Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Rousseau's Jungle in First Grade and two fun videos!

One of my favorite units in first grade art is learning about Henri Rousseau and his tropical jungle pictures.  I always begin by showing a few Rousseau paintings, then watching "Dropping in on Rousseau."

Several kids were very interested in Henri Rousseau's Surprised.  They kept telling me they had seen it on Nick Jr.  I looked up the link, and sure enough, just as they said, two kids go in to the painting and kind of explore.  It's fun!  During my search, I also came across this video, which I decided to share with my classes:


This one was a little more informative.   Plus, it lead me to the entire series of "Your Paintings" which I could probably use in the future!

Our first lesson in our Rousseau Unit is a torn paper jungle collage.  I just love how tearing and gluing paper can turn into something so cool, and how successful each child can be!


Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Painting like a real artist in 5th Grade.

I started teaching wine + paint events in June of 2014.  When I was prepping for my first 30 person adult party, I kept thinking I had to keep it simple, like how I teach 5th grade.  Well, my 5th graders haven't ever actually painted on canvas, so I thought it was time that they did.

Assembling easels.... kind of a pain.
I purchased a bunch of inexpensive easels from Blick.  The toughest part was getting them assembled.  Regardless, we finally got them put together!  We started by toning our canvas.  




The work the fifth graders were doing was actually pretty simple, and way less involved than a usual project.  I think that since they had the canvas, easel, palettes, and everything - they felt more like real artists.  They were super excited about this!

We sketched our Georgia O'Keeffe inspired flowers on our canvas, and next week we will start adding analogous colors to paint our petals.  They looked so cute all lined up on my floor, I had to take a picture!

Friday, January 30, 2015

Draft Folder Clean-Up: Am I special, enrichment, or multi-level and what makes you so typical?

This post was originally started 11/29/14.  Just 12 days later, The Art of Education posted this article:  Beyond Glorified Babysitters: Jaw-dropping Names Art Teachers Are Called.  It felt like I missed the boat, and would be beating a dead horse. but here are my thoughts regardless. I've edited my beginning ramblings to make a complete post too!

I've always loathed the title "special."  My first few years of teaching, I was the art teacher.  I wasn't grouped with anyone. I always did everything alone.  My second school district, I was a specialist. Elementary Art Specialist.  It sounded fancy.  We were never called "specials" though.  We were the fine arts team, and PE and library had their own thing going on.  It wasn't until my current district that I was referred to as "special."  I disliked it from the start.

Art isn't special.  Art is necessary.

In my district, art, music, PE, & library are special.  It is short for specialist, or special area.  To me, it just reiterates the idea that having art is a privilege, not an expectation.  I came across something recently that reiterated my feelings and illustrated it wonderfully: Every student every day is required to learn math, but will probably not grow up to be mathematicians,   Why do we not require every student every day to take art?  We know most will not grow up to be artists.  It should have the same importance.

I brought up my label at our first day institute with my brand new principal.  I threw out a few ideas and we kind of settled on "multi-level teacher".  I don't mind this label.  I do teach all the levels, and now I'm actually being considered a teacher!  Yeah!  My new principal has been very good about referring to me as multi-level too.  It hasn't quite gained the momentum I had hoped... but it's a start.

Fast-Forward to our next institute day.  We heard a lovely presentation on teaching students with autism.  I noticed right away that the presenter referred to students without autism, or special needs as "typical."  At first, I thought it sounded kind of weird. But, if we are referring to students with special needs as students with special needs, then typical would be the opposite. Calling a student without special needs regular ed is what's derogatory.

Considering my teaching position is referred to as special - I started referring to classroom teachers as typical teachers.  It does seem to make them sound less important and not at all unique, which in turn kind of makes me feel a little special.

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Draft Folder Clean Up: Things that stick in my mind from student teaching....

This post was started on 11/19/14. Hilarious.

This was almost 16 years ago, but I remember the cheap yet delicious lunch the teacher's got from the cafeteria.  Mmmmm cheese fries everyday.


Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Draft Folder Clean-up: Block Architecture

This was an awesome project I did earlier this year to start my architecture unit with 1st grade.  The kiddos built block structures at their table.  Then they drew them.  So cute!  Then, each table got a ton of pre-cut black paper pieces and they had to "build" a new structure on a paper and glue it down. My favorite part was when they were drawing.  They looked awesome.








