Welcome to Middleton Musings!

I managed to enter the teacher workforce just in time for the economic downturn several years ago. I eventually took a position at a charter school in Tucson, Arizona, teaching fifth grade, which I dearly loved, but at a cost - leaving behind family and friends. So I returned to Oregon and substituting. Now I am working towards obtaining my Reading Endorsement through the READOregon Program, and have been hired to teach an afterschool Art Club, which is what I blog about here. I also volunteer to help with homework for another group of afterschoolers.

Monday, October 28, 2013

Sugar Skull masks

     Since it's almost Halloween, I really wanted to do something that was both Halloween-related and yet not, since so many districts have moved towards "Harvest" themes. I settled on the idea of making some kind of sugar skull mask, and after many iterations, I eventually elected this one. We talked in class about Dia de los Muertos ("Hey, that's Spanish!") and that it is a holiday celebrated in Mexico after Halloween to celebrate family members who have died. I mentioned that the skulls were made out of sugar because it wasn't about being scary. I forgot to mention (and I read this somewhere, it is not original to me) that sugar skulls are sweet like life, but skulls to reflect death. I think that comparison may well have gone right over this groups' heads! But since so many kids in this school have Mexican friends or family, it seemed appropriate.

     I took a sugar skull stencil and oversprayed it with yellow glimmer mist. Then I cut each of them out into a 6" circle. I enlisted my husband and his drill in order to get the eye holes just right. (I don't recommend this exactly... turns out the regular drill you have at home isn't quite delicate enough to cut perfect circles through an inch of paper and paper plates.) Fortunately, the kids didn't care about that.

     I also sprayed glow in the dark fabric paint onto each of the paper plates, in the hopes that the outer edges would give off a glow.  I also added some glitter glue in yellow, pink, and green to give them a little more "sugar" effect and dimension. Finally, I prepped the paper plates by using poster glue dots to adhere the popsicle sticks to the back of the paper plates.

     Each table was given a set of colored pencils ("extreme colors"), two packs of neon crayons, and two sets of flourescent highlighters.  We talked about how we were using bright colors ("happy colors", two of my buddies called them), because the purpose was not to make scary skulls, but spectacular, vivid skulls. Naturally, one of the kindergarteners asked where the brown was, just seconds later.

     The trickiest part of this project (yes, it came as a surprise to me as well) was applying a glue stick to the back of the mask and adhering it to the paper plate. We had discussed how we wanted to match up the eye holes, so that wasn't the issue. It was the actual use of the highly technical glue stick. Here is a partial listing of some the issues I faced today:
  • twisting off the cap
  • twisting up the glue
  • applying the glue to paper
  • twisting the glue down so that the cap fits on
  • finding the cap
  • putting the cap onto the top of the stick
  • not gluing your friend's arm
     Evidently, the Common Core State Standards missed this one. I always figured it was pretty obvious how to use these things, but I have now learned that whenever I have a classroom again, I will explicitly teach the use of the glue stick. I will also teach the students how to dispose of a glue stick that no longer contains any "stick" or "glue".

     Once we finished the masks, I gave them some printed out sugar skull coloring pages (thanks to various sites on the internet and an e-book I bought: Thaneeya McArdle's Sugar Skulls) and I traded out the various neon colors for regular colored pencils, so that we would have all colors to work with.

     As you will see from the following pictures, the kids did an amazing job of coloring their masks. I am not even posting my own model (which I did late last night, and I have to admit, it was pretty lame) because they outperformed me so impressively. Overall, I am thrilled at their work today.

     Next week, I think we will be making squirrels out of egg cartons. Or maybe I will go with something easier. Something, I suspect, that does not involve glue sticks.

This student mentioned that her dad is from Mexico, so she is familiar with these skulls.

Love all of the bright colors!

The three amigos?

Love the usage of color to really brighten them up!

Amazing how everyone had a slightly different take on coloring these in.

Group photo!

They were all so proud of their work. I love it!




Sunday, October 27, 2013

Using swabs to paint autumn leaves

     How do you get 26 kids to use swabs to dab 4 colors of tempera paint onto trees they painted last week?
    
     Answer? I'll let you know if and when I figure it out!

     I put a little bit of red, orange, yellow, and brown paint into cupcake containers, 2 per table. I added a handful of swabs into the empty spots. I talked to the students about using one swab per color, so as not to mix the colors, since everyone at each table was going to be working with the paints. I demonstrated at each table how to dab the paint, not smear or paint with the swabs.

