Demonstrate
Teaching Method
Flexible classroom design optimizes teaching methods and morphs as teachers modify spaces based on personal style, subject matter and students’ needs. Whether lecturing, demonstrating, facilitating or personalizing your teaching method, you’ll find proactively designed furniture easily adjusts to support teaching goals. Focus on mobile products that have simple, non-handed shapes for optimal flexibility.
Group
Student Behavior
As educators prepare students for the complex global society and economy, the 4 C’s (creativity, communication, collaboration and critical thinking) become crucial for success. Obtaining these skills requires students to flex between working alone, in groups or all together. Look for products that enhance mobility, support a range of postures, and provide multipurpose solutions.
Clusters
Space
Space design might translate into basic shapes like rows, u-shapes or clusters, but agile space unleashes the other three quadrants of the Learning Environments Framework. Intuitive, easy-to-use classroom furniture empowers spatial and tool organization, connects students and teachers, and stimulates learning, engagement and well-being. Key features like table and storage mobility, height-adjustability and multipurpose functionality become essential.
Mixed Technology
Info-Medium
Today’s students intermix low- and high-tech info-mediums whether working with other students or their teachers. Low-tech mediums include paper-based reading and writing, brainstorming and class discussions. High-tech mediums use laptops and digital displays. Flexible design is crucial. It allows students and teachers to move fluidly between interpersonal, analog and digital modes of communication whether working alone, in groups or as a class. Plan for sight lines, space division, light levels, storage adjacencies, visual displays, and power/data access to optimize info-medium dynamics.
Insights for Science Classrooms
- Cultivate science mastery by giving students first-hand learning experiences in theory, experimentation, data collection and analysis to enhance critical thinking skills in group environments.
- Create teaching demonstration areas visible throughout the classroom.
- Build workspaces large enough to accommodate physical materials and digital tools, and tough enough to resist abuse from chemicals and students.
- Surround the perimeter of the classroom with reconfigurable storage for easy access and long-term flexibility.