DIY Clay Tools

Posted on 08. Sep, 2011 by in All Posts, Cool+Creative, Techniques, Tools and Miscellaneous

Tight budgets and larger class sizes don’t mean clay has to be eliminated from the curriculum. Help ease your budget by repurposing items already in your classroom. Old tools will get a second lease on life and precious budget dollars can be spent on other needed supplies. Create a few of the DIY clay tools located below to expand your ceramic curriculum and give every student in your class the tools for success.

Click on any of the images to enlarge.

 

Below are clay project ideas collected in Pinterest. Just click on the image to take a closer look.

Show Us Your Favorite Art Lesson!

Posted on 15. Aug, 2011 by in All Posts, Cool+Creative, Techniques

Do you have a favorite art lesson that you would like to share?  Join The Teaching Palette’s annual reader collaborative extravaganza!

Don’t over think it. Keep it short, keep it simple… just share! Maybe it’s a lesson you just can’t live without or a new twist to an old idea.  All lesson submissions will be published on The Teaching Palette as a resource for you.  So spread the word – the more participants, the better!

The deadline for submitting your lesson(s) is September 15. Email all lesson plans to TPlessonplan@gmail.com. Just for submitting a lesson plan you will be entered into a drawing to win one of four $10.00 Dick Blick gift cards we will be giving away! *Update* Additionally, Intel has offered a $100 DonorsChoose.org gift card that we will be giving to one lucky teacher who submitted a favorite lesson plan!

Lesson submissions will appear on The Teaching Palette and look something like this:

Lesson plan should include:

  • NAME
  • Lesson Title
  • Grade Level(s)
  • Image of Student Artwork (Separate from lesson plan)
  • Website Links **optional**
  • Tips for Success (i.e., classroom management, step-by-step, additional images, etc.) **optional**

 

Check out our other “Show Us Your…” collaborative projects:

Art Room Showcase 2009

Art Room Showcase 2010: Space Organizing

 

 

Why Art Teachers Need to Write & How to Do It!

Posted on 27. Jun, 2011 by in All Posts, Tech Stuff, Techniques

Image: Letters Book, Altered Book, Jean Fitzgerald, 2009

As art educators, we know that images are powerful tools to communicate ideas.  However, our world also relies heavily on written communication to share information. This makes it necessary to have good writing skills.  Good writing is key to effectively advocating for your art program, communicating art concepts, and sharing ideas with colleagues. New media, from blogging to tweeting to collaborating on ArtEd2.0, has made it easier for us to do just that.

Despite having a blog and the Tech4Arted column in SchoolArts Magazine, I simply don’t like to write. Words just don’t flow smoothly from my head to my fingertips.

What I do love to do is communicate and share ideas. I just finished my first year writing the Tech4Arted column (check out my articles below) and I have been getting great ideas from SchoolArts for years so it has been exciting to contribute to a large audience.

I know many of you who are reading this may think: “If I could just show you what I want to say with a picture instead of words, it would be so much easier!” You have a great idea on art education, but you may hesitate to share if you dread the thought of writing.  Here’s the writing process I have developed over the last couple years that works well for blogging, writing for SchoolArts, and writing e-newsletter communication to parents. Maybe it will inspire you.

1. Choose your topic. What art lessons have been successful? How have you improved on someone else’s idea? Don’t reinvent the wheel.  All great ideas are inspired by something else, right?
2. Start typing. Don’t worry about how incoherent you sound. Just get the ideas out of your head and written down.
3. Read it afterwards and fix the things that do not make sense.
4. Go do something else for a few minutes, a few days, or a week.  This is the magic time when you will think of a new idea or perfect phrase.  Then run —  don’t walk — back to your writing to make your edits.
5. Read what you wrote and ask yourself: Did I communicate my ideas? Revise your writing. Repeat steps 3-5 until you communicate your ideas effectively.
6. Choose a friend or colleague to read your rough draft.  I always do. Make revisions and let them read it again.

In case you missed my first year of the Tech4Arted column for SchoolArts, I have linked to the articles below.  I share my writing with you with hope that you will take the leap and share your ideas with us as well!

