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Terms of Use

Terms of Use

By using this site, you agree to these terms. The tool is provided “as is” for classroom planning convenience.

Last updated: 2025-09-22

License & access

We grant you a limited, non‑exclusive, non‑transferable license to access and use the site for classroom and personal planning.

User responsibilities

  • Use the tool for lawful educational purposes.
  • Do not attempt to reverse‑engineer, disrupt, or overload the service.
  • Respect student privacy when exporting or sharing files.

Content & accuracy

Seating suggestions are aids, not mandates. You remain responsible for instructional decisions and compliance with school policies.

Intellectual property

The site’s code, design, and content are protected by applicable laws. You may not reuse assets without permission except as allowed by fair use.

Third‑party links & ads

We are not responsible for third‑party content, products, or services accessed via links or advertisements.

Disclaimer of warranties

The site is provided “as is” without warranties of any kind, express or implied, including merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and non‑infringement.

Limitation of liability

To the maximum extent permitted by law, we are not liable for indirect, incidental, special, consequential, or punitive damages.

Indemnification

You agree to indemnify and hold us harmless from claims resulting from your misuse of the site or violation of these terms.

Changes

We may update these terms periodically. Continued use after changes constitutes acceptance.

Appropriate Use of Seating Charts in Your Context

Seating charts can influence classroom culture. This tool is intended to support fair, thoughtful decisions—not to label or track students in ways that feel punitive.

Using the tool within this spirit helps keep seating charts aligned with your goals for a respectful, supportive classroom.

What This Tool Can and Cannot Do

This generator can speed up the logistics of arranging names and seats, but it cannot replace your professional judgment or knowledge of your students.

Naming these limits keeps expectations realistic and supports healthier use of the generator.

Equity Considerations in Seating Decisions

Seating choices can unintentionally shape who participates, who feels visible, and who has easier access to help.

Naming these dynamics helps you use seating as a tool for inclusion rather than leaving patterns to chance.

Using Seating Changes as Support, Not Punishment

It can be tempting to move students only when there’s a problem, but that can make every seat change feel negative.

When students see that seats shift to help them, they are more likely to trust future adjustments.

Sharing Template Ideas with Other Educators

Many teachers discover creative ways to use the same tool. Sharing your approaches can help colleagues while still respecting this generator's intent.

This keeps a healthy balance between collaboration and honoring the original resource.

An Iteration Mindset for Classroom Layouts

Behind this tool is an assumption that good teaching is iterative. The same is true for your physical layout.

An iterative approach takes pressure off any single seating chart and focuses on long-term growth.

Professional Boundaries in Seating Discussions

How you talk about students and seating—on paper, in meetings, and online—reflects your professional judgment.

Strong boundaries support both your students' privacy and your own long-term professionalism.