Showing posts with label New Beginnings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Beginnings. Show all posts

Sunday, 23 July 2023

Back to School - The First Three Weeks - Part 1

Back to School - The First Three Weeks - Part 1

As teachers head back to school around the world, one of the pressing matters that they are contemplating is how to establish and sustain solid routines, and build a strong classroom culture with their students. For many years I have shared my systems and strategies with teachers around the world, including in this blog. As requested, I have compiled many of these ideas into a 'mega' back to school guide of over 100 pages. 

In this teacher resource, I explain how I set up my first 2-3 weeks of the year, building toward a successful and enduring classroom culture, suitable for teachers of upper elementary and middle school.

This bumper teacher resource is crammed full of ideas for starting your new school year just right, whether you are a new teacher or an experienced teachers looking for inspiration.


Classroom Decor
The first chapter in this resource looks at choosing a unifying theme for your room and using that for all you communication, posters, labels, presentations and so on. Almost considering that theme as your personal and recognisable 'brand'.

One thing to create with that decor theme, are name cards to use as  “business” or “calling cards” for each student. Included are a set of name card borders to print onto card and cut neatly with a guillotine. Students can create their own unique designs for their names. By inserting these into clip-on name tags, you can use them in a variety of ways - for labelling, seating and student drawers/cubbies, to wearing for visitors or relief teachers, attach to completed work in a learning centre for teacher checking, or leave in the place of borrowed equipment e.g. class headphones.
Links to further classroom decor themes, including my FREE welcome buntings, have also been added for you. 

Please join me again next week for another extract from this helpful resource or take a closer look at


🌸 🌸 🌸 🌸 🌸

❤️ I would love to have you join me and experience my resources first hand because my hope is that you will happily become an advocate for these products. 
❤️ As a way of thanking my followers for supporting my store, I regularly post new resources for FREE for the first 24 hours. 
❤️ Once I change the product to a paid resource, please return to rate and gain your bonus TPT credits for future discounts.

❤️ And remember to share this post with a friend who might need it.


Why trust One Teacher’s Journey resources?

Because I too am a full time teacher, just like you, with years of experience in the classroom. In other words, I do this everyday - just like you.

You can contact me through my store Q & A or email me through my website if you are looking for anything specific. 

That way I can get in touch to better support you info@help-me-learn.com

Friday, 30 June 2023

Matariki Art Lessons for the New Zealand New Year

Hi Friends,
As July approaches, a very significant day draws near for the people of New Zealand. Matariki, the Maori New Year, is named for the Matariki star cluster (Pleiades) which is visible in our night skies for 11 months of the year. It disappears  in the lunar month of Haratua (May/June) and rises again around a month later in the North-Eastern sky during the lunar Month of Piripi .(June/July). This celestial event marks the beginning of the Māori calendar, signalling a time for both reflection about the year that past, and renewal for the year ahead. It is a time for communities to come together and celebrate. Since 2022, this is now also an official public holiday, one that falls on a different day each year due to the lunar calendar.

This celebration, a time for Peace, Joy and Community, has lead to many art forms that educators can explore as a way to connect classroom learning with this important event. But first, let's dive a little deeper into the history of Matariki.


While Matariki has deep cultural significance for the people of Aotearoa New Zealand, it is understood and celebrated in different ways across the country. Legend has it that Tāwhirimātea (the god of wind) was so angry with his siblings for causing the separation of this parents - the sky father (Ranginui) and earth mother (Papatūānuku) - that he ripped out his eyes and flung them into the heavens. This gives Matariki its full name - The eyes of the god Tāwhirimātea (Ngā Mata o te Ariki Tāwhirimātea).

With the star cluster disappearing and then returning each year, this event celestial became linked with the cycle of life, death and rebirth. This is now a time to remember our ancestors, releasing their spirits to become stars. Similarly, a time to express thanks for the past year's harvest by feasting and sharing the bounty with family and friends. Celebrations often include storytelling and cultural performances which offer a wonderful opportunity to teach about cultural connection through engaging forms of creative expression.


Some popular options that educators can explore for art creating, include:
1. Star (whetu) themed art - painting, collages or sculptures that depict celestial representations. See a starry night lesson idea below.
2. Kites - the design and construction of traditional Māori kites can represent both ancestral connections and the spirit of Matariki.
3. Flax Weaving - teaching the traditional art of weaving flax leaves to create beautiful and functional pieces, like baskets (kete) and mats (whariki). See a lesson idea below.


