Art Portfolios
from Susan on Long Island
Susan
waits till NAEA Convention for her students to make their portfolios.
You could pre-punch holes for the pipe cleaner handles - have students
insert the pipe cleaners - fold - then reinforce pipe cleaner with
colored tape (many art resource catalogs carry colored masking tape and
colored "wet and stick" art tape). From Susan: All my
students make portfolios with the sub. It's an easy same lesson
for all with limited supplies: 36x24 paper folded, markers,
pipe cleaners for handles, staple sides. We save them until
the end of the year. They put all their year's art work in it and
take it home in June.
Monsters all Around
from
Tammi
An easy one I did in a pinch last week for kindergarten
was to have them trace a circle (I have a zillion butter tub lids and
they love to trace things to practice this skill) and then trace their
hand as many times as it will fit around the circle- like spokes coming
out from it. Then they used crayons and markers to turn it into a
monster. I told the sub that when they started saying, "I'm
done!" she can tell them to draw the monster's friends, favorite
toys, and food it eats in the background. When I returned, I found the
monsters unfinished because she had a big discussion about facial
expressions and how you can make your monster scary, happy, etc. I had
to put off my next lesson because they begged me to let them finish
their monsters! They did a great job putting patterns and designs on
them.
Beasties Galore
from Judy
Decker
Imaginary beasties would work with all
grade levels. See Linda
Wood's Mixed Breed Lesson for
examples (these are finished major project by 5th grade). Of course,
you would have different expectations for the younger students. My
second graders had no trouble doing Eric Carle style beasties one year -
so I know they can handle it. Might want to simplify to basic shapes for
first graders - but I think they could handle it too (my second graders
actually worked on their Eric Carl beasties a day I was out - the sub
handled it beautifully - and even made a great sample for me to keep.
She was a gem!). "Exquisite Beasties" - I have had students make beasties on a template where
the body had to line up between two notches so we could cut them apart
and make new animals. The head section of one - with the body of another
- and the tail section of another. We made these one year to put in a
book. It was my welcome fifth graders to the middle school lesson for
that day (I had double the amount of students in my room - all of my
sixth graders and all of their fifth grade shadows. I needed something
that would work for all). See Exquisite
Horse from Silver Buckle Press. (Note: "Exquisite Corpse"
was a surreal parlor game).
Earth layers - patterns in nature by Judy Decker
Draw a cross section of the earth -
making wavy lines to divide the differnt layers (maybe have some
scientific illustrations handy).Dividing up into rows, putting a different pattern/texture in each row. This could be
done with markers (fine point black marker for the lines and patterns.
Could be colored with colored pencils or crayons, too. Layers could show
bones and roots, as well.
Bad Hair Day
by Michal
Austin and Sky
McClain
All grade levels (K thru 8) should be able to have fun with this idea.
For Michal's "bad hair day"
assignment, draw either a lady's or a man's face. Add hair, either atop
the female's head, or the male's mustache and beard. The requirements
for this lesson include drawing a minimum of 5 different values, and 5
different line patterns. The values are achieved through variations of
line thickness and distance. The entire artwork is created using black
permanent marker on 12"x18" white paper. (For a sub, you could
use 9" x 12" paper so it will be easy to complete in one day).
Sky's lesson has the student drawing a minimum of six different kinds of
lines and repeating all around the head for hair. Check Michal Austin's
Art Kids site for more great ideas - pictures and brief
instructions included! Hey really have some fun with this! Play Bad
Day in the Art Room by Greg Percy first. Remember -- things could
always be worse (smile). Buy all three CD's -Songs
in the Key of Art and never run out of fun in the Art Room!.
See how beautiful this lesson can be! Princeton
Community Middle School See
Ali!
Bad
Hair Day meets Name Design! by Cathy Gaul

I tried Bad Hair Day meets the Name
Design Art work folder project (by Bunki Kramer) as a combo. My 6th graders did a head, then used their names to do the beginning of
Bad Hair. They either did fat letters or cursive writing around the
hairline (like a rainbow) or out from the hairline like rays of the sun.
Inside of the letter forms they did Michal's bad hair day patterns. They
LOVED seeing both projects by other kids on Michal's and Bunki's
websites, and were having a great time trying it as a combo project
using sharpie markers in 4 different widths. One girl remarked that she
thought the project by Ali (from Princeton
Community Middle School) was more a GOOD hair day *grin*. Then I
got out the gel metallic markers for finishing flourishes. They had just
finished a value study on their posterized digital portraits and were
having fun being a bit more creative. Have some more fun! Include meaning
of names in the words (Behind
the Name site by Mike Campbell. Mike does give art teachers
permission to use his site with students)
Also see Bunki
Kramer's Name Symmetry - Students as young as fourth grade can
handle this lesson.
