UPDATE: Other people’s learning rooms.
Today I treat you to pictures of our schoolroom, as is. (That is, I just walked in — didn’t clean up at all.)
We moved into the house this winter, and decoration has been a low priority, so the walls are pretty bare. Yesterday I taped a weekly schedule to the wall above the big worktable, for Oscar to see. Later Mark plans to screw to the wall there a thumbtack-board made from a spare half-sheet of drywall, wrapped in colorful fabric. I still haven’t gone to get the fabric.
Yes, we have an IKEA around here. How can you tell?
The room is a little disproportionately narrow, so I took over some of the adjacent "foyer" space. A small shelf is meant to hold work for the now-three-year-old to use at the little table. As soon as I figure out what that will be.
Here’s another view. The cabinets hold supplies. The base cabinet is recycled from our old house, and the tall cabinets are just ordinary steel locking cabinets. We added combination padlocks because I kept losing my keys. See the clothespin bag hanging on the left wall? There’s a clothesline running across the top, just out of the frame, but you can see some paintings that are hanging from it in front of the curtain valance. Red, blue, green. I’d say they are hanging "to dry" except that Milo probably painted them weeks ago and are just hanging around.
Let’s look inside the tall cabinets. First, the one that I open every day because it contains each day’s work:
Ahh, I’m so proud of this nice, neat cabinet. The white dishtubs are labeled "Math," "Reading," etc. There’s a lot of odds and ends, manipulatives and flashcards and stuff; the dishtub is easy to retrieve.
Paint and glue are in secondary containment, always an important consideration when working with hazardous materials. The little file thingy holds upcoming math masters and the files for the reading program I devised (with help). Subjects that require only a couple of workbooks or so live in magazine files. The tubs on the bottom hold manipulatives.
Less tidy: The Cabinet I Hold Extra Stuff In!
The underside of the base cabinet isn’t locked and contains things I want the children to have ready access to. For example, certain craft supplies (certain = "the ones that do not spill") and a box of folders with Oscar’s more independent work. Theoretically, I can say "Go get your red folder and do the worksheets in it" now.
Last but not least, the window through which we can wat
ch the yellow school buses speed by:



