Four Tips for Creating Modern, Collaborative Learning Spaces

By Elyse Torbert

When our new high school opened its doors for the first time for the 2022–23 school year, the school welcomed more than 1,000 students into its new facility. We’d spent an entire year planning out the new school, scouting locations, and managing the other details for what would become Queen Creek USD’s third high school.

When building the new facility, we wanted our classrooms and common areas to be very comfortable, safe, and inviting for students. We wanted furniture that promoted that atmosphere and culture.

Mein Collaborative Furniture
Images Courtesy of MiEN Company

Working with MiEN Company, we were able to bring this vision to life in our new high school. Here are four things we did to ensure our furniture matched our vision for a collaborative, engaging learning environment:

  1. Think beyond single-purpose spaces. In our common areas, we wanted furniture that promoted a specific atmosphere, environment, and culture. Some of the school’s classrooms serve as maker spaces, labs, and art classes—all in the same space. Both multipurpose and student-friendly, our cafeteria is not only a place to eat but also an inviting space for meetings, cheer practice, and other events.
  2. Find furniture that fits the space and the purpose. Working with our furniture partner, we selected chairs, stools, high-top tables, soft seating, and couches, the latter of which can be pulled apart and used independently, if so desired. These modular options help us satisfy a variety of different needs with the same furniture. We have spaces that serve different parts of our student population.
  3. Make life easier with wheels and casters. We also invested in wheeled furniture that’s equipped with casters and easy to move around. This was particularly important for the cafeteria, where custodial staff can easily move and clean under the tables. Everything that has wheels can be moved or easily pushed around, so no one has to lift the furniture. That’s something you don’t always think about when you’re selecting furniture, but having those big, moveable pieces turned out to be very beneficial.
  4. Create a space that everyone will love and enjoy. Our students love congregating, socializing, and learning in their new school’s cafeteria. To them, it’s like being on a college campus or mall seating area. They invest in it and want to take care of it. The space includes nooks and crannies for kids who want quiet time to read a book. It’s also a place for larger groups to gather. For example, we recently hosted our first-ever Fall Festival. It invited vendors to display their products and services along the cafeteria’s turf area that also features outdoor seating. As a DJ was spinning the top hits, students danced, played games, and enjoyed some light snacks. We’ll also be using the space for school and athletic banquets.

Mein Collaborative Furniture

When you’re building a new school, you have to get the culture and atmosphere right. The feel of the space is much more of a collaborative, safe space. Coming into this, I didn't realize the huge difference that the right furniture can make both for your physical building and in relation to your school’s core values and collaboration. Having areas where our students can meet in small pockets or larger areas—plus the moveable furniture and one-to-one technology—all goes hand-in-hand.

Elyse Torbert is the principal of Crismon High School in Queen Creek, Ariz.

Featured

  • Missouri State University Debuts Construction Education Center

    Missouri State University in Springfield, Mo., recently opened a new 10,000-square-foot addition and renovation to support the School of Construction, Design, and Project Management, according to university news. The Construction Education Success Center, built onto the existing Kemper Hall, provides academic space for the school’s construction managers and cost $9.6 million.

  • Kraus-Anderson Completes Improvements at Minnesota Middle, High Schools

    Construction management, real estate, and risk management firm Kraus-Anderson recently announced that it has finished two K–12 renovation projects in Minnesota, according to a news release.

  • California Boarding School Opens New Inquiry Collaborative Facility

    Cate School, a boarding school in Carpinteria, Calif., for students grades 9–12, recently announced that it has finished renovating a historic dining hall into a new academic hub, according to a news release. The school partnered with Blackbird Architects and Tangram Interiors on the two-story, 16,000-square-foot Inquiry Collaborative.

  • Average Annual Number of Tornadoes per State

    New Tornado Wind Load Design Criteria in IBC Offer Improvements to Life Safety

    For the first time in U.S. building code history, the 2024 International Building Code (IBC) includes tornado wind load design criteria, marking a significant advancement in life-safety provisions.

Digital Edition