1) Starry Night - an art lesson for Upper Elementary
You can make a great connection to a well loved artwork - Starry Night by Vincent Van Gogh - when exploring Matariki with Year 5-6  and middle school students.
First, it's important that students can correctly recite their personal and individual Pepeha. For help with this you can visit the following website: https://pepeha.nz/
A pepeha is a formal way of introducing yourself in Māori. It tells others about who you are by sharing your connection with people and places that are important to you.
Your pepeha is the inspiration for the content of this artwork. Students then locate images of water, mountains, plants and buildings or other landmarks that they associate with their significant place. 



Combining this with information about The eyes of the god Tāwhirimātea (Ngā Mata o te Ariki Tāwhirimātea) and the Post-Impressionist technique of Vincent Van Gogh, students create wonderful original artworks they can be proud of.
For a fully comprehensive art lesson including a video tutorial please visit my TPT store - One Teacher's Journey - HERE 





2) Make a Manu Tuktuku - Maori kite - an art lesson for Mid Elementary

Start this lesson with the shared book called The Seven Kites of Matariki. Here is a link to the read-aloud on YouTube:

The following video, made by Tauranga City Library, will guide you through resources to collect and and the steps to making kites with your students. 


3) Woven Whariki or blanket for lying down to watch the night sky  - an art lesson for Early Elementary.

Traditionally mats would be woven from the leaves of a flax plant in New Zealand. However, when harvesting the leaves of this plant, certain cultural procedures (tikanga) need to be followed. Here is a video on YouTube explaining more about that:


In the classroom you can substitute other materials  to teach weaving, when gathering flax is not an option. I always save the paper strips from trimming student artworks and these provide colourful pieces for students to work with. You can also strip coloured card on the guillotine for this lesson. By using up trimmings from other artworks that would otherwise be thrown away, you are aligning to, and honouring the Māori world view on sustainability and environmental awareness.

Students are given an A5 sized card to turn into a loom following a few careful steps and then they can weave coloured card or paper strips though this to create their mat or blanket.
Another option is to use wool on a loom. Make the looms by pre-cutting thick packaging cardboard to aprox. A5 size. Snip into both short edges - cut 1-2 cm deep and use 2cm spacing. Wrap the Warp thread around the card and tape the ends off. Thread a large plastic / craft needle with a length of wool and weave (the Weft) in and out of the Warp threads to create the blanket. Snip the ends of the Warp treads across the back of the card and tie this off in pairs across the top and bottom of the weaving. 
With the paper option, you can layer thinner strips, decorative strips or even thick wool across the weaving too.


For the full paper weaving lesson which also includes a video tutorial, you can go to my TPT store - One Teacher's Journey - HERE or 





So bring your classroom communities together and use the arts as a way to acknowledge the past, celebrate the present and look forward to the future.

Keep warm everyone! and enjoy your winter break if you are teaching in the Southern hemisphere.



Tuesday, 8 October 2019

Back 2 School - no fuss first week art centres


source - https://pixabay.com/photos/school-back-to-school-school-starts-4398499/

So how have your first couple of weeks back in your classrooms gone? Did all the prep you had done in your summer break pay off, and have you been able to make essential observations of, and connections with your students during these first weeks, to inform your planning and teaching going forward?

As a General classroom teacher of many years (and more recently a Visual Art specialist), I know how daunting the start of a new year can be.  These days I have as many new starts as I have classes that I teach. However, most specialist teachers have the added advantage that they see all the students, all year, so they can simply roll over their systems and expectations from year to year, with minor modifications and improvements. They already know most of their students needs and abilities through year-on-year observations and interactions.

My timetabling is a little different.

Timetable

I see most students for 1 term a year, and teach between 2-3 year levels in that term. I teach K-6.
The positives of this timetable is that I only teach around 1/3 of the school each term. This means remembering names and families, assessing and writing reports, and manage the work product and resources for 1/3 of the school rather that the whole school, all at once.

The drawback is that students get a solid burst of Visual Art for max. 18 x 45 min lessons in their term and very little for the rest of the year, unless they are independently motivated, join art clubs or attend private tutoring. They also forget the Art Space systems and routines or some may have changed since they last attended. I also need to re-evaluate what progress they have made since I last saw them almost a year ago.

