Ergonomics in the classroom is an important component of students learning environment. It can influence students physical health, level of comfort and productivity. Thats why it is highly recommended to select appropriate furniture when classrooms are designed.
During their early school years, childrens spines are still developing; it is at this young age that sitting habits are formed. It is imperative that children are taught about postural health and are provided with the correct furniture to support them in practicing good seating habits.
Children spend most of their school day seated. Research on classroom furniture has found that the chairs and tables that children are required to use are mostly inadequate, with some studies concluding that almost none of the students were able to find an appropriate seat and desk height combination. The introduction of ergonomic furniture that promotes good posture is arguably even more important to children than to adults. Several factors affect the postural health of children, including their use of classroom furniture, heavy backpacks, the use of electronic devices, underlying health conditions, and sitting habits at home.
School chairs are pivotal in giving the pupils a healthy ergonomic posture; and above all, we should consider that children and young people grow constantly and that they have different heights and sizes. Improved ergonomic positioning can improve their comfort and may even assist with reducing anxiety. Proper ergonomics suggests that students should sit having their feet firmly on the floor and their backs supported against the chairs backrest.
Educational facilities should regularly update their planning studies and pedagogies to meet the new standards of education. Equally important is that school furniture also needs to keep up with trends and be able to adjust to pupils needs, allowing them movement, and helping them to have a good posture when seated. Three main reasons why schools do not use ergonomic furniture are: price, investment, and durability. Many schools look for hardy furniture at a low price because pupils dont always take care of it. When this happens, durability is chosen over functionality - to the detriment of the pupils.
One way of improving awareness of the issue is to incorporate postural health education into schools - training courses and awareness days, not only within schools but also for parents. We believe that once enough awareness is raised, and the importance of the issue is highlighted, it could act as a driver, possibly helping to make it a greater priority. This can encourage schools to consider purchasing more ergonomically correct furniture when they are looking to replace their existing furniture.
This process is unfortunately not going to happen overnight, and schools do not have to immediately throw away their existing furniture. By introducing postural health education and raising awareness of its importance, the nations schools may be able to start to transition from cost-driven purchasing to investing in childrens future, postural health, and in doing so also positively affecting their comfort and productivity.
One of Ergonomicsdirects projects for is to introduce our Ergo-learner School Initiative, where we aim to partner with schools around the country to offer ergonomic products at a discounted rate.
We are beyond excited to make a difference in the postural health of South Africas youth - so watch this space!
References
Choudhary, M. S., Choudary, A. B., Jamal, S., Kumar, R., & Jamal, S. (). The Impact of Ergonomics on Children Studying Online During COVID19 Lockdown.
Journal of Advances in Sports and Physical Education, 3(8), 117120. doi:10./jaspe..v03i08.001
Page AS, Cooper AR, Griew P, Jago R. Children's screen viewing is related to psychological difficulties irrespective of physical activity. Pediatrics. .
This story about classroom design was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for the Hechinger newsletter.
MIAMI There are no walls between the seven classrooms on the third floor of the Medical Academy for Science and Technology, a former hospital that houses a magnet high school for would-be doctors, nurses, physical therapists and pharmacists.
On a recent morning, the students in Isha Browns literature class were huddled in groups, analyzing the symbolism in A Streetcar Named Desire. At the other end of the basketball-court-size room, far enough to be out of earshot, students from another class took turns reciting speeches. A boy stood in front of a whiteboard in a corner, rehearsing his presentation on family planning. And on leather couches in the middle of the room, a cluster of students in scrubs chatted quietly, their IDs dangling from lanyards.
Isha Brown arranges tables in small groups for her literature class at the Medical Academy for Science and Technology in Homestead, Florida.
Brenda Iasevoli / for The Hechinger Report
The space, upgraded in the -16 school year, is continuously changing. The seats in eye-catching blue, purple or orange might be lined up in neat rows, or rearranged in a circle for face-to-face discussion. All the furniture is fitted with wheels.
The mobility helps in my debate class where I have about 37 students, Brown said. We can get three debates on three different topics going at the same time by just rearranging the tables. I can weave in and out, listening in, and then the kids rotate. More kids can participate. That couldnt happen in a traditional classroom.
The academy, known as MAST, is just one example of how schools are experimenting with classroom designs more conducive to the different ways students learn and, increasingly, the different ways teachers want to teach.
