Arrangement is like putting together a puzzle. When you have a puzzle, each piece has its own special place. You need to find where each piece fits to see the whole picture. Just like that, when we arrange things, we find the right spot for each item so everything looks nice and works well together. Imagine your toys. If you put your teddy bear with your blocks, and your toy car with your crayons, it might look messy. But if you put all your teddy bears together, all your blocks in one place, and your crayons in a box, it looks neat and tidy.
Think of arrangement as making music with instruments. You have drums, a guitar, and a piano. If everyone plays at the same time without any plan, it can sound noisy. But if the drums play first, then the guitar, and finally the piano, it makes a beautiful song. Arranging is like deciding when each instrument should play to make the music sound just right.
Arrangement is also like setting the table for dinner. You have plates, forks, spoons, and cups. If you put them randomly on the table, it might be hard to eat. But if you place the plate in front of each chair, the fork on the left, the spoon on the right, and the cup above the plate, it makes eating easier and more fun. Arranging helps us see and use things better.