For this reason, I set up exploration stations for the first week with juniors, teacher guided skill sessions for middle and teacher themes for senior primary students.

Year 1-2, Kindy and Year 0:
Depending on the size of the class, I introduce between 2-4 'open-ended' stations for these first lessons. Some of these change over the term based on the class interests and skills / media I want them to explore independently before I take a guided lesson. But most will stay out and available as exploration stations all term. This gives me opportunity from week 2, to start with a whole class skill builder session and students can peel off to familiar stations as they complete the skill. I can also pull out small groups as needed. But most importantly, I can make observations in that first week that will inform my planning going forward and build relationships with students through availability and communication that will support trust going forward.
Hand made, scented playdough

Chenille craft wire and polystyrene recycled from packaging



Stencils

Simple drawing guides
Modelling clay with image prompts

Wooden building blocks

Collage

Large format weaving

Year 3 and 4 are ready for more complex (teacher guided) skill builders that go over several lessons. The stations above will also be available to them, with some slightly levelled up if appropriate. Mostly, these stations are so open-ended that students create and explore at their own level anyway and develop through learning from each other as they explore collaboratively.
I like to focus on 3D skills at middle primary level and introduce papier-mache, clay and cardboard construction. Where possible (due to time constraints) the aim is for a teacher guided skill buildr to be followed by a student choice exploration with that media.
At Y3 the skill builders involved ceramic slab work and papier-mache pets. While the art techniques are teacher guided, there is differentiation built into the content and shapes built by the students. The decoration phase is also completely open to the students. The connecting transdisciplinary theme was Exploration.






Year 4 have a dedicated ceramic focus on complex figure building due to the time constraints in my timetable. Students create a cat through a guided skill builder session and this is followed up with a fully independent clay session where they build a self portrait and demonstrate their learning from the skill builder, while aiming for a unique and personally representational sculpture. They are also introduced to glazes. Due to the time consuming, messy and expensive nature of ceramics, I have strict protocol around using clay which becomes an independent media station in Year 5 and 6.






By Year 5 and 6, students are mostly independent but also more aware of their abilities and that of others in their group. In my experience, the more agency they have and the more unique their work, the less potential for direct comparisons and defeatism rarely rears its head. Exploration Stations are no longer just physical but also virtual, and they independently explore concepts of personal interest as related to Art. Here I start with a research theme: What are the main elements of art, choose 1 that you are interested in and create a piece of work that communicates your understandings to an audience.
We have an art show every 2 years and then this inquiry has the added constraint of forming part of a collaborative piece e.g. feathers on a large wing, flower in a large bouquet, house in a large village etc. Students also select a media of choice for 2D work to explore with this assignment.
Self-directed inquiry is easier at this level as these students all have iPads which they bring to art at every lesson. They are also expected to reflect on their learnings and thinking process is most lessons through the Seesaw app. These reflections inform their grade for the Responding to Art strand in IB PYP. All work product, complete or not, informs their grade for the Creating in Art strand in IB PYP.
Some samples of the assignment are below, on displayed in the art room for the term, then glued into their sketchbooks:
Exploring Colour
Exploring Form

Exploring Line

This assignment also re-establishes the expectations and routines in the art room. Year 5 and 6 then go onto their personal artwork based on their current inquiry unit. They ideate using the Design Thinking Process (DTP) for content, message, originality etc. in their skethcbooks before creating their final artwork.

The Design Thinking Process phases 1-3

The Design Thinking Process phases 4-6
 Their only constraint is the time-frame. They can pick any media from the following menus:


Some time ago, I wrote 2 resources for starting art/creativity/fine-motor exploration stations in your own classroom or art room. These it right in with the play-based philosophy too. These are available on both my TPT  and HML stores for $5 each. I just know that you will find exploration stations as wonderful as I do !
View this product on TPT and HML

View this product on TPT or HML




Thank you for stopping by,
With love, Te Aroha
Timea
http://www.help-me-learn.com/
http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/One-Teachers-Journey
https://twitter.com/TimeaWillemse
http://www.youtube.com/user/HelpMeLearnMaths
http://pinterest.com/tkwillemse/boards/
https://www.instagram.com/timea_oneteachersjourney/

ShareThis