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Classroom Management, Education Trends   |   Jul 29, 2013

The culture of cute in the classroom

By Angela Watson

Founder and Writer

The culture of cute in the classroom

By Angela Watson

I recently received not just one, but two emails from teachers informing me that my classroom “wasn’t cute” in the pictures I’ve shared on this site. Commentary on cuteness (or lack thereof) is something that seems to be happening more and more frequently in education-related discussions. And what’s really interesting is that in many cases, “not cute” is meant as a compliment.

Here’s an excerpt from one email:

It seems like every time I’m looking for opinions, suggestions, and practical information about teaching, especially integrating technology in the K-6 classroom or differentiation, I am directed to middle school blogs run by male teachers. The elementary blogs seem to talk about cute bulletin board themes and actually use the word “cuteify”- as in, to make more cute, when talking about creating worksheets. It’s pretty depressing. I mean, worksheets? I found your weblog when looking for ideas about bulletin boards, simply because I have little space and less inclination; I hate bulletin board borders and pre-made things.  Your suggestions were clear, to the point, and most certainly not cute.  Student centered, student directed, and useful, yes. Exploring more, I found some practical suggestions for things that I’m considering as I’m setting up my own new classroom, and a clear sense that your view of being a teacher is not in how great you display student work, but how you use your time and energy to be the be guide (not master) for students.

Two days later, I received this from another frustrated teacher:

I follow quite a few blogs that are wonderful. The creators seem like wonderful teachers but do a lot of “fluff” and extras in a time when teachers are busier than ever. I am seeing that many teachers insist on having classroom themes (jungle, sports, animals, etc.). Teachers redo word wall words, parent notes, student information packets, learning stations, labeling systems, etc. to match the theme. Is this time well spent when we should be personalizing learning, deepening thinking, and many more?!? While looking at photos on your blog, I don’t see any of these things. I see a welcoming, engaging classroom that is “to the point” and contains the essentials. I noticed that you even commented about not putting holiday/seasonal thing up. I’ve taught for over ten years and have never had a student ask me why we don’t have Halloween, spring, etc decor on the walls. Do themes, different graphic organizers for each story with clip art from the story and all that really increase student achievement?

If you’ve been reading Matt Gomez’ blog, you know without a doubt that cuteness has become a hot button topic among teachers. But why is there such a divide between the cutes and cute-nots? Is it possible to accept the fact that teachers have different opinions of what they want their classrooms and materials to look like, and there’s no one right way?

The culture of cute in the classroom

I haven’t chosen sides in this debate, nor have I purposefully fallen on the not-cute side. In fact, until a few years ago, I thought my stuff WAS cute. It wasn’t until the boom in teacher blogging and Pinterest that I realized just how much more I could be doing. Social media has given us a glimpse into other people’s worlds and we see possibilities now that were unknown before. There are so many creative educators out there making their learning spaces and materials picture perfect that it’s easy to feel inferior. Many of us think we’re using Pinterest to find and share ideas, but half the time, we close the computer feeling that our classrooms (and homes, recipes, clothes, and bodies) don’t measure up to everyone else’s.

Though I don’t have a problem with individual teachers “cuteifying” their classrooms (or blogging about it, or buying/selling adorable things on Teachers Pay Teachers), I do have some concerns with the “culture of cute” as a whole, and I’ll share two reasons why.

First, I’m worried that making things look cute has become yet another unnecessary task and impossible standard for teachers to meet. The pressure to have a perfect-looking classroom can be intense in some schools, and teachers already feel that nothing they do is good enough. They barely have time to plan lessons or grade papers, but they feel guilty if their center materials use clashing color schemes. They worry that a plain-looking assignment shouldn’t be displayed even though it required higher level thinking on the part of students, and choose a precious but less challenging worksheet to hang up instead. They spend so much time creating the appearance of a beautiful learning environment that they’re too tired to think about the learning itself.

I can’t help but think that the time we spend making things look good is time we could have spent talking with students, creating meaningful assignments, differentiating learning, analyzing and reflecting on our own practice, and growing professionally. Sure, it’s possible to have style AND substance, but how do you make time for both when you’re barely keeping your head above water? Focusing on the appearance of things is easier and a often lot more fun, so it can become a distraction from the real purpose of teaching.

My second concern is that in some cases, we’re using “cute” to compensate for boring and outdated teaching practices. If the only way to get students to complete an assignment is to put adorable clip art and borders on it, I will submit that it might be time to rethink the assignment itself. Project-based learning and other tasks that are meaningful and authentic don’t need fancy disguises: the “hook” for kids is solving a real-world problem that they’re personally invested in. Realistically, I know that not everything kids do in school can fit that criteria, but I wonder if our energy is better spent on finding more authentic tasks instead of cuter worksheets.

