Friday, November 6, 2015

Art Certificate

Just opened my Teachers Pay Teachers store!  My first FREE product is an art certificate.  I frequently give these out to students to reward them for working hard and making great art.  I also give them out to reward students whose work gets chosen to be on display in the hallway.  When the student brings it home, it lets their parents know they are doing well in art.  We all know that sometimes the students that excel the most in art do not always excel in their classroom.  Parents of these students would be happy to see their child is doing well in art.  This gives the student a boost of self esteem and they are likely to continue to work hard in your class in hopes of receiving another certificate!


4th Grade Iroquois Blankets

Check this great lesson plan on my Teacher Pay Teachers site.  I've taught this lesson three times now and students love telling me about what they've learned in their classroom and using that information to help them design their blanket!






Thursday, July 23, 2015

Painted paper collage

This was a great end of the year projects for kindergarteners.  It showed how their cutting, gluing, painting, drawing, and coloring, skills have grown throughout the year.  I was in awe of their creativity.  



On the first day we looked at some Eric Carle books and saw how he made different types of paper with colors and textures. I then gave each table a pair of colors: red and yellow, blue and yellow, or blue and red.  I told students to paint a section with one color and then while that color was still wet mix the second color on top. While the paint was still wet, students scratched the paper with texture tools to make some textures and patterns.  This was also a great time to review primary and secondary colors.



Before day two, I cut up the papers into fourths and divided the colors evenly so every table had every color.  I also included some painted paper scraps from another project to add some more colors.

On day 2, I told some classes to invent some type of creature or animal similar to Eric Carle's style.  With other classes I told them they could make anything.   After watching them work with the papers for a while I told students they could get markers to add details to their drawings.  I stressed them not to let the markers touch the glue and they listened well.  Students had to make up a story about their picture.  Once collages were finished, some students shared their collages and story.














Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Understanding prejudices and self portraits

I attended a DASA workshop and received a lesson plan on teaching prejudices.  In the lesson students would first write or draw how they thought other people viewed or judged them.  Girls might write "I'm a girl so people think I don't like to get dirty."  After this students would write facts about themselves that people would not know just by looking at them.  I modified the lesson a little and first taught the students how to draw a self portrait with correct proportions.  Before writing about themselves, we had a discussion on what it meant to be prejudice.  Students shared how others have judged them before getting to know them.  One African American student shared how she was judged because of her skin color.  We discussed that it's not right to judge someone before we get to know them.  Everyone has many special qualities and we don't know them just from appearance.  Then students made a border around their self portrait and wrote things about themselves that people would not know just by looking at them.  I encouraged students to write about their family, personality, and favorite things. 





Friday, May 22, 2015

Art show

This is our annual district Art show featuring students in k-12th grade





Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Coil pots


Coil pots were glazed and just got out of the kiln.  The Amaco Crystaltex glazes are beautiful!

Saturday, April 11, 2015

Coil pots





3rd graders learned how to make a coil pot and how to use scratch and slip to attach the clay coils.