     We talked about how we aren't using the swabs in our ears. Evidently, also reviewing not sticking the swabs into other orifices should have been covered as well. You think you can predict kindergarten behavior, but you're wrong... they are so creative, they'll find a way around that rule you just laid down.

     The perk, I had thought, about using swabs was that there would be less paint mess. Less paint in the tins, less surface area to soak up paint, less spray of paint off of swabs. In practice, not so much. So glad I laminated those place mats for the kids - so much easier to clean up later.

     I will say that some of the art pieces were amazing. The smears were minimal. They really did dot (mostly) their trees and ground with an autumnal symphony of colors. The idea of including falling leaves was appealing as well. They dotted piles of leaves beneath the trees. And most of them even allowed for the lack of green paint, for grass, and blue paint, for sky. Conveniently, there was yellow for that sun in the corner though. Phew!

     Actually, other than the fact that the kids were really wired, we had a good conversation about poking the teacher. We talked about how it was a cleanliness issue - having been raised by a woman in whom the words "tempera paint" instilled instant terror, I have now inherited that concern. And yes, I have a smear of red paint on my shirt hem. we talked about keeping our fingers away from others in general because that was not a "good choice". How many times was I poked? Probably fewer, but at least I could turn around and say, "Did you just poke me?" to which the student would admit the action, and then I would smile and say, "we'll keep working on it."

     And that's the truth... we'll just keep working on it.

     Next week is Halloween. Hmmm, what to do, what to do...

      The kids got to take their work home, so pictures are on my phone again. Will upload when I can. Thanks for stopping by.

Which color to use?
 

Lots of leaves on the ground...

So much movement and color!

Looks like most of the leaves have fallen off of the trees!


    

Monday, October 14, 2013

Naked, Bald Trees

     The sign of a good teacher is the ability to be flexible. I say this because I spent hours trying to blow various paint viscositys through a straw over the weekend, and ended up with brown blotches and a headache. I figure if I can't do it with relative ease, I cannot expect Kindergartners to do it, either. So I decided we would paint our trees today instead. Ahh, flexibility.

     I used watered down tempera paint at home, and mixed up a batch that was still thick enough to hold color on the watercolor paper. Since I had already checked to make sure I could use the school's tempera, I didn't bring any extra. (Note to self: ALWAYS bring your own.) Upon arrival, I discovered that the tempera paint supply in the office was limited to magenta and orange, and had been used heavily, based on weight and the amount of dried paint on the outside of the bottles. I found a bottle of watered down brown, added it to what I had, and then after splitting it into 4 batches, watered it down a bit again.

     When the students showed up, (24 today), I showed them that we would be painting "just the trees" today, having learned that if I was not specific, we would end up with squirrels and other additions. We talked about the fact that we had no sky, no grass, no leaves... just the naked tree. And they giggled, as any K-2 student would do when you say that word. And then my tiniest Kinder raises her hand and says, "It's like the trees are bald." How cute is that?

     So I get everything handed out, and the class quiets down while they are working. They naturally finish at different times, so some start cleaning up while others are evidently trying to cover their entire paper in brown. Finally, I get the brushes in the sink (and rescue the ones going down the drain, toss out the watered down tempera paint, and collect the bald tree scenes on the only other table in the lounge.

     After enduring several pokes (two of which were at my breast!) and the repeated question, "What are we doing now?" (even though we had already talked about it it at the start of class), we were ready to start the second project for the day: cards for our principal, in recognition of Boss's Day, coming up on Wednesday.

     Over the summer, I had been given a set of cards for high school graduation announcements that were blank, and so I showed the students we were going to use these to make cards for Mr Principal. (Not his real name). I set up the three tables with different activities, and told the class they could move around to whatever table they wanted to work at. One table had crayons and markers, one table had Sharpies and finger ink pads, and one table had scissors, glue sticks, and some construction paper.
    
     We had to ensure that Mr Principal did not come in, of course, and he was just across the hall from us. Oh, the terror when he came near the door!

     By the end of this project, every table had every item. Yeah, you can imagine that cleanup was fun. How is it possible to lose glue stick tops? And one of them that was returned (minus the glue stick itself), had some blue construction paper all screwed into the cap. What is the thought process here?

     We were able to get most of the pieces of construction paper (I call it destruction paper) picked up from all of the nooks and crannies it always ends up hiding in, glue sticks and tops mostly together, and we even checked the floor for runaway crayons and Sharpies. I have to say, they all (mostly), worked together to clean up so they could go home to their waiting parents.