What's in a Crowd from Linda
Wood
Have the kids draw a crowd of people in an unusual situation, like
having a party in an elevator, for instance. Tell them you want them to
draw everyone's face different, different ages of people, different clothes,
different body positions, and you want their drawing to tell a visual
story.
Cartoon style is fine. Emphasize differences and overlapping, lots
of details...keeps them busy, and they have fun. Let them work on
them in pairs for even more enthusiasm.
A Day at Kings
Island (or any Amusement Park) by Ann Heineman
Since amusement parks are starting up for the season, a crowd of
people on
those scary and spinning rides would be fun to visualize and draw, too.
Clowns Express Emotion from Amy
Grade 1: draw clown faces with oil pastels...white face and add
make up. She do these on black paper then "frame them by gluing them to a
bigger piece of bright paper and then have the kids draw a border on that.
Alternating Color Design from Amy
Grade 2 and 3: draw circles on a paper, draw vertical lines on the
paper (through the circles) use 2 different colored markers....color the
background (for example) pink and the circle (or the half circle) green
in one stripe, color the background green and the circle pink in the
next stripe. This is easy and clean and can be finished in about 40
minutes.
Susan
Holland adds: The first time I saw this lesson with the circles and lines,
I thought it sounded perfect and put it in my sub folder, but I have since found that
it is not all that easy. It ends up taking my 4th graders two to
three 45 minute classes. (so this one might be good when you are
going to be out for more than one day)
Popsicle Stick
Sculpture from Susan Holland
A sub lesson I like to leave for little guys K and 1 (after
students are well versed in the procedure for it) is modeling clay with about 10
Popsicle sticks for each students. The students try to build standing
structures. Another good source for sub lessons is www.kinderart.com.
The lessons there are very thoroughly explained and many are 1
period lessons. See http://www.kinderart.com/drawing/
and http://www.kinderart.com/arthistory/abstractflowers.shtml
It's a Party from a
Mouse's Eye View from Amy
Grade 4: Draw a party from a mouse's point of
view....Draw all of
the people feet only, with the legs and the rest of the body being so tall
they come off the paper before they become anything more than legs.She
uses this to teach vertical perspective (i.e. if the bottom of an object is higher
than the bottom of something else, it is farther away). Extension: Have them
draw their own shoes - A party that they would have. Exchange shoes and
add their friend's shows to the fun.
Oaxacan inspired Alebrijes (Fantasy Animals)
From: Brenda Robson
I
showed a Crizmac video on Oaxacan Indians (Oaxacan Woodcarving:
Innovation Meets
Tradition) then had the kids draw an exaggerated animal of their own on black paper with oil pastels.
They liked that from K-8th! Great idea for Middle School, too.
Construction paper crayons would work too. (video available from Crizmac
Art and Cultural Education Materials)
Amusement Parks - Marble Runs from Ellen
Sears
Right now my 5th graders are creating marble runs - kinetic
sculptures...
they beg for it all year, and I save it for our testing cycle - strips
of poster board, a demo on construction techniques (scoring, tape etc...) and they are off.
(Note from Judy: A science teacher in my building had the students make
marble runs with Popsicle sticks - needed several hot glue guns for
this)
The younger students use paper strips to create a 3-D
amusement park - same construction techniques - and then draw the model
with people and surroundings -
"While You Were Out" from:
Ellen Sears
I leave books to go with lessons - "While
You Were Out" and pictures of Painted Ladies -
then they draw their own house with the new color scheme - or any building... you could also
have magazine pictures of structures that they can color over. More
ideas: Mixed-Up Chameleon - Matthew's Dream
Symmetrical Design from Betsy
Larson
Symmetrical designs using markers and white
napkins (gives four way design). Keep napkin
folded and use markers to create design - unfold when done. Kids
love it!. Idea came from Getty TeacherArtExchange list (now
TeacherArtExchange)
Amy adds:
This also works great with coffee filters.
Texture Rubbing Creatures From Sandy Bacon
I recently used a lesson found here on the list. See Linda
Wood's lesson on Eric Carl animals. The children are
given a topic or theme. I used a mythological/medieval creature.
They used all
kinds of different papers and texture rubbing plates (see Sax
catalog pg. 406) to create an Eric
Carle style creature. First read Eric Carle's Dragons
Dragons: & Other Creatures That Never Were book. I had a
sample done and the lesson went very well according to the sub.
The kids really had a good time creating.
Hog
Wild Metal Magnetic Sculptures from Linda
Wood
Linda has many different learning centers to use
as back-up plans. One is Hog Wild Metal Sculptures - the kids really go
to town creating unusual creative pieces (think Picasso and other cubist
sculptors). These are all temporary as after a few days, they are
disassembled and put back into the boxes for others to use. Linda has
purchased several sets and mixed them all into one center. See Hog
Wild page for more information.
