Set Up Your Classroom
Before School Starts
At a Glance Set up flexible seating, plan your key displays, and organize materials before day one. Everything else can grow with the learning.
A thoughtful classroom setup can welcome students, reinforce expectations, and signal that this is a place for meaningful reading, writing, and thinking. You don’t need to have everything perfect on day one—but a few intentional decisions about space and materials go a long way.
Room Arrangement
Arts & Letters lessons blend independent work, partner conversations, small groups, and whole-class discussion. Consider flexible seating with clear pathways for movement. A fresh layout can spark new energy and focus, and having a plan for how students transition between configurations saves time in every lesson.
Displays
Look at your first module and ask what students will need to see and return to throughout the unit—things such as module questions, anchor charts, vocabulary, the Content Stages, the Fluency Reference Chart, writing structure graphics, or the Talking Tool. Add and remove displays as learning unfolds. Less is more; avoid visual clutter that competes for attention.
Materials
Module texts can live in the classroom and be distributed as needed. If students keep their Learn books at their desks, decide in advance how they’ll submit work during or after lessons.
Key Actions
Watch: The Setting Up the Arts & Letters Classroom video
Check: The Materials lists on the digital platform to plan for purchase or communicate with families in advance
Read: The Implementation Guide for additional setup guidance