Get your holidays off to a flying start with a classroom declutter!
Are you longing to feel more energised? Perhaps you need to reduce your anxiety levels, reduce tension or find lost treasures? If any of these things resonate with you, decluttering your classroom is the answer. Stay with me for quick and easy ways to declutter your classroom and feel as good as the lady in the hat…
End of Term Refresh and Reboot
It’s amazing how quickly clutter builds up, especially in a classroom. The trick is, to stay on top of it and to declutter little and often.
The end of the school term or semester provides a perfect opportunity to declutter your classroom and to refresh what has become your second (or maybe first) home. As much as I understand your impulse to run from the scene at the start of your well deserved holiday, I urge you to declutter your classroom before you flee. If you declutter now, your energy levels will soar to new heights and you’ll kick start your holidays with a sense of deep satisfaction.
The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organising
I’ve recently been hugely inspired by the tidying expert, Marie Kondo. It occurred to me that the Japanese art of decluttering and organising that Marie lives and breathes by, is perfect to use in classrooms too!
If you don’t know already, Marie is the bestselling author of The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up and star of Netflix’s hit show, “Tidying Up With Marie Kondo”. In a series of inspiring home makeovers, Marie Kondo uses the innovative KonMari Method™ . She has also been listed as one of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people. Marie Kondo offers six basic steps for tidying:
- Commit yourself to tidying up.
- Imagine your ideal lifestyle.
- Finish discarding first.
- Tidy by category, not by location.
- Follow the right order.
- Ask yourself if it sparks joy.
How to Declutter Your Classroom the Marie Kondo Way
Marie Kondo’s principles of tidying and organising are perfect for the classroom. Her main rules are:
- Take an inventory of what you have.
- Declutter in a specific order.
- Does is spark joy for you?
- Everything has a place.
- Respect your belongings.
- Be a role model.
Declutter and Take an Inventory
The KonMari Method™ encourages decluttering by category – not by location. So perhaps you could make a solid start by creating a list of the games that you have in the maths games cupboard.
When you have taken stock of what you have, decide what you want to keep, donate, repurpose, recycle or throw.
To start, get yourself set up with four large containers:
- one for recycling
- one for giveaways
- one for items that need to find a new home, outside of your classroom
- one for rubbish.
For tips and ideas on how to have a clear out of your classroom read our blog 5 Ways to Nail the Perfect End-of-Year Classroom Clean Out.
Declutter in a Specific Order
The “Konmari method” of decluttering would have you working through your home in categories. E.g. clothes, books and documents, miscellaneous and sentimental items. I suggest the same for your classroom!
Write a list of the classroom categories that need the declutter treatment such as storage cupboard items, craft items or books in the reading corner. Then, decide which category you will tackle first and work through them in order of priority.
When it comes to books remember that often, less is more and quality is preferable over quantity.
Declutter Your Teaching Resources
Do you use your Teach Starter Gallery effectively? This super handy digital filing system enables you to reduce the need to keep paper copies and arranges your resources into easy to find files:
- Unit and Lessons
- Widgets
- Popular
- Latest
- Saved for Later
- Studio Files.
Declutter Your Desk
Is your desk covered in very important papers and leftover worksheets? Before you check out for the school holidays live by Marie Kondo’s principle, ‘finish discarding first‘.
It’s time to declutter your desk and to take stock of what you need to keep. That which you do not need to keep should be generously put in a colleagues pigeon hole, donated or recycled. It’s tempting to keep spare copies of worksheets, but try to avoid this and stick to keeping one master copy.
File your master copies in labelled box files or go new age and hang them up!
Paige Cathcart @teaching6 has some brilliant ideas for keeping a tidy classroom and creating a beautiful, warm and welcoming home. I love the idea of hanging resources and clearing floor space in a bid to declutter with this creative use of a clothes rack.
Does it Spark Joy for You?
The queen of decluttering, Marie Kondo, is perhaps best known for her philosophy that decluttering is all about choosing joy.
Keep only those things that speak to the heart, and discard items that no longer spark joy. Thank them for their service – then let them go.
It’s unlikely that you have the time to look at each individual item in your classroom and decide whether or not it sparks joy for you. But you could choose a category such as literacy games and decide which games to keep and which ones to let go of and upgrade.
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Respect Your Belongings
Let’s face it, your desk is probably the only space in your classroom that you can call your own. Respect your own belongings by giving them their own place and keeping them tidy and safe. During the holidays, set yourself up with some special boxes for your personal items or perhaps some new desk trays!
It looks as if @pumpkinspiceteacher has taken a considerable amount of time to declutter her classroom! But wow, how inspiring and calming is this desk space!
Be a Role Model
Be a role model to your students by keeping your belongings tidy and organised. By modelling the process of decluttering, you’ll soon find that your students pick up the skill of organising their own belongings.
Remember that decluttering is an ongoing process and that it’s important to involve your students in a daily declutter routine. Take a look at our collection of teaching resources related to assigning classroom jobs to share the load.
For more ideas on how to successfully assign classroom jobs and share responsibility, read my blog Sharing Responsibility in the Classroom | Classroom Jobs.
Decluttering is a sure fast way to feel more energised at the end of a school term. It’s a brilliant way to let go of the past and to open the door to new beginnings. So, at the end of this term or semester, commit to declutter your classroom before it gets ‘bigger than Ben Hur’.
Then, most importantly of all, get out there and…
enjoy every second of your school break!
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