The physical arrangement of the early childhood classroom is a vital component in achieving a successful learning environment for young children.
Developmentally appropriate programs provide opportunities for children to broaden and deepen their knowledge through interaction with the environment by engaging in play-based experiences while using a variety of different materials and tools that are conducive to successful learning.
The difference between a chaotic classroom and an orderly classroom is based in great part on how the teacher prepares the environment. Successful teachers know that the arrangement and management of the early childhood classroom have direct effects on classroom behaviors children exhibit as they live and work together in the environment with their peers (Hemmeter, Ostrosky, and Corso 2012).
Teachers must consider several factors and components of the physical space when setting up an effective early childhood classroom:
Creating a classroom community that promotes children’s language and literacy development requires that print-rich materials be located throughout the classroom. The print in the classroom often serves as the earliest source of print awareness for young successful learners. Well-stocked learning centers/stations should be supplied with printed materials (e.g. posters), labels, and fiction and non-fiction books that promote the integration of a multitude of academic concepts.
In addition, it is important that children have rich literacy-based experiences that represent culturally and linguistically diverse contexts. In classrooms with children who are learning English, the environment must include familiar print that is found in the places, objects, and materials that children encounter every day (Salinas-Gonzalez and Alanis 2015). Creating labels in English as well as students' home languages in the classroom serves to validate the home culture and language. It also provides an opportunity for all students to learn about the diverse cultures represented in their classroom and opens the door for parents to become involved in the classroom as they share their culture and language. Labels with words and pictures should be available where appropriate everywhere in the classroom so that children constantly connect written language with the things the language represent.
Hemmeter, M.L., M.M. Ostrosky, and R.M. Corso. 2012. Preventing and Addressing Challenging Behavior: Common Questions and Practical Strategies. Young Exceptional Children 15 (2): 32–46.
Salinas-Gonzalez, I & Alanis, I. (2015). Classroom Labels that Young Children Can Use: Enhancing Biliteracy Development in a Dual Language Classroom. Dimensions of Early Childhood 43(1), 25-32.