fit. Maybe even make a 3d basket and put the appropriate letters in? Play with the idea till you get something you like.

You could use a mix of children’s drawings, photos and carefully re-cycled product wrappers for the products themselves. Maybe link it with  a shop in a role play area?

I hope this helps & send me a photo of what you do decide to do! Sometimes just asking someone and seeing their ideas gets your own design juices flowing :-)

Useful Fairtrade related web sites with lots of lovely free resources:
http://www.fairtrade.org.uk/schools/support_resources/default.aspx
http://www.globaldimension.org.uk/resourcesearch/results.aspx?selTopic=38&rs=top
http://www.cafod.org.uk/primary/eyfs-and-ks1

Tags: ,

Interesting Ways to Make Your Classroom a Sparkly Place to Learn

Classroom Displays group member  Tom Barrett has done a whole series of collaborative slideshows for teachers and his latest is all about making your classroom a fabulous sparkly learning environment.

The slide show will keep growing and over time become a great place for pooling ideas. There’s not much there yet but these slide shows of Tom’s just keep growing so come back in a month and there might be 30 or 40 tips there. You can see what people have contributed so far by looking through but better yet, why not join in and add your own ideas?

Tags: , , ,

Classroom Displays – Autism Friendly

I’ve got a guest post this week. I hope it will help you make your classroom Autism friendly.

The author is S.B Linton who runs Autism Classroom.com and she’s provided us with some great tips. If you’ve questions please let us know in the comments and we’ll try to help. (If you use twitter be sure to follow her on there AutismClassroom twitter as she posts lots of useful links)

The numbers of students with autism in our schools is increasing, as is the need for classrooms that effectively educate children with autism.

The following information from the book How to Set Up a Classroom for Students with Autism: A Manual for Teachers, Para-professionals and Administrators by S. B. Linton, highlights some tips in setting up an autism friendly classroom.

Set Up a Classroom for Students with Autism_ A Manual for Teachers, Para-professionals and Administrators_ S. B. Linton.jpg

Use Various Types of Visual Schedules

  • Daily class schedules to accurately tell what activities will occur that particular school day. This type of schedule should be posted, easy for students to follow and should be large enough to see from across the room.
  • Individual/personal schedules to help students organize, learn routines and possibly relieve stress for some students with autism by giving them an idea of what to expect. A personal schedule might also show sensory input activities which are specific to that student, individual speech therapy times, break times, small group areas, or toileting opportunities, which may not be the same exact time as other students.
  • Task schedules to serve as directions. They help to visually “break down” the elements of a task or an activity for a student. Task schedules show a student what will occur within the context of a structured lesson or activity, much like directions. Task schedules can also help students perform tasks without the use of a verbal prompt from the adult, thus increasing independence.
  • Visual Reinforcement schedules to give students a visual indicator of when their reinforcement or break will occur. These may be helpful for a child who is on a behavior intervention plan and needs to be reminded that their reinforcement will be coming soon.

Organize the Room to Support the Student

  • Create clear visual boundaries in the classroom.
  • Make various centers and locations for the students to move to throughout the day to avoid having them sit in one spot all day.
classroomdisplays-autism.jpg
  • Create work areas near blank walls or facing way from peers to improve concentration.
  • Remove distracting items such as string, bright colors, loud appliances.
  • Create a safe place or quiet area in the room for the student if they need a retreat.
  • Remember you will have to teach play skills and social skills. They do not come naturally for some students with autism.
  • Seat “runners” with their back facing a wall or divider and have the adult facing the student, between the student and the door.

Be An Effective Collaborator

  • Creating a specific time for staff to meet, answer questions or create new plans is a critical.
  • View student’s objectives as a shared responsibility of the student’s team.
  • Keep a notebook or journal that is sent from school to home each day.

Use Language Based Techniques

  • Try a set of pictures showing the steps in washing their hands or a visual task analysis for hanging up their belongings in the morning to help keep some students focused.
  • Write down directions instead of ju st using words.
  • Use hands on activities as much as possible.
  • Use a visual topic board to show the students what the lesson will be about.

Question. Discuss. Learn.
www.autismclassroom.com

Tags: , ,

Classroom Displays for Learning

Displays for Learning
There aren’t many books about classroom displays for secondary and beyond. This one has just been published and looks like a super addition to the the subject. I can’t wait to read it and see if I can apply some of it to my adult teaching. Teaching assistants need an interesting learning environment just as much as any other learners!

Amazon says:

Display has long been seen as a tool for learning in primary schools but this practical and timely book shows its value in whole school improvement for secondary and post-16. Walking through an entrance hall speaks volumes about the ethos of a school. The physical environment supported by display and signs allow visitors to make a judgement about the school and this judgement, correctly or not, will be based on what the visitor first sees. In some schools this first impression exudes positivism – display celebrates achievement and success, there are images of happy learners, learning focused signs and statements, and the environment seems cared for and respected. In others, negative statements confront visitors, the environment is neglected and unloved, there are no references to learning in the entrance to the school.The current educational agenda identifies learner wellbeing as the key determinant in achievement and outcome. How the learning environment is designed can have a huge impact on wellbeing. One particular aspect that has a powerful influence on this environment is the use of display space. Managed well, it can create a climate where students feel valued and nurtured, and can achieve beyond their potential.Display should transcend simple physical appearance. Successful and meaningful display reflects the ethos of a school, and an exciting, learning-focused environment makes for excited learners. An environment that mirrors respect and care makes learners feel cared for and respected by the place in which they learn. This positively impacts on how well students learn, how happy they are as they learn and the respect and care with which they treat their school; the same applies to staff. The signs used around schools and the messages that signage and display deliver are key to a learning-focused climate and they reinforce a school’s ethos. Care for the school environment and classrooms shows care for the students, and for teachers and other staff. This impression is quickly passed to parents and visitors to the school.This book aims to address a gap in the market for secondary school leaders and teachers (with transferable lessons for primary and 16 – 19 colleges) and provide a toolkit to develop display for learning with strategies and solutions, within the context of the school improvement and transformation agenda. The book aims to inspire colleagues in schools to develop this in their classrooms and on a whole school level – with the motivation and justification for doing so.

About the Author
Kirstie Andrew-Power is Achievement Networks Coordinator for the Specialist Schools and Academies Trust. Her current role is facilitating networks of schools engaged in the school improvement agenda, leading shared learning opportunities for this through events and conferences, and contributing and writing publications to support this agenda. Charlotte Gormley is Assistant Headteacher Inclusion at The Compton School in north London. She is senior leader in school involved in a variety of outreach work with other schools – specifically with behaviours for learning, inclusion, environments for learning and school improvement

Sounds good. I’ll do a proper review once I’ve read it but if you can’t wait you can buy it from the Classroom Displays Bookshop

Thanks for reading Classroom Displays Blog articles about displays advice on UsefulWiki.com