Monday, April 18, 2011
Rainbow Fish Collage
The fish was designed by drawing a fish from an outline of a fish. I drew the fish upside down as instructed. Then the fish was cut out and had to be covered with different colors of paper, but the paper had to be torn instead of cut and the whole fish had to be covered. I chose red, purple, and blue because they look good together, along with the primary colors red and blue make purple. I glued the paper onto the fish, staying in the lines, then added some glitter ans sequins to bring some shiny details to the fish.
This project could be used for a reading/literacy class because the students would have to use their imagination for how they want the fish to look. It would be easier to use for lower elementary because their imagination is better, along with the students liking to tear instead of cutting.
Oil Pastels
The oil pastel art piece was completed by looking at an object, sketching it, then coloring it by blending oil pastels. I used monochromatic blue coloring for the jug. The more of the oil pastel that was on the paper, the easier it blended.
Oil pastels can be used for a social studies lesson where the students are learning about Native Americans. The students would be building tepees, and they could use the oil pastels to mix the different colors of the tepees.
Print It!
This project is print making mixed with the Easter holiday. I used a cleaned, foam meat tray and carving sticks to make an imprint on the foam so that it was textured. The texture had to be pretty deep into the tray without putting holes into it. Once the design was traced, I used ink and a roller to transfer the ink from the tray onto my carved tray. The ink had to be even. Then I used paper and smoothed it out over the foam piece. Slowly, I peeled the paper off of the tray. I did this with four colors. Once they dried, I glued them onto construction paper.
Print making can be used for social studies lesson where the students are learning about fossils. The students would be able to make their own form of a flat fossil.
Scratch Art
The scratch art project was created using a pointed wooden stick and black paper that is colored underneath. This way when the black is scratched off, the color came through. I had a shape and had to imagine an image and create a scene using the given shape. My picture is ghosts in a forest. The ghosts are made out of the shape. The ghost on the right did not turn out the greatest because I was not informed prior to the project that once the paper gets oily from being touched, it does not scratch off.
A cross curriculum project could be to use geometry when learning the shapes. The students would have to create a scene like I did, but have to include all of the shapes they have been learning. The students would like it because the black paper can come with a mixture of colors instead of one solid color. For the students to make the colors appear would be a joy to them.
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Pebble Painting
This is the completed bulletin board from the project a classmate and I co-taught. The project is for second graders. The students had to dip different sizes of rocks into paint and shake them inside of a box. There was a piece of paper in the box so that the rocks created a design. The students also had to cut their paintings into shapes, so math was reviewed. With this project, the primary colors were learned, along with how to make secondary colors by mixing the primary colors. Another cross curriculum project for pebble painting is a science lesson that explains how and why rocks are different sizes. The students would learn about erosion.
3D Design
This image a weaving design showing 3D. The twists are made out of newspaper taped to a piece of board. Once the twists were complete, I painted them using cool colors, along with the background. I added the green ribbon for another cool color and the blue glitter for some shine. A cross curriculum project would be math. Students could measure the dimensions and volume of different parts of the weaves.
Hidden Safari
This project was titled "Hidden Safari". To create the project, I used a light blue colored pencil to draw a zebra, then used warm colors to create designs over the zebra so that you do not notice the zebra. In order to see the zebra clearly, I made "ruby red glasses". This is see through red plastic that when looked through, you only see the cool color. The zebra is hard to in the red picture, but it shows if looking closely. A cross curriculum for this project would be science. Students can learn about different animals and draw the animal of their choosing.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)