Saturday, March 29, 2014

Extreme Room Makeover-Art Edition, Unit Lesson Plan

NAEA Lesson/Unit Plan
Name:  Wendi Coats
     

School:  Texas Tech College of Art, Visual Studies
     

Lesson/Unit Title:  Extreme Room Makeover-Art Edition
   

Lesson/Unit Overview: We will be discussing historical architecture and interior designs and then applying this information into decorating our own room.
     

Grade Level:  Primary Elementary (PK-2), Intermediate Elementary (3 – 5)     

Media Type:  Architecture. Interior Design
     

Duration:  3 weeks, 40 minutes/class/day.

Entry Point for Generating Lesson/Unit Ideas: 
Artwork/Artists: http://greatbuildings.com/, http://www.arthistory.net/
     

Media: watercolor, pencil, pen, color pencils.
  

Subject Matter: architecture, interior design, 1pt perspective, color schemes.
     

Concepts:
            Art Concepts:
       o   Focus on perspective of the room and unity of architectural forms, plus furniture placement.
       o     Line can be described using contour lines.
       o     Variety can be achieved by change in tone and value.    
             Process Concepts:
       o     1pt perspective/think in 3D terms.
             Historical Concepts:
       o     “Pyramid”, ”Castle”, “Roman Antics”, “City”, “Cathedral” by  David Macaulay.                
     

Enduring Ideas
Enduring Ideas:
o     Place continuously influences our lives.
o     People use symbols to express feelings and ideas.  

Theme:
Themes in Art:
o     Art and color psychology
o     Art and Celebration
o     Art and Identity

     
Rationale: This lesson is important to help students realize that fads, including those in ar,t are temporary and change frequently, which I believe will help them in other facets of life changes.  The lesson is appropriate for the age level because it deals with the color wheel, discusses shapes through architecture and begins to develop a sense of intentionality toward making art.

     
Objectives:
Objective(s) for Planning: 
o     Students will participate in discussion from projected slides and photos showing numerous architectural styles.
o     Students will demonstrate knowledge of details of architecture within their community and in history.

     
Objective(s) for the Product(s): 
Objectives for the Product(s):
o     Students will review color theory and create a theme for their rooms.

     
Objective(s) for Student Reflection:
Objective(s) for Student Reflection:
o     Critique of each student’s project and discuss choices in color, organization, perspective, etc.      
     
Assessment:
Assessing Student Planning:
o     Identify four different architectural details found in local buildings and record them on their sketchbooks/worksheet.
o     Take notes on complementary/secondary colors and make examples in sketchbook.
o     Quick examples of 1pt perspective in sketchbook.

     
Assessing student products: 
Assessing Student Products:
The final project demonstrates:
o     emphasis through the use of a specific color scheme
o     quality craftsmanship.
o     Consistent use of 1pt perspective 

     
Assessing student reflections:  Summative assessments that measure student understanding of personal message/meaning, understanding of the relationship with the artist or theme, the process and media used, the technical skills that were gained.  These can take the form of checklists, brief constructed responses, peer assessments, etc.
Assessing Student Reflections:
o     Explain why you chose this particular color scheme and how this describes you.

   
Content and Achievement Standards: 
http://artsedge.kennedy-center.org/educators/standards.aspx
Standard 1
Content Standard
Understanding and applying media, techniques, and processes
Achievement Standard
Students know the differences between materials, techniques, and processes
Students describe how different materials, techniques, and processes cause different responses
Students use different media, techniques, and processes to communicate ideas, experiences, and stories
Students use art materials and tools in a safe and responsible manner

Standard 2
Content Standard
Using knowledge of structures and functions
Achievement Standard
Students know the differences among visual characteristics and purposes of art in order to convey ideas
Students describe how different expressive features and organizational principles cause different responses
Students use visual structures and functions of art to communicate ideas

Standard 4
Content Standard
Understanding the visual arts in relation to history and cultures
Achievement Standard
Students know that the visual arts have both a history and specific relationships to various cultures
Students identify specific works of art as belonging to particular cultures, times, and places
Students demonstrate how history, culture, and the visual arts can influence each other in making and studying works of art
     

Materials: 11x17” watercolor paper, interior design templates, pencils, rulers, paper towels, watercolors, paintbrushes.
   

Procedure:
Lesson 1: Begin by showing a PowerPoint of various architectural structures.  Ask questions regarding where they’re found, materials used, why they were made, etc.  Allow students to make sketches of their favorite from the PowerPoint in sketchbooks. 
Lesson 2:  Show PowerPoint of various interior design trends…rococo, etc. and give some art history background.  Allow Q&A.  Allow students to write in sketchbooks the style they liked most & why.
Lesson 3:  Have students draw a picture of a room-any type on watercolor paper.  Discuss color wheel- primary & secondary colors.  Let students mix watercolors to create the various colors and use them to color their drawings.
Lesson 4:  Continue discussing the color wheel by adding info about complementary colors. Use watercolors to color shapes using complementary colors on watercolor paper.  Discuss how these are pleasing to the eye.
Lesson 5:  Discuss the intermediate colors(mixing primary & secondary colors to achieve the intermediate color).  Discuss color families(monochromatic) and have students draw a picture on watercolor paper and paint it using ONLY color families.
Lesson 6:  Review the previous lessons on architecture, interior design and color theory.  Discuss how colors can make you feel a certain way.  Have students draw a picture and paint it based on the feelings of that day.
Lesson 7:  Show a PowerPoint of building floorplans and explain how these are used for building and decorating a business or home.  Use room cards to demo elements& principles of design(pattern, unity, etc.).  Give students a room graph and furniture template to begin working on their own floor plan of a home/room.
Lesson 8:  Continue working on floor plans and give advice on furniture placement, doors/windows/etc.  Give option to do more than one if time permits.
Lesson 9:  Begin discussing 1pt perspective and demo how this is done.  Have students draw boxes to practice.
Lesson 10:  Continue 1pt perspective and begin showing how this can be used to design a room.  Have students practice drawing an open cube and adding windows/doors/etc.
Lesson 11:  Review floor plans and 1pt perspective.  Have students brainstorm in their sketchbooks on what kind of room they’d like to design, what colors they might want to use.
Lesson 12:  Begin drawing 1pt perspective rooms on watercolor paper(lightly & with rulers)& start adding any furniture/windows/etc. 
Lesson 13:  Work day on room.
Lesson 14:  Work day on room & complete project for presentation next class period.
Lesson 15:  Class presentations of rooms and discuss choices, etc.
      
