Every teacher knows that staying organized keeps the classroom running smoothly. It helps the teachers and students know where things are in the classroom. I want to share these FREE labels with you to help your classroom be more organized. Using these labels will also help you reuse classroom supplies and help take care of our earth!
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Free Labels
In my classroom, we keep tubs for “old markers,” “extra lids” and “scrap paper” on top of my art shelf. It is an easy way to get the most out of your classroom supplies and reuse them. By keeping the labeled tubs in the same place, students (and teachers) always know where they are, and they can use them independently and quickly. Like any other classroom routine, it takes a few reminders or verbal cues from the teacher. Once it becomes a routine, the students will be reminding each other and remembering to use them themselves as needed.
EXTRA LIDS free labels – My students are always losing lids to glue sticks, markers, and EXPO markers. They can spend so much time looking for one little lid. The lids roll under shelves, under the tables, or occasionally “fly” across the room. When this happens, instruction or playtime is lost, which isn’t good for anyone.
I created an “extra lid” tub in my art center. Now when students lose a lid, they can go look in the “extra lid” tub and grab a matching lid! NO (or little) instruction time lost, and no more wandering the room looking for a lid!
How do we fill the extra lid tub, you ask? When a glue stick is empty, students throw away the stick and put the lid in the “extra lids” tub. When an EXPO marker runs out, they throw the EXPO marker in the trash and put the lid in the “extra lids” tub. When I make watercolor using my “old markers,” I toss all the lids in the “extra lids” tub.
OLD MARKERS – Keep your old markers and reuse them to make homemade watercolor paints. I will be writing about how I make watercolors with old markers in another post!
SCRAP PAPER – How many times do you or your students need just a little piece of construction paper for a project? How many times do students use a full piece of paper, cut out a small piece and throw it in the trash or recycling can? If your classroom is like mine, it happens all the time. I hated to see students recycling almost full sheets of construction paper. Then I tried and tried to have a scrap box. Someone would always throw all the scraps away, thinking the scraps were trash. I decided to make a label for it so it wouldn’t keep happening! It worked like a charm, and no one throws away the useful scraps anymore. Students and teachers are now using the scraps when they need little pieces, and less is going into the recycling.
Our classroom and the environment win!
Get more organization tips here.
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hey, i’m jackie!
I’m Jackie, your go-to girl for early childhood inspiration and research-based curriculum.