Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Art Room Transformation


Welcome to the Art Studio!
by Elizabeth Van Allen
for scribblesbyartteachervanallen.blogspot.com/

My art room is the size of a gym.  I'm certainly not complaining, even with the acoustical drawbacks (I have 2 story high ceilings- great for singing, horrible for talking) I really wouldn't trade it for anything.  Putting together a classroom is no easy feat for any teacher, but I feel that I have a unique challenge at the end of August before school starts each year.  


Your view as you enter the room

Taking such an enormous space and making it feel inviting while taking traffic patterns into account often feels monumental.   Especially since the room has to be left as a blank slate every June!  I may be a little late in the year for this type of post, but hopefully you can get a little inspiration as your own classrooms evolve through the school year.

The View From Our Sinks
Working Area: Before
Working Area: In Progress

Working Area: Finished

 From Above 
A whole new challenge: keeping students off an in-class stairway
From Above: In Progress
From Above: Before


From Above: Finished

The Studio
My biggest challenge: What do you do with a classroom-sized empty space with very little available furniture, and how do you keep it from becoming a race track / impromptu break dancing space?
This big empty space
could be a total nightmare...
High top tables with stools for two
with elementary age students gives me
uninvited premonitions of cracked skulls!
 ...so I moved some flat files and cabinets to break up the space without creating 
line-of-sight issues and added ribbons with clothespins to hang up lost projects! 
The high top tables serve two purposes:  as a quiet work area for older students and as a physical barrier between the carpets and projects drying on the countertops.

The carpet area mimics the area the younger grades have in their regular classrooms.  It's great for introducing book-based projects 
The carpet space is color-coded in the same way as the table rows in the work area.  This way I can keep younger students who have issues with each other apart and transition students to the other side of the room in an orderly fashion without having to remember names off the top of my head! 

 What unique challenges do you face in organizing your teaching or work space?

2 comments:

  1. that is amazing space! love it. my classrooms are pretty straightforward…a kitchen room and a sewing room so luckily they are already laid out for me. will you be my art teacher? :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. What I wouldn't give for a sewing room. I love that there are districts that still value teaching skills like sewing and cooking! Of course I'll be your art teacher, I welcome all into my studio. :-)

      Delete