Creating a Compassionate Curriculum
Take an Art Tour in Google Maps
Wallwisher: Collaborate and Interact
Twenty-First Century Storytelling
Out of Place
Re-Making Time
Create Your Own Customized Art Quiz
Technology Transformation [Infographic]
Wired to the Natural World

Ready to share? SchoolArts is always looking for lesson ideas and art expression in your school and community. Or write a guest post on The Teaching Palette. Check out some of our fantastic guest post submissions here.

Special Note: A great resource for grammar is the Associate Press Guide to Punctuation.

“I’m through. What do I do?”

Posted on 05. Nov, 2010 by in All Posts, Art Games, Books, Clean-up and Transition, Clssrm Mgmt, Cool+Creative, Music+Art, Neat Video, Off-task Behavior, Organization and Preparation, Reviews, Tech Stuff, Techniques, Tools and Miscellaneous

It’s those 5, 10, or 15 minutes when students finish assigned work early that can send a teacher into an internal panic.  Instead of panic, be prepared.  We have pulled some of our ready-to-use ideas together to help you fill those last few minutes with meaningful content.

Independent Activities for Early Finishers:

Large Group Activities:

  • Online quiz games in MyStudiyo and PhotoPeach
  • Start a book.  Check out these read-aloud recommendations for elementary and for older students.
  • Explore art in Google Maps. Find some ideas in this SchoolArts article.
  • Play Art Toss Ball, Art Memo, Flexible Hexabits, Pictionary on the whitboard, Sculptorades, Zolotopia, or Teledraw.
  • Art Vocab quiz. Give a choice is it 1, 2, or 3 (list possible answers on board with corresponding #).  All hold up number of their answer (all participate)
  • Music & art integration ready-to-use resources.
  • Show a short video from our YouTube and Vimeo favorites
  • Free Online Games by Artsology or explore these other online art games
  • Magic Pocket Name
  • Show Slideshare “Brilliant Examples of Photo Manipulation Art
  • Put up an art print and have students describe what they see in writing. Another option for younger students is to work in groups and generate a list of words they think describes the picture.
  • Hold up artwork for a show and tell
  • Critique artwork
  • Quiz about art concepts to get to line up.
  • Sculpture Freeze:  Have your students use their body to create a human sculpture.  Get specific by asking for a particular type of pose (symmetrical/asymmetrical, precarious/stable, seated/standing)
  • Play Simon Says for line vocabulary.  Students use their bodies to create a line (vertical, horizontal, spiral, diagonal, etc).
  • Eye Spy.  Ask students to find examples of art throughout the room or create your own Eye Spy.
  • Swat Game.  Write art terms on the board. Group the students in teams. Read a definition for an art term that is listed on the board.  Armed with fly swatters, the first student to “swat” the correct word wins the round.  Fly swatters are then handed to next student on team to continue play.
  • Sing some art songs (Red, Yellow, Blues You Tube Video)
  • Show an art teacher-created video from Art Class with Ms S or Fugleflicks

Favorite Things from NAEA Convention, Baltimore

Posted on 19. Apr, 2010 by in All Posts, Clssrm Mgmt, Cool+Creative, Educators in Art, In The News, Neat Video, Tech Stuff, Techniques

This year was the first time I traveled outside of my home state to attend a National Art Education Association (NAEA) Conference. If you ever have the opportunity to attend, it is an experience you will never forget.  Listed below are some of the my favorite activities, observations, presentations and tidbits of information I picked up from casual conversations in Baltimore:

  • I had never heard about Merlot (peer reviewed online resource of teaching and learning materials). A quick search on Merlot turned up this awesome Cave of Lascaux interactive explorer.
  • LOVE, LOVE, LOVE the American Visionary Art Museum. Although I was not allowed to photograph inside, I spent about 20 minutes outside admiring the sculptural forms.

Once I finally made it inside, the theme of the museum became very clear by the words and messages incorporated into the art.  Watch this entertaining video featuring the art of Chris Robert-Antieau to get a feel for what the museum is about.