I would love to know how much time, effort, and (let’s get real) money you spend making things in your classroom look cute. How do you balance cuteness with content when choosing learning materials or figuring out how to manage your time? All respectful viewpoints are welcome–let’s discuss!

 

Angela Watson

Founder and Writer

Angela created the first version of this site in 2003 to share practical ideas with fellow educators. Now with 11 years of teaching experience and more than a decade of experience as an instructional coach, Angela is the Editor-in-Chief of...
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Discussion


  1. I’m all for a cute organized classroom. I strive for one myself. I do think that sometimes it’s too visually stimulating. My theory is if its not relative for now it comes down. As far as bulletin boards, I use most of my bulletin boards from relative student work..

  2. Thank you for this post! Even as a high school teacher, there’s pressure to “cute it up” when organizing your classroom.

    When it comes to themes, schemes, and holidays, I tend to follow three basic patterns. One, as someone who teaches many different preps I color code all of my classes and a lot of their materials, so that it’s easy for both my students and me to find the info and materials that they need. Hence, I have quite a bit of ROYGBV (no I :)…) going on in my room. Two, when it comes to bulletin board backgrounds, borders, etc, I like to use school colors for that bit of school pride – also, by sticking to those colors I don’t feel a need to change them out. Third, I do love Snoopy flags, so those tend to be what I change out depending on the season/holiday/etc – since I have them on cafe rods, it only takes about two minutes to change them out, and students are usually willing to do that for me.

    I do occasionally cute up other things in the classroom, but usually they are things that need change and they’re almost all permanent changes – updating a hideous filing cabinet, recovering chairs with torn upholstery (after all, I am a home ec teacher), replacing stained and torn ironing board covers, etc. If I have to put effort into it anyway, might as well make it something nice to look at and something that will bring a little cheer to me, even if the kids don’t notice!

  3. Thank you for writing this. I have to admit that this summer I have been focusing SO MUCH on making my classroom more cohesive and everything fit my theme. And even still I saw some teachers asking each other what their theme will be this year and I think how exhausting it must be to change themes every year!

    I do think that having an attractive room is important, but it’s really good to see someone saying “Stop! Think of the CONENT.” And although I think social media is part of the reason we’re so interested in the eye candy this year, I wonder if it’s also because so many teachers I know are feeling underprepared when it comes to the new CCSS and PARCC assessments. I sincerely hope once we start receiving more quality professional development to empower us, the tendency to devote our time to decoration will be curbed.

  4. I think this is a fantastic post!! I spend a lot of time organizing my classroom but not to make it cute. I have fadless blue b.board paper that stays up for years!! I do not like store things bought especially when I can have my students make it. I do think you need to have your classroom organized, labeled and warm. I like to have boards empty but ready to be filled with my students work. The only colors are the backing of my students self-portraits that hang across the room. I am shocked at all the crazy themes…yuck!!! My goal is to create a beautiful space filled with kids work and the learning that is happening. Not store bought or crazy clip art.

  5. It seems as if some of these comments are equating clean, organized and welcoming with cute. My classroom is all of those things and is most certainly not cutified. I always get compliments on my room from parents and other teachers clearly seeing that “so much goes on in here.” I make it fun and functional by using interesting things to look at that also serve some purpose (someone gave me a tin rooster that turned out to be a place for spare pens and pencils), and I don’t have to spend time on that. I find that students appreciate the use and function. Just like some are judging/commenting that a cutified room means less substance, I’m a bit confused by the suggestion (by teachers offended by THOSE comments, not comments from students) that rooms that aren’t, are not as fun to learn in, or boring. If students, or teachers for that matter, are bored in that room, the decorations aren’t the problem.
    If a student came back to visit, or completed a survey and commented on how cute my room was, I’d feel a little empty. That’s not the impression I hope they carry through the years when they remember my class. I want them to remember the culture and climate of my class and the room, the experiences they had there, and it’s certainly okay with me if they remember how the classroom set up contributed to their experiences.
    Bottom line, neither side should be assuming anything – that cute rooms lack substance, or “boring” rooms lack exiting or engaging learning experiences (i.e. substance). In the end, for me, the time spent on making my room look cute has far less of a payoff than spending time on making my room interesting while functional, which takes up very little of my time. I bring in posters of things I love like movies or whatever, and the students like that window into my life. Therefore, I love being in my classroom, teachers’ comments on it always correlate to the learning that clearly occurs there, and I can spend time on the massive amount of work it takes to make my teaching and class engaging and effective.
    Consider, maybe, that in this way you could “have it all.” If the goal is to make a place in which you and your students love learning, don’t feel like “cutifying” is the only option. And consider that some of these comments are accusing lack of substance on both sides of argument. We all work too hard, and love or jobs too much to have to deal with suggestions like that.

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