Once upon a time, classroom seating was so inflexible that desks and chairs were literally bolted to the floor. These days, flexible seating options let kids choose where and how they sit and listen, work, and learn.
What is flexible seating?
Flexible seating is about student knowledge and choice. It isn’t letting students move around aimlessly, or moving students into groups. Instead, flexible seating is about making sure that students have options for the ways they sit and letting them choose what works for them. The idea is that students know how they sit best to learn best and can make those choices themselves.
What does flexible seating look like?
Flexible seating doesn’t look just one way. You could have various options around the room—small-group work spaces, a few reading corners, individual work spaces—and teach students how to use each. You could also have various types of seating that students select from one spot and take to where they are going to work. For example, students who wanted a stool would grab one on the way to circle time.
Even if you have desks and chairs already, you can build in flexible seating. Check out how one teacher set up flexible seating in her classroom even after she started with a traditional setup.
What are the benefits for students?
Flexible seating can be a love it or hate it situation, but if you decide to incorporate it into your classroom, focus on the benefits.
Choice
Flexible seating provides students with a choice they can make that allows them to feel more in control and empowered about learning. (Teaching students how to make and manage seating choices is a big part of using flexible seating in your classroom.)
Comfort
We love choosing our desk chairs, and students do too. When students are more comfortable, they’re better able to learn and work.
Classroom Culture
If you incorporate flexible seating into your classroom culture and encourage students to increase collaboration and choice, the community in your classroom will shift for the better.
Tips for Setting Up Flexible Seating
Once you’re committed, take these tips to make it work:
- Treat it like a procedure: Before you set out the seating options, explain the rules, then expect to review them often.
- Talk through choices: Especially if a student chooses a seat that’s not the right one for them (maybe they can’t handle the wiggly stool today), focus on choosing the best seat, not the trouble the current seat is causing.
- Follow through: If you set the expectation that students are going to use flexible seating to be more focused and productive, remind students of the expectations, then move students the moment you see them not meeting expectations so they don’t disrupt even more.
- Set parameters for choosing again: If a child has to move seats, let them know when they can have their choice again. After this assignment? After lunch? Tomorrow?
- Don’t be afraid to assign seats: Even with flexible seating, you can assign spots, partners, or even seats.
Have we convinced you? If you want to give it a try, these are some of the best choices for flexible seating on the market today.