The idea isnt new there was a movement in the late s to build open classrooms but its made a comeback recently out of a desire to create a collaboration-minded workforce that will thrive in the open office spaces being built by companies such as Google and Facebook.
From to , the school resources crowdfunding site DonorsChoose saw requests for funding for flexible furniture balloon from 110 to 21,163. On Instagram, there are 81,100 posts using the hashtag #flexibleseating, many from teachers sharing tips and photos.
Some of the experiments, like the one at MAST, have been costly, with cities and districts hiring top-line architects and updating technology. In all, Miami is spending $1.2 billion to upgrade outdated schools and open up cramped classrooms that used to have desks lined up, as one teacher put it, cemetery style. In New York, Chappaqua Central School District is in the midst of a $42.5 million overhaul, including more flexible furniture. In northern California, schools in the Campbell Union School District are getting a similar $72 million upgrade.
In other places, in the absence of schoolwide funding or administrative interest, the movement is grassroots as teachers revamp their classrooms themselves, spending their own money or even making their own furniture.
The idea of a classroom that can be rearranged to fit the activity individual work, class discussion, group projects has faced some pushback. Critics of the so-called open classroom argued in the s that schools had attempted an overnight transformation without training teachers on how to adjust to the new space. Educators today have issued similar warnings.
Peter Barrett, the lead researcher for a study on classroom design in the United Kingdom and emeritus professor at the University of Salford, warns against silver bullet thinking. I strongly believe teachers should be explicitly trained to see the physical classroom as a holistic element to be actively thought about and used to optimize childrens learning, he said.
For educators, this redesign movement isnt about creating an Instagram-ready classroom filled with trendy standing tables and funky seating. Its based on brain research that is still in the early stages but has shown that, when it comes to learning, space matters. A space that allows for movement can reduce student fatigue, improve performance and promote student collaboration.
Second grader Jaxson Murchison opts for a beanbag and clipboard to complete an art project at Thomas Hooker Elementary School in Meriden, Connecticut.
Brenda Iasevoli / for The Hechinger Report
Barretts study of 153 U.K. classrooms in 27 schools found that adjusting particular classroom characteristics light and temperature, the amount of flexibility and student choice boosted academic performance in reading, writing and math by 16 percent over the course of a year. A quarter of that improvement was attributed to letting students decide when to get up and where to sit. In , a study using brain imaging to examine the effects of standing desks on high school students revealed improvements in working memory as well as in students ability to plan, organize and finish tasks.
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Brain research tells us that movement in a classroom matters, choice matters, said Robert Dillon, director of innovation for the University City school district in St. Louis, Missouri. His work consulting with districts and schools across the country on how to make the most of classroom redesigns has tripled in the past two years. If kids dont have these things, they will make these things happen, he said. They will be disruptive. Theyll get sent to the office. Theyll ask to go to the bathroom, just so they can have some space and the chance to move.
Tuyler Sanford, 17, a student in Isha Browns literature class, said the classrooms flexible setup allows you to work at your own pace. When students work in groups, hes able to walk around and ask his fellow students for help. Its really communal, he said. The freedom is amazing.
Keeping an eye on students working across such a large space may sound exhausting, but Brown said the effect on students, who are energized by the arrangement, is worth the effort. Kids love the idea of constantly moving around and doing different projects, because they get tired if theyre expected to just sit in a room. I would get tired, too, so it really works out.
According to the Miami-Dade Office of School Facilities, MAST is one of 329 schools out of 392 in the district the nations fourth largest, with 345,000 students getting some kind of overhaul. For seven years, the district has been renovating classrooms, along with cafeterias, gyms, athletic fields and just about every other aspect of school infrastructure. District leaders have used the redesign as a chance to rethink how students learn best. Hence, the moveable furniture, open spaces and technology upgrades such as interactive boards for every classroom and a much-needed expansion of high-speed Wi-Fi. The project is about two years from the finish line.
What were seeing is a shift from seat time to engagement, said Jose Murguido, a partner at Zyscovich Architects who has designed several schools for Miami-Dade, including MAST. You really have to understand how people learn, so that the time in the classroom is productive as opposed to just doing the time. If the learning environment is static, it will result in disengagement in young people.
Brooke Markle, a seventh grade language arts teacher in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, noticed several years ago that her students preferred doing their work anywhere but at their desks on countertops, on the floor, under a desk, sitting on top of it. I had 30 students, so the desks took up the entire room, she said. I decided they had to go.
