Saturday, 30 November 2013

Thumbprint Timeline - Art Show

Thumbprint Timeline - Art Show
 

My art show project was a class mural, a thumbprint timeline!  I enjoyed doing the project with my class.  It was my first experience with a Montessori type lesson.  I really liked the system.  First I gave a whole class lesson where I demonstrated the technique and provided the context for the project.  I then set up a centre where I had groups of students coming and going and finishing one part of the lesson at a time.  I had a checklist to make observations about students’ understanding of the science content and to monitor that each have met all the criteria.  Because I was only working with five students at a time, I was able to conference with each student individually for each section of the lesson.  It was fascinating to watch which students carefully followed instructions, which made realistic looking creatures, which wanted to only make the creatures in the samples, and which wanted to create their own creatures.  I instructed each student to create some and follow the instructions for some so that I could assess their abilities in each area.  Integrating art with science was also a fabulous way to learn the content because after they created, sorted (with realia and pictures), and glued their creatures onto the proper evolutionary eras, most students could easily tell me which plants and animals belonged in which sections.  The students applied their learning in kinesthetic and tactile ways and used higher order thinking skills while creating and sorting their creatures.  Each class learns the same lesson each year (called the Second Great Lesson, on the Coming of Life), where the teachers use realia and pictures to provide a hook, overview lesson of the earth’s entire evolution.  I painted each section of the mural the same colours as the cloth one that the school uses.  My CT has done the thumbprint creatures for the lesson in the past, but never the entire timeline.  The school is going to try to laminate the mural and use it in future years.  It was exciting to contribute a resource to the school.

Batik School Wide Art Project


 
 - Laura Berkeley

 
Batik – School Wide Art Project
During our practicum, Kathleen and I had the opportunity to initiate and organize a school wide art project.  It is a healing, community building project for the school and parents to work on together.  It was meant to be a step forward after the fire.  The focal resource is a book called Seeds of Peace, by Laura Berkeley.   In the book, two men live at different ends of a rainbow.  One is a hermit who lives in a cave and one is a rich man who lives in a mansion.  During the book, the rich man realizes he is not happy like the hermit and learns that peace is a choice and happiness does not come from belongings.  The illustrations are all brightly coloured batik paintings.  The students will each make their own batik painting on a small square of mueslin cloth.  To make Batik, they draw a picture on the cloth with blue glue, wait for it to dry, paint over it, soak it until the glue comes off, let it dry, and then there will be white space where the glue was (see pictures below).  The paintings are supposed to symbolize peace to the students; the squares are the students’ opportunity to show how they are choosing peace in their new school building.  It is a decision to heal.  Kathleen and I prepared some kits to move between the classes so that students can work on their squares as they have time.  Once all the classes are finished, a parent volunteer is organizing parents to sew the squares together into a quilt that will be hung in the school foyer to cover up the previous school’s symbol.

The following quotation will hang above the quilt:

Peace comes from within you. It is

   Like a seed. You cannot force

   It to grow or shape it into

   Something you want it to be.

   You must give it love and

   Freedom so that it can grow

   Outwards into something pure

   And beautiful. Only then will you know

  True Happiness.   

(excerpt from The Seeds of Peace – by Laura Berkeley)

 

When I was teaching my class about the project, I showed a video about some children in Indonesia (where Batik originates) who also used Batik to heal, but from an earthquake.