Tuesday, January 27, 2015

The labels of art class: Am I second class?

This post was originally started 11/21/2014

The arts are the second class citizens of my school district.  I feel comfortable writing this because it wasn't me who gave me that label.  It happened when "every teacher at every school will get an ELMO projector" happened.

It wasn't every teacher.  It was every classroom teacher.

It took me a year and a half to get one, but I did finally get one.  Our wonderful tech support guy went through a lot to get it, find it, and make sure it was installed.  What wasn't wonderful was when he came to check on it and complained about what a pain it was to finagle, and said just that: "the special teachers are like second class citizens around here..."

Ugh.  That was deflating.

That's where it ended.  Kind of sad.  

Monday, January 26, 2015

Draft Folder Clean-UP: Perfect Square by Michael Hall

This post was originally from 5/22/14


It was blank...

Perfect Square by Michael Hall is a little picture book.  The artist/illustrator takes us through a week in a square's life.. It gets torn, crumpled, poked, cut, etc.  After each manipulation, it gets turned into something wonderful, like a fountain, or a bridge.

I recently read this book to my K-2 after school art enrichment class.  We had about 20 minutes left, and this ended up being a perfect mini-lesson.  We read the book.  We each got a square piece of construction paper and cut, tore, and poked it for about 5 minutes.  Then, I asked students to "play" with their scraps like they would play with blocks.  What could you build?  After 5-10 minutes of that (clearing away after each design) students glued their final piece down.  It was kind of cute, the kids had fun, and the scraps made a huge mess.






Friday, January 23, 2015

Draft Folder Clean-Up: Mrs. Obama and art is everywhere

This post was originally from 5/24/14

I heard Mrs. Obama's speech at the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Anna Wintour Gallery Opening.  She talked to fashion design students and emphasized the use of math, science, and technology in the creation of Charles James' designs.  She said students should think more carefully about what they are learning in geometry.



A colleague of mine just told me her son's school does not have art, but it is integrated into their language arts classes.

Are we losing "Art for arts sake?"

That's as far as I got.  I still think that the emphasis on STEM and even STEAM is a way of creating validation for our subject matter that shouldn't be necessary.  We shouldn't have to combine art with anything for people to see it's importance.


Thursday, January 22, 2015

Draft Folder Clean UP: Engaging one day projects week! Collage heads.

This post was originally started 6/14/2014

Juxtaposition is a 21st century principle of design that I LOOOOOOOOVE!

Collage heads is a fun day lesson that always gains positive results.  This lesson can be as intense or as easy as you wish.  I like to do it as a sketchbook lesson, or a super end of year project.

that's as far as a got! 

It is a great lesson!  Cut out a bunch of heads out of a magazine.  Photocopy them.  Have kids cut out the copies of the heads they like and glue them down.  Next, finish the picture.  In can be with a body, or something else!

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

I kind of feel like I should be campaigning more... The Art of Education Blog of the Year!


I love looking at the other blogs nominated for this year's Art of Education Blog of the Year contest.  Many of them have become regular stops when I am planning my projects!  All fantastic.  I can't believe I got grouped in there!

If you would please, oh loyal reader, take a moment to vote! Here is the link! It's so easy, it takes one second.

If you are a newcomer to No Corner Suns, here is one of my most popular posts. (Even with my sage advice, my Elements of Art Packet remains my most popular on TPT too.)


Thanks!
Heather

Winter Portraits in Second Grade

Self-Portraits are my favorite project to teach.  I try to teach a self-portrait in every grade, K-5.  I was talking about how much I loved portraits in my after school teen class when I realized I never actually drew, painted, or made a formal self-portrait myself until I was in high school... and even then, I was so apprehensive about drawing the portrait, I made a taco covering half of my face!

I started a self-portrait project in second grade just before Winter Break.  The goals of this lesson were to learn about famous artists' self-portraits, introduce students to proper facial proportions, and draw what you see.  When these students were in first grade, they constructed a Fall Self-Portrait. Better start planning Spring Portraits for 3rd grade!

See more on our Artsonia.com gallery!