My favorite Visionary Museum message through art: “Some stare though me and refuse to see that we are different branches of the same tree.”
-Athlon Clark

  • Loved Tricia Fuglestad’s information on Interactive Whiteboards – so inspiring!
  • Attended a fantastic session titled “Why Didn’t I Think of That?” presented by Lauren Kolesar-Eatinger and Elizabeth Willett.  My favorite trick was a yarn organizer. Start by cutting out the base of 2-liter pop bottles. Next, turn them upside down and hang from the wall and walla! . . . yarn dispensers.  If you teach elementary art, you must download their full classroom management presentation (PDF 5.5 MB).
  • Delicious bookmarking was mentioned during several sessions I attended (my must-have online tool – read earlier post on Delicious here)
  • Sent a message to Secretary of Education, Arnie Duncan about the importance of creativity in education.
  • Jackie Cassidy reminded me of Animoto for Education. Watch Tricia Fuglestad’s Animoto of  NAEA ’10 in Baltimore.
  • Participated in a “5 minute idea” in a creativity presentation. Start by presenting students with paper and two lines (curved and/or straight) drawn in sharpie marker. Allow children 2 minutes to draw anything incorporating the lines in their imagination.  Everyone holds up their paper and shares their title (an important requirement).  Give them one more minute to add something in the foreground and background.
  • Discovered an amazing YouTube video (below) from Sarah Brooks and watched her fantastic use of Prezi on Web 2.0.  I also loved the Macro Photo Project she included as part of her presentation.
    • Took the plane home with the Artsonia guys and learned some top secret plans to make Artsonia even better.  (Pressure’s on guys!)
    • Learned about some great web resources from Jean King.  Special needs: I Can’t Draw Syndrome and ArtPromote.   Character development: Powerful Projects.
    • Inspired by Samantha Melvin’s teaching empathy through art curriculum.
    • Discovered a timeline of Carrie Mae Weems life!
    • Make your presentations Sticky by Craig Roland was a crowd favorite.
    • Saw a great video presentation on Universal Design Learning by Kathy Rulien-Bareis.  Her methods are very useful for creating an adaptive classroom addressing special needs.  Watch her video segments one, two, three, and four.
    • I got a chance to present an art experience that that incorporated science, writing, social/emotional development, and technology into the art curriculum.

    Tons of additional great resources from conference presenters can be found online.
    Did you attend NAEA Conference this year?  What did you discover?

    Create Your Own Detail Detective

    Posted on 22. Feb, 2010 by in All Posts, Techniques

    Engaging students of all levels though a detail search of an image is a great way to introduce a unit or fill a few minutes of extra time at the end of class. A few of my favorite online sources include:
    What is it?
    Carpet Hunt
    Albright-Knox Art Games
    Getty Detail Detective
    Can You Find the Detail?

    However, you may want to customize your detail search to a lesson you are teaching. In this case, you could easily design your own in a few short minutes. The video below illustrates how to create a detail detective game using iPhoto (although our demo uses iPhoto, adaptations can be made using other photo programs):

    Can’t view video above? Click here.

    Here are the steps:
    1. Photograph a print or pull a large image from the Internet to a photo manipulation program.
    2. Duplicate the image several times.
    3. Crop duplicate images in different areas
    4. Project electronically on a screen or print image details for a low tech version.

    Turn Old Prints Into New Puzzles

    Posted on 10. Feb, 2010 by in All Posts, Cool+Creative, Organization and Preparation, Techniques

    I’m fortunate to have some duplicate copies of fine art prints — most were freebies from conferences and workshops. Originally, I divided a few prints into rectangular sections for grid drawings but after inheriting a felt board I started using them as a puzzle (click image at left to enlarge). When students had free time they loved working on these giant puzzles. And I loved finding a new purpose for existing materials that can do double duty and extend learning. Below is how to create each activity.

    Group Grid Drawing Pieces

    • Select a duplicate print to cut up into pieces. Remember you can use posters from inserts in publications like School Arts, your state art education publications, National Art Education Association publications or vendor freebies.
    • Use a paper cutter to divide the art print into even sized pieces. Each art print will measure slightly differently due to its size. Cut up a large supply of blank paper the same size as the art print pieces for students to do their grid drawings on.
    • Glue directions on the back of each art print piece and number them (see example). Having the directions on the back of each piece allows students to work independently when they finish regular assignments. Click here to print Art Puzzle Directions for students.
    • Laminate all the art print pieces and cut them out. Remember cutting out laminate is a great job for student helpers in the art room (see odd art jobs).
    • Store the art print and blank paper pieces in a gallon sized zip-lock plastic bag. On your storage bag record the artist, name of the artwork and the number of art print pieces. (Knowing the number of pieces makes clean-up and sorting easier.) Zip-lock bags are on the student supply lists at my school. I asked a home room teacher for an extra box to use in the art room. Check with the teachers in your building.
    • Introduce the group grid drawing activity to your classes and store the pieces in a box, basket or container that they can easily access when they complete their regular work. Make sure to create a place to turn in completed grid drawings as well as store drawings still in progress.

