I've written a lot about the benefits I've seen come from hanging student work and math word walls. But I didn't always have my classroom bulletin boards covered. It wasn't until a few years after my first year teaching that I started decorating my classroom.
This post is a collection of math classroom decoration ideas, some from my own classroom, some printables I've made for teachers, and photos that teachers have sent to me of their own math classroom décor.
Above is a how to be a Math Person poster (linked below) surrounded by some printable mathy math bulletin board borders.
There was a positive change in my classroom once I started hanging student work and math word wall references to our classroom walls.
Here is a photo of Ms. Estrada getting her 6th grade math word wall together.
Even my seniors liked seeing their work displayed. Here is a photo of our classroom Fridge where students hung their graded papers:
Most of the time even my juniors and seniors choose to hang their papers on our classroom Fridge instead of bringing them home. I also like having their papers displayed. On tough days, days that my students feel they "can't", I can point to their wonderful work on the wall and say, "Yes you can!".
At the beginning of the school year as students enter your classroom for the first time, this Welcome, Math Person! poster poster is a reminder that we are all math people.
This Practice Makes Better poster reminds students that perfect is overrated. Great things happen when we work hard, get better and stop worrying about being perfect. Making mistakes is important and the way we grow, especially in math class. I hope this poster helps students remember this.
To me, math confidence is everything. When students are confident, they can push through that tough math topic or at least be more willing to try. That confidence can be tough to build and comes from more than just classroom décor. But I do believe that the decorations we hang in our classrooms can help.
This order of operations mobile is part of my blog's free math resource library.
This collection of data and statistics is part of a 6th grade math word wall.
Teachers have sent me so many great photos of their classrooms and seeing them all has made me so happy. This one was sent over by Ms. Koehler of her geometry word wall.
And this is a photo of Ms. Paulus's 5th grade math word wall.
Mr. Urzua shared a photo of his math word wall on Instagram. I love the black background.
Ms. Woodworth brought her math classroom décor outside and hung hundreds of matholution math pennants in her school's courtyard.
I've made over 100 math pennants, with a bunch being for the holidays. They're fun activities that cover math topics and then double as student-created math classroom décor.
How many times have you heard, "I'm just not a math person" from students when they get stuck? No way. We are all math people. This How to be a Math Person poster reminds all students that math is for all of us.
How cute is Ms. Lyons's How to be a Math Person mural? Her friend painted it on her classroom wall and totally nailed it!
Here is an "I Know I Can" motivational classroom poster with words from Nas. I heard from a bunch of teachers that their students thought the words were from Lil Nas X. Nothing makes a person feel older, lol. There are directions to enlarge PDFs in this post.
This back to school math pennant with a Golden Spiral theme helps students get to know each other at the beginning of the year. It comes with a short lesson on the Golden Ratio and optional glyph directions for students to color based on get-to-know-you questions.
My friend Karrie from Mrs. E Teaches Math sent this photo of her students' back to school math pennants. How about that wood paneling? There are more math pennants to see here.
If you're into Halloween and teach algebra or algebra 2, this is a free set of 12 posters with skeletons posing as algebraic functions. It's a fun set to display in the fall.
Ms. Page sent this photo with little Santa hats on her skeleton functions to extend their life through the winter holidays!
I made this billions place value reference for a 4th grade teacher who needed it for her classroom's math word wall. You can grab it from my dropbox here.
And an Albert Einstein poster to remind us that even geniuses write in their math notebooks.
How do you like to decorate your walls? Do you believe less is better, go all out or are you somewhere in the middle? If you're part of the Visual Math Facebook group, I'd love to see your photos!
>Browse all math classroom décor
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Thank you so it's a wonderful idea i will use it this year ....i wish i can find someone here to share with me ideas about math ....i'm from Algeria.......thanks in advance
ReplyDeleteAlgeria! Wow! Thank you for your comment! We have a math group on Facebook called Visual Math where teachers share ideas about teaching math to visual learners. I hope you will join!
DeleteNice indeed!
ReplyDeleteI would love to share the walls from my classroom too. We mostly have math formula as students want to remember for solving problems.
Thank you Keshab! I hope you have a wonderful school year!
DeleteI love these a lot! I just finished my first year and only wish I had found this post before. I will be incorporating some of these ideas next year! When you give tests, do you cover over the word walls or leave them up?
ReplyDeleteThank you for asking, Allison. I never covered the walls for tests. Anything that I gave in class wasy fair game to use on any assessments I gave. That being said, I had the luxury of creating the curriculum we used in class because there was no self-contained Algebra 2 or Consumer Math curriculum. If the state test was given in my room, the walls would definitely have to be covered though.
DeleteThank you for share your ideas!! I really like it! I will do it in my classroom (im a math teacher from the Patagonia Argentina).
ReplyDeleteThanks again!
Hello from Massachusetts, US! Thank you for your comment! I hope you have a wonderful school year!
DeleteDo you have the parent function people somewhere that I can purchase them or access them elsewhere?
ReplyDeleteThanks for asking, Elisabeth. They are a free download on the OK Math website here: http://okmathteachers.com/algebra-aerobics/
DeleteThank you so much. I am from Nigeria,hope to learn more from you .
ReplyDeleteHello from Massachusetts, US!
DeleteI thought I saw on your blog a wall decoration for a daily or weekly calculation/word problem posting. Do you still have it?
ReplyDeleteI don't think it was here, but I do know that my friend Alex over at Middle School Math Man has a Challenge of the Week: https://www.middleschoolmathman.com/middleschoolmathmanblog/middle-school-math-challenge-of-the-week
Deletewhat font do you use?
ReplyDeleteI use a lot of fonts from Kimberly Geswein. Her fonts are free for personal use on TPT.
DeleteThank you for the ideas. I am a new Mathematics teacher here in the Philippines. You are a very great help.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on your new math teaching job!
Delete