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10/2/19

4th grade painting unit


            Students in 4th grade (in fact, students in all grades) start all units with exploration. It allows me to take notes on their interests and their level of knowledge on the media. In this case, I noticed students painted in one layer and often did not paint a background. Next week we will look at various famous paintings and try to draw inspiration from them into our own work. I will give them their own paintings again and they will use varied brushes to add more layers, or add details as well as add a background. 



Students get only 6 colors. Black, white, red, blue, yellow and white. The primaries so they could make secondaries. White and black to make tints and shades (lighter and darker versions of colors) and brown, because it's sometimes too hard to mix it. The pink and green you see above, therefore, were mixed before applying to paper. With experience, students learn to manipulate the amounts to get the right color for the expression they seek to make. 







Above I have new jobs for students. I keep track of who did what job and go down the list democratically. Jobs range from traffic control by the drying rack, calling kids to line when quiet to line helper, who call kids in line to back if they are talking while waiting for teacher to arrive for pick-up. 

I never tell students what to paint. For kids who are used to just following directions, transitioning to this might be a bit tough, yet, eventually, all students know that when they work with me I fully expect them to come up with their own ideas. I teach them the techniques, but I NEVER say, we will all paint (fill in the blank). That is not art, that is craft. 


Some students just enjoy mixing colors, that is okay. 

Some explore wet on wet techniques, others explore wet on dry techniques. 



Lots of colors are being invented, mixed, found, learned.... these are some of their mixing colors..













After exploration, students practice painting several aspects of a landscape painting. Trees, pines, flowers, sky, water, bushes...etc. 







I also have tons of landscapes hung all over the classroom, for both inspiration and ideation. 

I then have them choose, from a box of hundreds of calendar images of landscapes, one to inspire their own landscape....I do a short demo on how we paint back to front... so what we see furthest in the image is first. Time is also very important. Sometimes we wait for the color to dry to add paint on top, sometimes not. 

Students have access to varied brushes... big brushes to fill in spaces fast, smaller for smaller spaces, fanned brushes for bushes and trees. detail brushes for fine lines. 







I have a table I call "the store" in the classroom. In Spanish we call it, "el mercado" (same translation). Kids can use any and all materials placed in this table. I have mixing paper (loose magazine pages), brushes, cups, and ready to go paint palettes. Kids have been taught to fill and clean up their own cups of water when needed, as long as it's only 3/4 of the way. 









Some finished work ....hot off the press. Notice how different each piece is. Notice that they all are not the same idea. This is because I let them decide what to paint. The overall theme is landscape but within that they got to choose what to paint, and each faced the same set of challenges...such as how to make the colors needed, which colors go first, what brushes to use, should they wait or paint on the painting while wet with another color. All these are decisions they faced while working on their painting. 



























More images to come week of November 11, 2019. 

9/30/19

Let’s start with leaves, a printmaking unit.


At our school we have an awesome library and in fact, we have wonderful, and helpful librarians who were able to find great books to get us started. For the first class in this unit I simply took the kids out to our school garden and they were to draw leaves, or any other nature treasures they wanted to draw in their sketchbooks. The sketchbooks are these composition books which we personalized with magazines images and words. 

Seeing as this is fall and flowers are drying out for the winter, the kids got very excited about seeds. Seeds were everywhere. This child here is pocketing some seeds to take home and plant. Their high level of excitement was energizing to witness and I knew we were on a good path to learning. 

             During the walk we also collected some "treasures" and I took the time to individually display them in these clear pockets. I used clear tape to tape each natural treasure to a white paper and stuck the papers in the clear pocket. The next class (class #2) kids were given these cards as a resource. Using black markers (felt pens/sharpies) kids tried drawing what they saw. They were so incredibly fun to watch. I have a class set of these small private eyes, they are small, individual-use magnifying glasses. The kids were so interested and intrigued by what they found when looking through them. 



The drawings from this second lesson were just to die for!! Each one could easily be on a t-shirt or a printed card. 


I am so excited about these drawings. They just make me smile. Kids' drawings will always trump any drawings adults could make, they look effortless and spontaneous. 






Tweeted: "Drawing the items we found yesterday during our nature walk using loops #scienceconnection #apsarts #artsed #cis_aps ⁦@SrPadillaAPS⁩ ⁦@Cante2_CIS⁩ "




Transferring our drawings onto the printing plate. 


Using scratchfoam and pens to press down, make the lines thicker and color in a few shapes. 

These printing plates are ready to be printed. 


Our initial prints. I provided them with assorted, colored fadeless paper and ONLY black ink. In the past I have given them various ink colors and white paper...but, I find the doling out of one color onto the trays much easier than constantly being asked to provide a specific color to a specific table. The assorted fadeless paper allows me kids control of some color while allowing me a bit more freedom to actually walk around and assist where needed.