Book_Review_Kondo_The_Life-Changing_Magic_of_Tidying_Up_feature-minMarie Kondo’s book The Life-changing Magic of Tidying Up is all the rage on social media and #1 on the New York Times best seller list. It is certainly a novel approach to keeping a neat, functional house that begins with a radical clean-out or “decluttering,” as the book calls it. She maintains that storage experts are hoarders. The idea is that organizing and arranging clutter does not make it any less clutter.

So, as is my tendency, I began to think about the classroom. In the world language field, we have learned to grab everything we can to help us in providing quality learning experiences for our students. How many conferences have you been to where you came home with a suitcase full of handouts containing suggestions to improve the language learning experience? Every time someone shows you an activity they have used successfully in their classroom, do you say, “May I have a copy of that?” Are you the teacher who keeps all the sample books from the last adoption? What about the old literary magazines you subscribed to last year but don’t have the money for this year? And the realia you collected on your trip to Europe 10 years ago? Let’s face it. We’re hoarders. “Yeah,” you say, “so what’s your point?”

My point is this: A proficiency-based classroom is a very targeted classroom. The teacher uses a curriculum that is based on state and national standards and units derived therefrom. It requires a laser-like focus on the part of teacher and students alike. Yet our collection of “resources” does not always reflect such a focus. It rather reflects a kind of desperation that fears that, should we let go of all the things we have collected, we will suddenly find ourselves without something we need.

That brings me to a question. Is it possible that our eclectic collections of “stuff” in our classrooms result in fuzzy, unfocused thinking in our planning? Do the many options of resources, activities, props, and realia we have collected over the years cause us to give in to the temptation to choose one of these things to use and they try to maneuver the learning target to fit our choice? If so, I fear we may be in danger of losing the essential focus of a proficiency-based classroom.

It goes back to the idea of backward-design lesson planning. We, along with our students, determine our learning targets, decide how we will know we have reached those targets, and then plan how to get there. From our collections of stuff, we need only consider those items that can efficiently and productively help our students down the path toward their targets. The rest is our security blanket “just in case.”

There’s something else to consider—our students. Maybe you’re one of those people who feels you function just fine in the middle of clutter, or perhaps you’re one who takes great pride in the way you can organize everything you hoard so that you know exactly where you put the things you haven’t used since your first year. But what about your students? Can they function in the middle of clutter? You want to include them in the selection of resources and tools they will use to work toward their targets. Can they figure out your organization system? How can they sift through your entire collection to help choose the tools they will use to meet their personal learning goals? And what about your students who are ADHD? Autistic? Physically disabled? Surely these students, like all our students, deserve a focused environment that minimizes the effects of their personal challenges.

Finally, a classroom where we have everything we have amassed over the years misses the opportunity to communicate a message. The proficiency-based classroom needs to speak to you when you walk in.  It needs to say to students, “Welcome. You will find yourself at home here. Everything in this room has a purpose. This room has been intentionally designed to help you reach your learning goals. It is OUR room. We will work together here to acquire a new language and culture, and everything you see is going to help us. Leave the rest of the world behind. Here we are completely focused on our task.”

So when you get ready to clean out your classroom at the end of this school year, why not resist the temptation to just organize the things you hoard? Why not look at your classroom with fresh eyes and with your thoughts focused on the targets your students will need to reach next year? Ask yourself the question, “Do I need this _________________ (resource, activity, prop, etc.) in order to help my students move toward one of their targets and acquire the skills they need to use this language in the real world?” No? Then do you have the courage to remove it from the learning environment?

I know, it’s really scary. Your budget is tiny, and your extra requests are almost never granted. It’s okay. Your students aren’t taught by stuff. They’re taught by you and through their own discovery. The stuff is just a vehicle. If it makes you feel better, however, box the things that don’t fit your learning targets and put them in the book room or take them home.  We’ll talk again in 5 years to see if you have looked at them since. But consider this—you spend endless hours planning your lessons, including the learning experiences they contain. Why not prepare the environment such that your students have their best opportunity to flourish through those lessons? I can’t wait to hear how focusing the learning environment helps you focus the learning. Enjoy!

Image credit: https://www.flickr.com/photos/mrsdkrebs/7264707952/

Published by Sharon Deering

Sharon has recently retired as Instructional Specialist for Languages Other than English in Arlington Independent School District, Arlington, TX. In that capacity she oversaw the writing and implementation of curriculum for 32 courses in five languages. She was also instrumental in the establishment of two Fine Arts Dual Languages Academies, as well as FLES programs in Chinese and Portuguese. She has directed five successful STARTALK programs in Arlington. Sharon has served as President of the Texas Foreign Language Association and continues to be active in the profession in her role as a collaborator on the TELL project and as a consultant to various school districts.