The Science Behind 6:1 Learning Environments

Jun 1, 2026 | Education

Six young children playing closely together in a sandbox, demonstrating the collaborative nature and science of small class sizes during outdoor learning.Why Small Classes Change Big Feelings: The Science Behind 6:1 Learning Environments

Did you know that school is emotional long before it’s academic? New routines, noisy rooms, and social rules all stress developing nervous systems. Understanding the science of small class sizes reveals how the right environment can change everything.

What the research shows

  • A recent study following children in the early school years found that distress and difficulties adjusting to school were meaningfully linked to classroom experiences—not just individual temperament. [3]
  • Reviews of class size in special and intensive education settings highlight that students with extra learning or emotional needs tend to thrive more in smaller groups, where teaching can be adapted and relationships are closer. [1]
  • Children who feel they belong at school and have strong relationships there tend to have better mental health, fewer behaviour problems, and better long-term outcomes, even years later. [10][11]

Small classes aren’t the only way to create that sense of connection—but they make it much easier. When there are six children in a space (instead of twenty or more), it’s easier to notice the child who is quietly worrying, the one who shuts down when they don’t understand, or the one who looks “fine” but is slowly disconnecting.

How We Create Connection at Oak

At Oak, small classes give us room to:

  • Pause when big feelings show up rather than “power through” the lesson.
  • Co-regulate—that lovely nervous system magic where a calm, attuned adult helps a child feel safe again.
  • Offer flexible spaces: maybe a child works at a desk, on a wobble stool, or at a quiet corner table, depending on what their body needs that day.

What a 6:1 classroom feels like to a child

In a small group, children are more than “the quiet one,” “the wiggly one,” or “the advanced one.”
They are:

  • Greeted by name, with eye contact.
  • Notice when their mood is “off,” even if they don’t say anything.
  • Invited into conversations, not just called on to give the “right answer.”

Recent work asking children directly what “well-being at school” means to them found that they care most about feeling connected to others and feeling capable, much more than having fancy equipment or big buildings. [7] When they feel like they belong and can succeed, school becomes somewhere they want to be.

Small classes make that kind of connection easier to build: more shared jokes, more chances to be listened to, and more time for a teacher to sit beside a child and say, “Let’s figure this out together.”

Attention you can feel: Focus, engagement, and class size

Teachers and parents often notice the same things in smaller groups: children participate more, ask more questions, and are less likely to “vanish in the back row.”

That intuition is backed by data. When we look at the science of small class sizes, the evidence is clear.

A 2025 national classroom observation study found that children in smaller classes showed higher moment-to-moment behavioural engagement—they were more on-task, more involved, and less distracted. [2] Another 2024 study on year 4 reading showed that students in smaller classes not only improved more in reading comprehension but also felt more supported and more able to join discussions. [5]

Other large-scale research on school performance has found that student–teacher ratio matters as one of the structural factors linked with academic outcomes—especially when paired with good teaching. [4]

In a 6:1 class at Oak, that looks like:

  • Every child gets multiple turns to speak every lesson.
  • Teachers having time to rephrase and reteach in different ways for different learners.
  • More chances to notice how a child is trying, not just whether they got the answer right.

For children with ADHD traits, anxiety, or quieter temperaments, this kind of environment can be the difference between surviving school and actually feeling engaged.

The science of feeling capable: Competence in a 6:1 classroom

Children’s own words about school well-being often circle around two ideas:

“I feel like I can do it.”
“I feel like I’m good at something here.” [7]

That sense of competence is not about constant praise—it’s about having just-right challenges and enough support to get through them. The science of small class sizes proves that when teachers have smaller groups, they can more closely track each child’s progress because teachers in small classes can closely track each child’s progress:

  • Adjust tasks up or down before frustration explodes.
  • Offer specific feedback (“You worked really hard on breaking that word into chunks”) instead of generic “good job.”
  • Spot strengths in places that don’t always shine in large group settings: nature skills, creativity, leadership in play, and kindness to younger students.

Research on class size and literacy suggests that smaller groups create conditions for more individualized feedback and participation, which, in turn, boost confidence and engagement. [5] When children feel competent, they’re more willing to attempt hard things—academically and socially.

