Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts

Monday, 16 December 2019

The Mitten- Mandala Art

We were challenged as a school to decorate the windows beside our classroom doors. We have been exploring lines in art and used this in our collaborative creation. Using acrylic paint and a clear plastic table cloth, we created a winter themed mandala as the background for our representation of the book 'The Mitten'. Here are photos from the mandala painting process.




We read the book together as a class and discussed what animals they wanted to create to add to our window scene. Students used a variety of materials to make their animals.

Image result for the mitten

Here is the final product, while we didn't win the challenge we were proud of how our window turned out! 




Monday, 25 February 2019

Foods with Feelings

"Art has the role in education of helping children become like themselves instead of more of everyone else"
-Sydney Clemens 



At the beginning of each school year, we spend a lot of time learning about emotions and self-regulation. We use the Zones of Regulation to support building language around feelings and emotions (See last year's post about how we use Zones by clicking here). We spent time reading a variety of books about different feelings.


We learned that all feelings are okay. It's okay to be sad, or scared, or angry, or frustrated, or happy.

We read the book 'How are you Peeling? Foods with Moods', which inspired a wonderful art and literacy project for our learners. Our artists decided they wanted to create their own foods with feelings.


Our artists used their knowledge of feelings to create a representation of different emotions using clay/plasticine. 


We then turned their artwork into a book! Our writers added words to describe each feeling. 
(We used the company Book Bub to have our book published).




Here is a peak into our book: 




Thursday, 7 February 2019

Spider Inquiry

Our spider inquiry continued to grow! We learned so much about spiders and even got to speak with experts. While we were learning about spiders, the ROM (Royal Ontario Museum) had a spider exhibit. As we were unable to organize a last minute affordable trip down, we contacted the ROM to see what our options were. We ended up having a video call with their 'spider wrangler' and a scientist and it was AMAZING!

Our learning about how spiders catch their prey- we added to this chart as we learned

A spider web created by J.C.
A trapdoor spider created by P.X.
A spider using a sticky globule to catch a bug by B.R.





Students showed their learning in play all over the classroom!

We created these Peacock Spider holiday gifts for the families.
 

After reading many non-fiction books about spiders, our authors wrote and illustrated their own:

By: D.K.
By: P.X.
By: D.S.
By: J.C.
By: P.W.



Before our call with the ROM, our learners wanted the experts to know all the information we knew. So they decided to use mind maps to share all their knowledge. They then wrote the questions they wanted to the spider experts to answer and we sent them ahead of time to the ROM.





 And then we had our call!


This is a moulted exoskeleton of a Goliath Birdeater Spider
Doing the Peacock Spider dance


A big thanks to the ROM! We are now all spider experts! What a great way to end our inquiry.

Tuesday, 27 November 2018

Spiders!

We have been learning so much about spiders! The vocabulary our Kindergartens are using has been blowing us away! It really shows that kids will learn what we expose them to, so set the bar high and they will make it up there.

Here is a sneak peak into some of our learning...

Some of our initial wonders:
D.S- I wonder how spiders are born?
B.R.- I wonder why they have 8 legs?
J.C- I wonder how they make their webs?
I.S- I wonder why spiders have webs?
D.K- I wonder why spiders have a line on their bodies?
A.W- I wonder why do spiders crawl around?
A.S- I wonder why they have webs?
P.X- I wonder why bodies have colours?
M.R- I wonder why spiders need webs?
A.G- I wonder how many eyes spiders have?
A.A- spiders go home outside
J.R- I wonder how many eyes spiders have?
R.B- I wonder how spiders get big?
P.W- I wonder why some spiders are poison?
Z.D- I wonder why some got stripes on them?


This video (below) was what really sparked an interest and fascination about spiders. 



We learned a lot about spiders and their body parts from books and videos. Our learners worked together to create a large spider for our classroom that they painted and then labeled all the parts. Our artists also painted spiders as a way to share their learning.



Here is some of the information we learned:
P.X- spider web can touch the bug and eat the fly or mosquito
A.W- there is different kinds of silk
H.M- some people is scared of spiders
J.C- some spiders are scared of people
I.S- we learned that spiders aren’t insects
P.S- they are arachnids
V.S- they have 8 legs
A.G- they shoot out the silk from their spinnerets
J.R- the spiders are tiny and some are bigger and if humans step on them the spiders will put webs on them
M.R- black widow spiders can bite you
B.R- spiders eat any insects or flies or mosquitos and they wrap their food so they can eat it

We also learning about spiders' webs and how they make them.



This video and learning inspired our learners to create their own webs and spiders using various materials around the classroom.









What we learned about webs and silk:
P.S- spiders have 7 kinds of silks, but not three
D.S- I wonder how the bugs want to fly in the web?
H.M- I wonder why the bugs will go to to the web and the spider will eat him?
P.S- I wonder how the bugs could go in the spider’s web?
A.G- it’s sticky!
P.W- how does the fly want to go in the web and think the spider don’t want to eat it?
P.X- I wonder why the spider can touch the white one and the white one is the sticky one. The spider touches the bug and he eats it

We had Zoo to You come visit and they brought a tarantula for us to high five!


Stay tuned for more learning!