Plasticine Clay
by Judy Decker
One idea that worked for me was to have Plasticine
clay (one color per child only) in small butter dishes - one per child
(you could use Baggies, instead I suppose). I had some simple tools
available in cans - one for each table (just Popsicle sticks and some
simple wooden tools -nothing dangerous). I had torn out enough fabric
backed wall paper samples for each student to use as a placemat. This
was particularly helpful if I was going to be out during a ceramics
lesson and didn't feel the substitute would be able to handle the
students being at all different stages of completion in a project. This
was an idea I got from Linda Lehman of Bath Elementary.
Create a Coloring Sheet
- by Sky McClain
Another fun substitute plan is to have them draw a
picture on Xerox paper using pencil only. It has to be just an
outline because a few of the best ones will be chosen by me (on my
return) to be Xeroxed and then they will be used as coloring sheets for
all my other classes to color. I print their name clearly on the
bottom so everyone can see who did it. I keep these coloring sheets in a
box lid in the art room next to the cans of markers. They can be colored
if the children finish their art project early. Sometimes I suggest a
theme like dinosaurs or favorite cartoon characters or summertime fun.
They must fill the page with lots of interesting things to be colored or
else it won't be chosen.
Shapes and Things by
Ellen Sears
I have left for grades 2-7. I left the book 'Shapes
and Things' by Tana Hoban - a book of photo grams along with a
bucket of kitchen utensils.
Two assignments I have left are:
- Draw one object 5 times - 1 complete, and four
coming onto or going off of the page
- Divide the paper into 6 unequal sections. Draw
the silhouette in one section to fill... Abstract the object in each
of the remaining sections by - multiplying, dividing, adding,
subtracting, stretching...
They can use markers to add pattern in negative or
positive, warm and cool, complementary...
Design a T-Shirt
by Jean Womack
Jean has been substituting in the San Francisco
area. One very professional art teacher I worked with gave the
kids an outline of a T-shirt and asked them to design their own T-shirt.
Then she had them add the pants and arms, legs, and head. That
would be good for one or two days.
Castles Dragons and More
by Jean Womack
Another great teacher was gone for a week.
She left a very elaborate lesson plan where they were supposed to draw a
castle, from a handout. Then add dragons, trees, etc, all from the
handout. And draw lots of detail. She said they love
castles. She drew one on the board that was awesome. Jean showed
Cinderella or Snow White or one of those Disney movies that have castles
in it (you might want to check with the school policy on showing Disney
videos - maybe show a segment of the video). She told them that
Disney people made a lot of money drawing castles. Jean also got
old calendars with castles and put them up on the wall.
Rainbow Fish -
idea by Michal Austin
This could work for grades K thru 2. Read Rainbow
Fish http://www.geocities.com/theartkids/
Students
draw large fish to fill 9 x 12 white paper - Make interesting patterns
(could show Paul Klee print of Goldfish - and one of Fisherman), outline
heavily with black crayon. Color in sections heavily with crayon. Use
watercolor wash in negative space (could wait and do watercolor when
teacher returns). Add a glitter glue accent to some scales
Elmer Again -
idea by Michal Austin
This could work for grades 1 to 2- http://www.geocities.com/theartkids.l
Have
sub read story
"Elmer Again" by David McKee - You could
have a 1' gridded paper run off for the checkerboard. Students begin
coloring the checker board the day you are off - finish when you return.
Design Money
- from Sara Green (for elementary and middle school)
Copy dollar bills and distribute them
to the tables. You could copy money from other countries if available.
Discuss the design- center, border etc. Tell
the students they are designing the new money for their new country.
They name the country, they design the symbols and designs. You
can cut 41/2 x 12 inch pieces of paper for the sub ahead of time.
In a pinch? Try ART a Facts™ Magazine
Source for Art Lesson Plans and Teacher Resources for Art Education Elementary
and Secondary Level. Five issues each year - Comes in set of 30 copies.
Homeschool issue also available (consists of one copy of each of the five
issues). From Judy: I would recommend you order a copy for elementary and
secondary for yourself (see Homeschool price - it is worth it!).
Lessons are different for each level....Secondary can be adapted for
lower grades, too. There is not much difference in reading level. Font
is smaller on Secondary copy so there is more in depth information -
also good for you to have. Internet resources are given as well as
books. You can easily write up a hands on exercise for student to do
after they are finished reading and discussing the magazine. Reading
level is probably grade 4 and up. Substitute could read to lower
grades.
Be sure to scan the lesson
plans on Incredible Art Department for more plans adaptable for a
substitute.