Resources:
Interior-decorating-info.com, interior-design-tutor.net
Historical:  Jean-Henri Jansen, Frank Lloyd Wright, Elsie De Wolfe
Contemporary:  Kate Arends, Britto Charette, Angela Cachia

Cross Curriculum Integration:  Art History, Math, Multicultural, Technology
     

Differentiated Instruction:  How will you differentiate for gifted, special needs, and ESOL students?
     

Searchable Keywords:  architecture, interior design, 1pt perspective.

Monday, February 17, 2014

Walk of Remembrance

Walk of Remembrance

Title of Lesson:  Slavery was abolished a long time ago…right??

National Standards:

Texas Essential Knowledge Skills (TEKS):
§117.14. Art, Grade 4.
(a)  Introduction.

(1)  Four basic strands--perception, creative expression/performance, historical and cultural heritage, and critical evaluation--provide broad, unifying structures for organizing the knowledge and skills students are expected to acquire. Students rely on their perceptions of the environment, developed through increasing visual awareness and sensitivity to surroundings, memory, imagination, and life experiences, as a source for creating artworks. They express their thoughts and ideas creatively, while challenging their imagination, fostering reflective thinking, and developing disciplined effort and problem-solving skills.

(2)  By analyzing artistic styles and historical periods students develop respect for the traditions and contributions of diverse cultures. Students respond to and analyze artworks, thus contributing to the development of lifelong skills of making informed judgments and evaluations.

(b)  Knowledge and skills.

(1)  Perception. The student develops and organizes ideas from the environment. The student is expected to:

(A)  communicate ideas about self, family, school, and community, using sensory knowledge and life experiences; and

(B)  choose appropriate vocabulary to discuss the use of art elements such as color, texture, form, line, space, and value and art principles such as emphasis, pattern, rhythm, balance, proportion, and unity.

(2)  Creative expression/performance. The student expresses ideas through original artworks, using a variety of media with appropriate skill. The student is expected to:

(A)  integrate a variety of ideas about self, life events, family, and community in original artworks;

(B)  design original artworks; and

(C)  invent ways to produce artworks and to explore photographic imagery, using a variety of art media and materials.

(3)  Historical/cultural heritage. The student demonstrates an understanding of art history and culture as records of human achievement. The student is expected to:

(A)  identify simple main ideas expressed in art;

(B)  compare and contrast selected artworks from a variety of cultural settings; and

(C)  identify the roles of art in American society.

(4)  Response/evaluation. The student makes informed judgments about personal artworks and the artworks of others. The student is expected to:

(A)  describe intent and form conclusions about personal artworks; and

(B)  interpret ideas and moods in original artworks, portfolios, and exhibitions by peers and others.

Objectives:
1.  To educate students that slavery is not a thing of the past and is still occurring all over the world, including the US
2.  To allow students to work through this new info by incorporating stories of past and modern slavery, adding their own thoughts


Social/Historic Context for Lesson:  Modern Day Slavery

Historic Artists Used:  Turner "The Slave Ship,", Norman Rockwell “Lincoln for the Defense”

Contemporary Artists Used:  Kara Walker


Materials Used:  11x14” poster board; newspaper or online article printout about past slavery/human trafficking/modern slavery; magazine cutouts of various people; blue painters tape; liquid/stick glue; acrylic paints/markers/etc.;

Timeline for Lesson:  2 weeks

Activity/Procedure:
1.  I will spend 2 days discussing slavery in the past and then begin introducing modern slavery instances.  Being that this is elementary age students, certain aspects will be toned down(ie. sex trafficking), but focus on child labor.

2.  After the initial discussion, allow the students to research for more info via the internet/library and find articles to print and start looking through magazines for human images to add to the collage.

3.  Give each student a poster board and electrical tape to add randomly to the board.  Articles and pictures will be pasted around the tape.  After, chosen articles and pictures are pasted, use markers/paint/pens/pencils/etc. to further embellish. 

4.  After this is complete, remove electrical tape and instruct students to add any personal feelings, thoughts, etc. about modern day slavery in the blank spaces.


Assessments (objective or subjective):

1.  Subjective-to see how students react to the subject of slavery and how they use the collage art technique to share it with others

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Sunday, February 2, 2014

My First Work...

"Untitled"  pencil, crayons on notebook paper, circa 1988/1989

I did this while visiting my great-grandparents in Hardesty, OK when I was about 11 yrs old.

I remember that everyone really liked the effort I put into trying to get the skin tone right. Looking back at this, I notice that my perspective isn't quite right but I feel it's impressive for the age I did it.  :-)