Draft Folder Clean-up: house at the top of the tree

This post was from 5/16/14

Just the title.

It's a They Might Be Giants song I once used as a theme for a fifth grade collage.  I guess I was going to tell you about it.  The collages were not that successful though. 

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

2015 Art Ed Blog of the Year! Vote for me!

I can't even believe that I am a finalist for Art Ed. Blog of the Year through The Art of Education.  I absolutely love blogging about what my students and I are up to, and my thoughts on my daily routines.  Even though I see the blog getting hits... I always kind of feel like nobody really reads it.  This is kind of nice to get some recognition!

If you feel so inclined, you can vote for me and many other fabulous blogs here.

If you are new to No Corner Suns, here is the gist of the blog:

A million resources:  Every worksheet I make, every worksheet I find, every lesson plan I love is available somewhere on this blog for download. Just check out that ridiculous list of tags on the right!



An art studio: In September of 2014 I opened No Corner Suns art studio in downtown Westmont, IL.  Many of my posts detail the ups, the downs, and the how tos of branching into private art teaching.

Substitute Plans:  I've written three books that are complete lessons for the elementary art substitute.  The Art Teacher's Substitute Notebook:  The Basics, K-2 Lessons, & 3-5 Lessons are all available to purchase on my site or through TPT.  It is a complete print and leave booklet perfect for subs and curriculum appropriate for students.  I also offer a bunch of free sub plans that I have developed over the years.

Your Art Room's A Mess:  I used to have time to write books.  This is meant for the new or disorganized art teacher.  It's a little bit classroom anecdote, little bit anal retentive a organization tips.

Thanks for stopping by!

Draft Folder Clean up: Harry K. Wong, Love & Logic, and "I" statements in the art room.

This post was originally started 4/14/14

All I wrote was the title of this post (too).  It seems like it could be a pretty good post.

If you haven't read "Teaching with Love & Logic" and you are struggling with relationships with your students, read it.

If you haven't read "The First Days of School" by Harry K. Wong, you should.  On the surface it doesn't seem applicable to special area teachers, but it is.

and finally if you are saying:
 "You need to clean up your mess!" 
"You need to make that part black."  
"You need to come to class on time"

I'm going to need you to turn those into "I" statements:
"I need you to clean up your mess, please"
"I would like you to color that part black, please"
"I like it when you come to class on time. Thank-you"

I'm not sure if this came from "Teaching with Love & Logic" or not, but this makes all the difference in gaining student respect.

Draft Folder Clean-Up: Franz Cizek

This post was originally started March, 2014

That's all I wrote.  The title of the blog "Franz Cizek."  I am sure it had something to do with him being the "Father of Art Education," and his techniques and tough as nails step-by-step teaching methods. 
I think I was feeling overwhelmed with students saying, "I can't do this..." and I wanted to show them the near perfect drawings of Cizek's 8 year old students.  If you haven't read up on this guy, you should.

Monday, January 19, 2015

Draft Folder Clean-up: (Story Hour) Life on the cart. I absolutely hate every second of it.

This post was originally started in February, 2014.  This year I have both of my classrooms back.

I've found a few art teacher blogs and pins that brag about how easy it can be to teach from a cart.  There are pages and pages devoted to all the fantastic and wonderful things you can still teach, how to organize your supplies, and how to manage discipline.

They are all lies.

There is nothing good about teaching from a cart.

Art teachers make these blogs and pins to reassure themselves and their community that this is a perfectly acceptable way to teach.  They are desperately convincing themselves and others that their students are receiving a quality art education.  They are assuring everyone that there is nothing wrong with a professional hanging their coat in the break room and using the hallway as their office.  I think these teachers have just given up.

I was displaced from my classroom when school resumed in January.  Another section of free preschool was entering my building and the quickest, and least disruptive solution for everyone else was to take my room.

It is several weeks later and I am still furious about it.  I get physically sick on my way to school and mope through the hallways.  I got sympathetic looks in the beginning, but now I think people are avoiding me.  I'm not much fun.

Now, I know I won't get much sympathy when I reveal that I only teach at that school 1.5 days a week,  I only teach six classes, and I have a gorgeous art room at my other building.... But that's not even the point.  Granted, my loathsome behavior would be better justified if I was full time and taught 35+ classes a week.  Anyway, the point is Why Art?

