Before I slide a single desk, I plan the function and flow. A classroom isn’t just a learning space—it’s a living space that constantly communicates what matters, who belongs, and how students should move and feel. In this episode, I share how to map zones with intention, avoid common setup mistakes, and use a few simple planning moves so your room works with you, not against you. Why this matters Decorating before designing is like furnishing a house before deciding how you’ll live in it. I design for routines, movement, visibility, and student ownership first. Environment shapes regulation and learning. Calm, consistent, accessible spaces lower stress and support focus. Key ideas & takeaways Plan the flow before the furniture. Map entry, transitions, gathering spots, and material access so the space reinforces your systems. Design with feelings in mind. Decide how each zone should feel (cozy library, focused small-group table, connected carpet) and build for that feeling. Make ownership visible. Shared supplies, student mailboxes, and authentic work walls quietly say, “This space belongs to you, too.” Avoid the big three mistakes. Overstuffing, poor traffic flow, and blind spots create behavior issues. Curate > cram; make clear paths; protect visibility. Operationalize calm. Think: supply stations at pods, a tucked-away but visible calm corner, and walls that feature work you’ll actually use. Try this week Sketch your dream flow. Mark zones, traffic patterns, and supply points; assign simple roles (table leads) to prevent pile-ups. List your Top 5 routines. Arrival, transitions, getting help, materials, community circle—then check your layout actually makes each one easier. Walk the room before moving anything. Sit in student seats, stand at your teach point, and “let the room talk” so you catch tweaks you’d miss on paper. Favorite line “The best classrooms aren’t crammed—they’re curated.”