Two summers ago, she replaced the desks with vinyl, runnerless rockers and Adirondack chairs, adding spray-painted donated recycled tires and gallon-size plastic buckets with homemade cushions on top. She had no idea the results would be so striking.
Kids stopped raising their hands to ask for bathroom breaks, Markle said. There were fewer breaks in learning. That was a pleasant surprise.
Last year, the Mechanicsburg Area School District began replacing desks with whatever type of furniture teachers thought would work best. We are thinking more strategically in the district as a whole about how to change the learning environment to help our students gain the skills theyll need after they graduate, Markle said. Students will need to innovate and collaborate. We see these changes as helping them to achieve that goal.
Seventh graders Evan-June Pineo and Grace Simpson say the variety of seating choices in their language arts classroom at Mechanicsburg Middle School, in Pennsylvania, helps to keep things fresh. Evan-June especially likes the floor-level rockers because the movement helps her to concentrate.
Brenda Iasevoli / for The Hechinger Report
Related: How high school would be different if students could design it
At Thomas Hooker Elementary School in Meriden, Connecticut, two second grade teachers ditched the desks in their classrooms two years ago. On a recent morning in one of those revamped rooms, Melissa Sciarretto worked with a few students on their reading at a table, while the rest of the class sat on beanbag chairs and floor cushions, clicking through a game-based math program on their laptops.
Eight-year-olds Kamilla Armstrong and Juliette Ortiz sat on wobble stools next to a round table as they tackled math problems on their laptops. Kamilla pushed off on the table to set her chair spinning, fast. This helps me think when my brain is full and I need a break, she said.
Actually, I think it distracts you, Juliette said.
Oh, really? Kamilla responded. Juliette rolled her eyes and smiled before getting back to work.
Wobble stools allow second graders, from left, Zariah Atwater, Juliette Ortiz and Kamilla Armstrong to rock and spin in between solving math problems at Thomas Hooker Elementary School.
Brenda Iasevoli / for The Hechinger Report
Sciarretto acquired the furniture using $4,000 in GoFundMe donations, combined with more than $6,000 from the school budget. The seating is more collaboration-friendly, she said. When they look up, they see another kid, and so I think they naturally started going to each other for help from there.
There are rules. Katie Somerset, 8, kneeled on a stability ball, balancing herself precariously as she worked. Sciarretto told Katie to sit correctly a few times, before sending her to a cushion on the floor. I know Im not supposed to kneel, Katie said, because its hard to control the ball. I could fall over.
Its those types of distractions that drive some teachers crazy. Shaina Ramos, a second grade bilingual special education teacher at P.S. 257 in Brooklyn, knows the feeling well. Two years ago, she applied for grants through DonorsChoose to buy new furniture in her classroom: stability balls, floor rockers, wobble chairs, standing desks and tall stools.
The transition didnt go smoothly at first. Id see a student moving out of the corner of my eye, and I would have to say Its OK; its OK to calm myself.
But she stuck it out and the investment started paying off. Students with attention deficit disorder who were allowed to rock or wobble in their seats could concentrate for longer on tasks they usually dreaded, she said. They were writing complete paragraphs. They would get up, go to a dictionary, look up a word, walk over to a classmate and talk about the assignment.
They werent just confined to their desks, forced to sit still and stare at a blank page, Ramos said. Eventually, I just told them, As long as I see youre working, go for it rock, bounce, stand or move around.
Last year, Ramos school tried flexible seating in all special education classrooms. But it didnt work out the teachers were frustrated by how much the students were moving during class, Ramos said. Some teachers added all-new furniture and then had to remove it entirely.
Related: When personalized learning also boosts special education students
Lack of planning is the No. 1 reason the move to flexible seating doesnt always work, said Dillon, the consultant who helps teachers prepare for classroom redesigns.
Failure happens because people try to go from zero to 60, as opposed to saying I am going to try this one little thing, Dillon said. He suggests teachers start by allowing kids to go to the back of the room and stand if they need to. Then, keep their attention and encourage collaboration by letting them use whiteboards. The idea of ripping out all of your desks? he said. Setting yourself up for failure.
But Murguido, who has designed more than 400 schools over the course of his 30-year career in Miami, across the country and as far afield as Germany, said classrooms need major changes to provide the right setting to help students succeed.
Whatever the economy of the future, kids will need to learn to collaborate, Murguido said. The challenges that lie ahead are greater than any particular person can tackle individually.
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