Why art?

Historically, my discipline has not received much respect in my district.  When I arrived I was full time and taught at three different schools in three completely different environments.  I was on a cart, I had a cruddy but huge classroom, and at one I literally taught in a break room with no sink.  Coincidently, that room is now the break room, and they installed a sink.  

The "woe is me" portion of this is:
Every day was a challenge.
My trunk was constantly full and I was becoming used to carrying trunk loads of supplies from school to school and up stairwells while pregnant.
It became commonplace for me to forget visuals and lose worksheets, thus enacting many days of last minute and on the fly changes.
I never got to know many of the kids because I was never in a building for very long.
My cart school had supplies strewn all over the building and my cart was an old AV cart.
I hardly was in the right place at the right time to attend building meetings.
I had three different administrators, and three schools with different philosophies.
No one ever asked me what I was teaching, or what students were learning.
No one seemed to care what I did or where I was.

All that sucked. I had little babies at home and a crappy work situation. But, I also know all that stuff is secondary.  All that stuff was hard on me, but a situation like that effects all the kids at those three schools' art education too.  How come nobody ever did anything about this?  So, I started speaking out.

I made sure my administrators knew the importance of an art classroom.  I wrote position papers advocating for a classroom at one school, and a room with a sink at another.  I spoke in favor of grade level centers, and petitioned to be part-time and only at two schools - instead of one teacher picking up some of my classes while I'm at the third building (when was that ever a good idea?)  I wanted technology and made it known constantly.  I don't know if anyone was ever really listening to me, or reading my emails, but things changed.  Slowly things started to improve.  It started in baby steps at one school, sharing a room with music (but with a sink!) Finally a room to myself, to finally a dedicated space.  I got a room at my cart school, when our enrollment dipped.  I jumped at it and tried to make it as much of an art room as possible.  I started to know the students.  I started to understand my administrators. I was part of the discipline system. Students finally started to respect a teacher they knew and they finally started to respect a subject they seemed to know nothing about.

Finally students were winning competitions and being included in national and statewide exhibits.  I had a full Artsonia Gallery, a parent blog, an art show, and community displays.

This is where the post ended.  I don't know where the post was heading, and that is probably why I stopped.  


Friday, January 16, 2015

Most popular post... Weird!

My most popular post is:

Free art sub lesson: The Circle Game! Adapted from Ande Cook's Art Starters


with 10,291 views!  Holy Schnike!

I guess art teachers love free sub lessons.  If you want to pay for awesome, completely easy, print & leave it lessons, you should visit this link.

Draft folder clean-up: A million ideas for Still Life drawing!

Recently in the Art Teacher's group on Facebook, a member asked a simple question:

"Have any observational drawing subjects for 10-15 minute warm ups? I'm a little tired of shoes and bottles."

Over 100 hundred responses later, the conclusion I came up with was, "draw whatever you feel like drawing, gosh!"


Here is the list of Still Life objects (never proofed and ready for you!) Good Luck!

This post was originally started in February, 2014

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Sixteen blog posts in the drafts folder: Time to roll up my sleeves and get to work.

Every once and awhile I come up with a great idea for a blog post, and a week or so later, The Art of Education writes it for me.  Waa Waa.

I like to take my snippets of information and start a blog post, with the intention of going back to it later... but obviously, I do not always get to it.  Starting tomorrow, prep yourself for 16 blog posts that might not end up being complete thoughts!  I'm cleaning out the drafts folder folks, it's going to be a bumpy ride.

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Wouldn't you love to vote for me for blog of the year, please?


 I admit, I haven't been the greatest about posting everyday like I used to... but I'm still getting a lot of hits each day and this blog is FULL of free resources for every art teacher.

The Art of Education is hosting a Blog of the Year contest.  Wouldn't you like to vote for me? Please?  All I kept thinking about was that Seinfeld clip when the thought even entered my mind to pander for votes....

Here's the deets:
Click HERE and fill out this simple Google doc.  Voting ends 1/15/15 (that's tomorrow, yo!).  I felt I fit into the Rising Star category best. I'm no Deep Space Sparkle, or Cassie Stephens... !

Thanks!