Rob Butler - former science teacher, now Field Officer at the ASE - provides tips on ensuring your classroom is welcoming and clutter-free for primary children...
We know that classrooms are busy places with lots of different things happening, but have you considered the needs of your individual learners? We know that lots of students can suffer from sensory overload, for examples autistic learners or those with sensory difficulties. These sensory inputs can affect all the senses, and it is worth considering the impact of the classroom environment on these learners.
Visual overload
As a teacher you might want to display lots of information for learners. Connectives and key words start off on display boards, they spread into gaps on the wall and around whiteboards and may continue onto washing lines strung across the classroom. I’ve even seen writing on windows using chalk pens. Combined with this we are often short on space to store resources, reference books and evidence of past work (well it is evidence of progress) which leads to stacks of plastic boxes and resources on shelves and in convenient alcoves. Does this describe your classroom?
If you have learners who display signs of sensory overload…
Consider which materials on display are essential and which are not. Think of the colours you use – can you use more muted tones rather than a display that leaps off the wall and assails learners while they are trying to concentrate?
You might want to cut down some of this ‘visual clutter’ for example taking down resources from washing lines when they are no longer being used. If your resources are kept in plastic boxes, there may be somewhere else in the school to keep them, many schools have resorted to sheds outside for these overflowing materials. As somebody who hates clutter, my science lab always passed our sensory audits (common in a special school environment) because of the bare surfaces and tidy, well organised equipment in trays ready to be used.
Other types of overload
Auditory – there are often lots of noises produced in a school environment that most learners simply don’t register. The chatter from a neighbouring classroom, the buzz of a heater fan blowing out warm air, the frequent tapping of footsteps in a corridor near reception. Although some of these may be harder to eliminate with carpets and curtains, you can ask students with sensory difficulties where they would prefer to sit in the classroom.
Olfactory – science labs (and many other areas of the school) often have their own smell. These can change over the course of a lesson, for example the smell of ingredients when weighing out through to the yeasty smell of proving bread onto the final cooking smells (and maybe even some burning if you are unlucky) It can be hard to stop rooms smelling of particular smells (secondary DT rooms often smell of sawdust) but you can make sure these rooms are well ventilated to keep odours to a minimum.
Sometimes it isn’t the sensory stimulation that’s the problem but when they arrive unexpectedly, for example a bang or a smell in science lessons. Warning learners that a sound or smell is coming will prepare these learners.