Book bins, book boxes and shopping bags Oh My! How do you help your students stay organized
during independent reading time?
There are so many different ways to organize
students' books, and you have to find what’s right for you, your classroom
space, and your students.
Today’s post is all about the endless
possibilities for organizing student books for independent reading time. Because remember- in a Reader's Workshop- independent reading is NOT a center (AKA Classroom Library Center) it is something every child does every day and it starts on the 1st day of school!
Below are my absolute favorite ways of organizing
student books on a TEACHER BUDGET (if you know what I mean!)
Book Baggies:
In my opinion, the easiest way to organize if you
have a SMALL classroom space are student book baggies! Each student gets a baggie with their name on
it for storing their books. You can get fancy and let them design their own name tags for the bag or decorate with stickers! (or not).
These gallon sized baggies
slide nicely into student desks or chair pockets, making them easily accessible
for independent reading time! You can
grab these at your local grocery store.
If you choose this route expect the bags to rip and tear
eventually….meaning buy extra baggies and replace the baggies every so often as
students need a fresh, new bag.
Another favorite baggie to use are the 2.5 gallon
sized! These are great for students if
you have LARGE picture books that won’t fit in a gallon sized baggie. Perfect for Kinder, First, and Second grade
readers!
Book Bins:
IF you are RICH (or are blessed with a nice classroom budget- do those still exist?) you can find sturdy book bins through Lakeshore
Learning (first photo) or Really Good Stuff. You will most likely NOT have to replace these.
If you are NOT RICH or on a budget (so like everyone reading this) you can still
find magazine holders on a dime! Kids LOVE decorating these every year!
If you aren’t into cardboard, but still want to
find affordable book bins, look no further.
Head to your local dollar store or Walmart and
peruse the kitchen section. You can find
ice cube bins that are sturdy and durable for a few bucks. Turning these into book boxes is a great way
to get that Lakeshore Learning "look" without going in debt!
One last idea is to use baskets to organize
student books.
One teacher in TISD calls them ‘shopping
bags’ Isn’t that ADORABLE!?
The last thing to think about before deciding is
storage!
If you have lots of shelf space in your
classroom, go for the book boxes/bins/shopping bags. I recommend spreading out the boxes on
different shelves around the room so that you don’t have a traffic jam while getting
started with independent reading.
If you don’t have shelf storage or have a smaller
classroom, go with the baggies! But make
sure students have a place to store the bags of books (like a desk, chair pocket, or
cubbie). Or plan for some crates you can keep them in and make a plan for a FAST passing out come independent reading time.
What’s your favorite go-to storage for student
books? Comment below to let me know!