     I collected the cards in a brown gift bag for Mr Principal, and the plan was that I would decorate the bag before giving it to one of the secretaries to give to him on Wednesday. However, between the huge falcon constructed card, my personal exhaustion, and the need to clean up and take one of the students home, I admit I cheated and gave them all to Mr Principal early. He was thrilled.

     Next week: q-tips and paint. What could go wrong?

 - I figured out how to load pictures... The first one is mine. -





Monday, October 7, 2013

Watered Down Art Club




This was the model... my daughter did this one for me.


Notice the scarecrow? And the heart?

I love the hay bales!


This is the one with a stump and ferns. And a very angry scarecrow.

This is one of my Kindergardener's work. Notice that everything has to be at the bottom of the page, and there is a sun in the top corner?
 
     Just when you think you have things figured out... kids can ensure that you need to think again.

     Our project today was based on Monet's "Haystack" series, using crayons and oil pastels and then watercolors for a "crayon resist" technique. I showed them several print outs of some of Monet's work, all showing haystacks. We talked about haystacks, that we could make them shaped a little differently (Monet's kind of look like houses), and that we could have more than 2... I don't think I encouraged the inclusion of scarecrows, squirrels, hearts, or houses. Okay, it's art, it's their work and their ideas, it's all good. So I have them using colors I specifically chose for the project - yellows, oranges, browns - for the haystacks (and other items). "Where's the green?" one child asks. "Well, that's not a color I want you to use in the haystacks" I reply. (Because we are going to use green next anyway). I tell them we are really focusing on fall colors, to which these kids argue that green is a fall color. "Look outside" they tell me. Well, they ARE right, it IS still pretty green outside. I promise that we will get to green in a bit.

     We get to add trees and shrubs using the greens. "I would like you to draw them along the middle of the paper", I tell them, showing my example. I saw trees in every spot possible... along the bottom, only along the sides, growing off the top of the page, and even where I asked them to draw them in. I also got blackberry bushes, an apple tree, and ferns. And a stump. With mushrooms.

     And then we got all wet. The idea was the kids would use their brushes to brush water along the bottom, to which I would add droppers of brown, red, and orange, allowing the colors to spread out before using their brushes to meld the colors. I didn't put that much water on the tables... we were using metal cupcake trays half filled with water. Suddenly, we had puddles on every piece of art. Some before I ever added the drops of paint. So kids did what evidently is the natural response to this problem - they held up their papers and let all of the water and paint run off and onto the floor. "Let's try and keep the water on the paper and the tables; I don't think I need to have to clean the floor, okay?"  I mean, how do you prepare for that? I guess I am prepared for it in the future.

     But we weren't done yet. We still had the sky to complete, which was going to be similar to the other colors, but only with the one color. And we had to clean out the water left in the tins because it was mostly brown. Which was a new opportunity to get more water onto the sodden papers.

     They came out pretty good this time. Even with the squirrels and houses and stumps with mushrooms. They were amazed at how the oily crayons resisted the watercolor paint. Even though I had promised that they would do exactly that. It was also the wettest watercoloring I have ever done.

     The placemats we fingerprinted last week had been laminated over the weekend (thank heavens for a local Lakeshore store that has do it yourself laminating), and several of the kids were reluctant to "get their placemats wet" or "dirty".  I tried to point out that they had plastic on them to prevent exactly that issue, but again, they didn't believe me, I guess. I had one kid who really could not grasp the idea that we could work on the placemat all term. He really wanted to take it home, and tried several times to do exactly that.

     And let's get back to class size. This class was supposed to limited to 20 children. I was given a new and updated class list, upon which I have 26 student names. 2 names are brand new. Which also means they have no placemats. Which I will have to make and laminate. And I will have to re count all of the prepared supplies. The good news? Today I was missing 8 kids who were sick, since there is something going around. So I had 19 artists. I also had my 17 year old daughter who really is an artist helping me out. She had two things to say afterwards, "yeah, they don't really listen, do they?" and "now I understand why you are so tired after teaching".  We both just laughed.

     Yep.

     The really important thing to take away from this experience is that the kids are having fun, learning new ways to make some arts and crafts, and hopefully learning ways not to do things. The artwork looks decent, considering that they don't have a great artist leading them. But their creativity abounds and they seem to be proud of their work.

     Looking forward to using straws to blow black watercolor on paper next week. I'm sure nothing could go wrong there...