    Art Puzzle Pieces

    • Take the newly created art print pieces for grid drawing and add Velcro or magnets to the back of each one. This is another great job for students (see odd art jobs). What you use depends on your preferences and what you have on hand.
    • Velcro is great on felt boards and carpets. Kids can easily work on a puzzle in groups in a carpeted area. If you don’t have a carpet area you can take a piece of the Velcro’s hook side to a discount store and find an inexpensive throw rug. Local flooring companies might be willing to donate carpet samples or remnant pieces. There are also lots of inexpensive ways to construct a felt board. Here is a link to one creative solution I found. How to Make a Felt Board.  Find the “U Loop” fabric for velcro board online here.
    • Magnets are a perfect option for any classroom because almost everyone has a magnetic chalkboard or whiteboard surface that can be immediately utilized. If you have art on a cart or travel to another building you’re almost always guaranteed to have a magnetic surface at your disposal.  Other options to consider are magnetic dry erase easels, magnetic paint or even cookie sheets depending on the art puzzle size.
    • Store art puzzle pieces in a labeled zip-lock bag along with the blank paper for the group grid drawings and place in an area easily accessible to students.

    Below is a short video of kindergartners using an art puzzle.

    Can’t view this video? Try this link.

    Improve Curriculum Delivery with Document Cameras

    Posted on 17. Jan, 2010 by in All Posts, Cool+Creative, Tech Stuff, Techniques

    If there is only enough money in your budget to splurge on one piece of equipment for the art room then a document camera, in my opinion, is it.

    A document camera is not a fancy overhead projector but a versatile piece of equipment that can help improve the way you deliver curriculum. The most obvious function of the camera is that you can place any object, drawing or small piece of equipment under the lens and it will be projected in full color onto a large screen.

    What is often overlooked is that the document camera can be highly interactive, save on equipment and space, improve classroom management and produce it’s own art. Below are several different ways I’ve incorporated the document camera into my art room and some of the techniques that might work for your room as well.

    Still Life Drawing

    Turn the document camera lens out and project a still life that the whole class can see. Instead of having to find multiple objects and set up numerous still life displays use your document camera to enlarge one set of objects. It cuts down on the materials that need to be collected and saves space in the classroom by only needing one display. Another perk is you can instantly change to another still life when a different grade comes. You also can easily control the lighting to show a full range of values and actually demonstrate how artists select portions of a still life to draw.

    The kids love to watch me reposition the still life by turning the stand multiple directions in combination with zooming in and out on different sections of the objects. It allows me to show the entire class the concepts I’m teaching such as light source, highlight, shadow and reflected light. My document camera also has a feature that allows me to turn the image from color to black and white. I’ve found this to be especially useful when teaching rendering /shading or to help a class focus on drawing the actual object shapes and not be distracted by color. I’ve traveled to four different schools in my district, each with a different document camera, and they all had the black and white feature. You might need to do a little experimenting to find that feature on your camera but it will most likely have it.

    Here’s how I used my camera to project a still life (click the image to enlarge):

    First, find a table or platform at the right height to display your objects. I used a sturdy music stand. It works beautifully for light to medium weight materials and it easily can rotate or slide up and down for demonstrations. Next, turn the lens or rotate it out so that you can see the objects you want to display. Now you can zoom and reposition the stand to focus on different sections of the still-life. Then add a light source to create depth and shadows. You can get a utility light that clips from the hardware store, use a desk lamp with a flexible arm or a flash light. My motto is what ever works and is cheap.

