I took a group of students to the studio and we did a critique of the collaborative sculpture created by students and parents at Open House. After describing and analyzing the piece, I mentioned that the "interpret" stage of art criticism would be interesting for this piece because it was not created by one artist with a set plan, but by combining the individual work of many people.
Before... |
The finished product! |
We compiled a list of characters in the sculpture that could be featured in a story about the piece. Then, we had a discussion about how we could make a story using these characters. At first, the teenage mutant ninja turtle captivated their attention and they wanted to make a story about him. The problem was they couldn't make sense of the other characters using this protagonist. Filly, one student suggested the characters were like Halloween costumes.
I guided them by saying that the story should have a problem that the characters should deal with and right away, they came up with the idea that the houses would have no candy. There were "bad guys" who took the candy and as they spoke to each other, they resolved it by having the bad guys learn their lesson! I am impressed that the story contains a moral- very Aesop's fable of them- and I honestly did little but transcribe their conversation as they spoke. The Reggio philosophy believes that children are capable and come to the table with so much potential. Here is their story with some of the illustrations (they aren't all finished with their illustrations yet.)
It's Halloween. A group of friends is dressed up and trick-or-treating, but every house has no candy. The bad guys took the candy. The good guys go to a lit house at the end of the road. The good guys see a trail of candy. The bad guys see the good guys eating the candy. They ask for it back. The bad guys say, "no." Then they hear a noise. A person was stealing the candy! The bad guys and good guys team up to get it back! The person ran away. The bad guys knew how it felt to have someone steal from them. They felt bad. They apologized and they all shared the candy.
Another reason I love this lesson is because the students went beyond my expectations. When I looked at that sculpture, I had NO IDEA of how they could make a story that would make sense of it all. I saw that there was a connection to holidays, so I thought maybe they would make it take place over the course of a year, but they tied it up better than I would have done myself. And then they added a moral!
We read the story to the rest of their class and the students were impressed by the work of their peers. They want to share it with the younger grades, so I'm hoping that we can finish it up today and send a pair around to the pre-k and kindergarten classes today, on Halloween, to read it during the Fall Festival parties.
More Stories from this week:
I've been taking the students to the Burchfield Nature and Art Center. I discovered this place with my daughters over the summer and knew immediately that it would tie in with our partnership with the Burchfield-Penney Art Center and our exploration of the Valley Nature Trail near our school.
That says "School 33." I sounded it out. -Remi |
They loved drawing in the gravel with sticks. |
Some were making maps ("x" marks the spot) while others just drew designs. |
The bird's nest in the slide was one of the things the students recalled as we reflected on our day. |
Observational drawing time |
These trees are scary! -Multiple students |
Jayden- It's dangerous!
Kierstin- It's not scary. It's a tree.
Remi- It's natural.
I used this as an opportunity to do a critique of Burchfield's own paintings, called An April Mood.
Scary. Frightening. Afraid. Those were the words they used to describe Burchfield's work. When we clicked back on the photograph, they understood that even though something is perfectly safe and natural, it can still cause someone to feel a certain way. I explained that Burchfield was skilled at putting those feelings into his paintings of nature.
The creek provided opportunities for stone skipping, which many students have never done before. |
J'Mar- It looks bloody.
Remi- It looks like a cocoon.
Jayden- It looks kinda like a crab. Or a hamburger.
Taylor- I see this when I go to the center. On branches.
What is this? We will have to investigate further. |
They were very kind to each other on the trip.
There were ruins around the park. These captivated my attention, but the students didn't give more than a passing glance. I want to find out more about these ruins and I think if I do a little research, they might become interested before our trip back to the Nature Center in June.
Marciano was very interested in the way the leaves look under the water. This would make an awesome painting. I hope he chooses to work with this picture.
So peaceful and picturesque.
Eliseo told us that this is a giant fairy house. It can be for the tooth fairy!
The birdhouses were exciting because many of them built their own birdhouses last year in Mrs. Holden's class. |
Some students were impressive at skipping stones. |
The students told Ms. Boyd that these rocks were "glued together" but they don't know why or how. |
The lighting was beautiful. |
They had me laughing at this point. There are green pipes in the ground and the class the day before decided the pipes were a home for an animal. This group said they were for Mario (from the Super Mario Brothers games) and they started calling down for Mario and Luigi.
The following set of photos was taken by Mrs. Passino. She captured some beautiful moments in a very important day for the students.
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