How Oak’s 6:1 environment puts this into practice

Here’s how the science of small class sizes comes alive in a typical Oak day:

  • Morning check-ins in a small circle
  • Flexible, multi-sensory learning in tiny groups
  • Built-in regulation breaks
  • Outdoor adventures as shared stories
  • Tight family–school communication

All of this is much harder to sustain in a class of 25–30 students, even with excellent teachers.

References

  1. Bondebjerg, A., Dalgaard, N. T., Filges, T., & Viinholt, B. C. A. (2023). The effects of small class sizes on students’ academic achievement, socioemotional development, and well-being in special education: A systematic review. Campbell Systematic Reviews, 19(3), e1345. https://doi.org/10.1002/cl2.1345
  2. Symonds, J. E., Boheim, R., Creaby, H., Handscomb, G., & Torsney, B. (2025). Children’s momentary behavioural engagement and class size: A national systematic observation study. Frontline Learning Research, 13(2).
  3. Beuchert, L., & Nandrup, A. B. (2025). Beyond academic achievement: Class size and distress in the early school years. Applied Economics Letters. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1080/13504851.2025.2559404
  4. Aung, T. N., & Ogawa, K. (2025). What drives academic achievement? A deep dive into the determinants using standardized test scores and hierarchical linear modelling. Cogent Education, 12(1), 2387783. https://doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2024.2387783
  5. Mathavan, P., Subramaniam, R. D., & Markendan, K. (2024). The relationship between class size and students’ achievement in English reading comprehension among Year 4 students. Journal of Translation, Linguistics, and Translation (TRANS-LITE), 1(2), 97–108. https://doi.org/10.26714/translite.v1i2.413
  6. Cohman, H., van Hole, R., & Vahle, J. (2024). School belonging and mental well-being in adolescents in care: The mediating role of teacher connectedness and peer acceptance. Adoption & Fostering, 48(3), 278–294. https://doi.org/10.1177/03085759241295589

Additional Sources

  1. Klemp, G., Urton, K., Krull, J., Bosch, J., & Wilbert, J. (2025). What does well-being at school mean to primary school students? Children’s understanding of basic psychological needs. Wellbeing, Space, and Society. (Advance online publication).
    Castro, M., et al. (2025). Does school climate affect students’ social and emotional skills? The importance of relationships. European Journal of Psychology of Education. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10212-025-01007-8
  2. Cipriano, C., Strambler, M. J., Naples, L. H., Ha, C., Kirk, M., Wood, M., … Durlak, J. (2023). The state of evidence for social and emotional learning: A contemporary meta-analysis of universal school-based SEL interventions. Child Development, 94(5), 1181–1204. https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.13968
  3. Islam, M. I., Cheruvu, V. S., Laska, C., Esgin, T., & Martiniuk, A. (2025). School Connectedness Boosts Mental Health in Indigenous Adolescents With Adverse Childhood Experiences: Mediation Analysis of a Longitudinal Study in Australia. The Journal of School Health, 95(9), 731–740. https://doi.org/10.1111/josh.70047
  4. Allen, K. A., Greenwood, C. J., Berger, E., Patlamazoglou, L., Reupert, A., Wurf, G., May, F., O’Connor, M., Sanson, A., Olsson, C. A., & Letcher, P. (2024). Adolescent school belonging and mental health outcomes in young adulthood: Findings from a multi-wave prospective cohort study. School Mental Health, 16(1), 149–160. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12310-023-09626-6
Daniela Urbina

Daniela Urbina

Daniela has been a member of the Oak Learners staff since 2022. She grew up in Colombia; she is a Psychologist from La Sabana University. She also took Homeschooling and Child Neurodevelopment, Neuroeducation and Neuropsychology courses at Ceenford and a study at the Queensland University of Technology about Inclusive Education: Essential knowledge for success. Daniela has previous co-founded a non-profit foundation, where she developed and implemented some social impact projects, gave speeches, and created dynamic activities. She has experience working with kids between 15 months to 15 years old. Daniela loves cycling, being active, learning daily, reading books and accepting new challenges. She believes the learning process should be fun and dynamic and that the student needs to know how to apply the knowledge to their lives. Teaching is her passion, and she tries to transmit this love to her students.


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