    Microscope

    Change your perspective and the classes by taking advantage of the microscopes used in science class. I use a great lesson I got from my colleague to take an artist’s view-point when looking at fall leaves. Originally the class would collect leaves, draw an outline of the leaves they observe and then fill in each leaf shape with tiny circular shapes to represent the molecular structure. We took the artistic license to imagine what the cellular structure looked like but since getting a document camera we  don’t have to imagine. I call up students to put samples of the leaves they collected under the microscope and focus the lens. Then we discuss what we observe and how we can relate it to our art. We are able to make greater connections to what we see and tie back into the science curriculum at a deeper level.

    Here’s how I use the document camera to project the microscope (click the image to enlarge):

    Artwork

    Don’t just use your document camera to project an example piece of art or a demonstration. Let the kids use it to create their own original art. I was inspired by the illustrator and caricature artist Hanoch Piven’s book My Dog is As Smelly As Socks: And Other Funny Family Portraits to have 2nd graders create their own assemblage portraiture.

    I showed students several of Hanoch Piven’s books and talked to them about assemblage and discussed different ways to use found objects in our art. I had students draw the shape of their own face and hair and add color but no facial features. Students put their picture under the document camera and added facial features with different found objects (i.e., buttons, sea shells, bolts, nails, rubber bands, small toys, pieces of yarn, candy, art supplies, tools). Then students would take a picture with the document camera. Most of the document cameras came with software to use in conjunction with a computer for recording, editing, adding annotations and taking pictures. You’ll have to investigate how your particular document camera takes pictures. All of the found objects would then be put back into the box for other students to use. The images can then be printed, shared through a classroom website, used in an enhanced podcast or in a voice thread.

    You can view more photos of using the document camera in the art room at The Teaching Palette’s Flicker photo stream.

    Posts You May Have Missed During the Summer

    Posted on 30. Aug, 2009 by in All Posts, Clssrm Mgmt, Neat Video, Tech Stuff, Techniques

    summer vacationBy now, you are probably back in your classroom planning for the upcoming school year. Over the summer, we were busy adding to our Teaching Palette resources; here are a few you may have missed while recharging your batteries.

    Never miss a post again.  Receive a email when new content is posted (we promise, no spam)!

    A Great Solution for Bookmarking Web Images

    Posted on 09. Aug, 2009 by in All Posts, Cool+Creative, Reviews, Tech Stuff, Techniques, Technology and Gadgets, Tools and Miscellaneous

    visualizeus-2

    I’m always looking for different images to help communicate the concepts I’m teaching. The images I saved were taking up a ton of space on my computer and really slowing it down. Plus it wasn’t very efficient for locating what I needed in the spur of the moment. Then I discovered the Vi.sualize.us website as a way to catalog and collect images. If you like Delicious, you will love Vi.sualize.us for bookmarking images you find on the web.

    Vi.sualize.us is a free social bookmarking site that allows you to surf the web as normal, and bookmark any images you find along the way.  Images can be tagged so that you can search through your bookmarks to find what you want for your next art lesson. It’s very easy to use, just add a bookmark button on your browser or install a Firefox plugin and start surfing the web. When you see an inspiring image you want to remember just right click (control + click for mac users) or use the button in your browser.  There is even a free app called Cooliris for your iPhone or iPod Touch that will let you utilize your images on the go. The feature that really sets Vi.sualize.us apart from other image sites is the “Safe For Work” feature.  Just click the “Safe ON/Safe OFF” button in the top right-hand corner of your screen to filter out inappropriate images while you browse.

    Below are some of the features Vi.sualize.us offers:

    • Bookmark images you want to remember on the Internet
    • Safe ON/Safe OFF filter for work environments
    • Bulk edit
    • Comment on images
    • Add tags to pictures so you can easily search for them again
    • WordPress plugin to display your images on blog or website
    • A watchlist to keep track of images posted by others you want to follow
    • Can search with the “And”, “Or” and the negation (“!”) operators. For example, you could search for still life apples or oranges.

    You can check out what The Teaching Palette is bookmarking by clicking on this link. We also want to see the amazing images you discover around the web. You can share images by emailing info@theteachingpalette.com with your Vi.sualize.us name or by adding it to the comments section below. Then we will add your name to our “watchlist”.

    Below is a short video that shows what the Vi.sualize.us site looks like and how to tag and save an image. There’s no sound, but a picture is worth a thousand words.

    (Trouble viewing this video? Try this link.)