I usually have some kind of handwriting self starter that the kids do first thing when they come in the morning. I call it "Morning Workshop," and it usually only lasts for about 5-10 minutes. This gives me some time to take roll and finish any last minute preperations, while also giving the students some time to socialize a bit before we get started...(as well as to practice handwriting, of course).
I read about this great idea on Fairy Dust Teaching, and decided to adapt it for the animal unit I've been teaching the past two weeks. At the beginning of the unit, I gave every student a simple book with a handwriting line on the bottom of each blank page. When the kids come in, there is a drawing of an animal on the board, with the name printed underneath on enlarged handwriting lines. Their job is to copy the drawing and the placement of the letters on the line as best as they can. If there is time, they can color it and add details. By the end of the unit, they will have filled up the book with 10 different animal drawings. I really like this concept, because they are working on fine motor skills and letter formation, in addition to animal vocabulary words in a fast and easy activity.
The kids love it too. They have been really excited to see which animal I have chosen for each day.
Here was yesterday's animal:
I picked a tree frog yesterday because we spent the day learning about these animals using a nonfiction book from our language arts program. As we were reading the book, we got to a page where the tree frog jumps, and all of the kids got excited and said it looked like our tree frog on the board. That made me feel good about my drawing...
Some tree frogs:
Some other pages:
Showing posts with label Fine Arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fine Arts. Show all posts
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Map Art
We made these land and water maps back in February...or March...the weeks and months are all starting to blend together. This is one of my favorite ways to explore the concept of representing and recognizing land and water features on a map. It is fun for the kids, and pretty easy to prepare. All you need is salt dough, small pieces of cardboard, and paint. You want the salt dough to be a pretty sticky texture, so it sticks to the cardboard. Although, once it dries, Elmer's Glue seems to do the trick if there are breaking problems.
The project takes at least two days, because the salt dough needs to dry out on the first day and the paint needs to dry on the second day. I love the creativity of the results, and ask the kids to give me a title for their map...I'm pretty sure the titles are my favorite part. Here are a few examples:
The project takes at least two days, because the salt dough needs to dry out on the first day and the paint needs to dry on the second day. I love the creativity of the results, and ask the kids to give me a title for their map...I'm pretty sure the titles are my favorite part. Here are a few examples:
![]() |
| Titles (Left) A Pretty Waterfall and Volcano (Right) A Tree and a Volcano Squirting Water |
![]() |
| Titles: (Top Left) Water and Curves (Top Right) King of the Earth (Bottom Left) So Many Lands (Bottom Right) A Flat Surface |
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
When I Grow Up...
When I was a kid and people asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up, I would usually say one of three things:
1. A Veterinarian
2. An Author
3. A Teacher
Now I am considered to be "grown up,"
and I no longer have any desire to work closely with animals.
But I do still have dreams of becoming a children's book author someday,
and I feel lucky to be working as a teacher.
Sometimes you never know where life is going to take you,
but I'm glad that I ended up in a place where I wanted to be. :)
and I feel lucky to be working as a teacher.
Sometimes you never know where life is going to take you,
but I'm glad that I ended up in a place where I wanted to be. :)
When I asked my Kindergarten kids what kinds of jobs they would want to do when they grew up, I got a lot of different responses. Many kids would change their minds from day to day...or even minute to minute. One girl said "Mrs. Carruth, I want to be so many things when I grow up...a teacher, an artist, a ballerina, a mom...I can't even decide!" It's so fun to be a part of that dream-making process with kids so young. They are so imaginative, and at this point in their life, truly anything seems possible. In fact, several boys in my class decided they definitely wanted to be ninjas, and several girls wanted to be princesses. I love it. And who am I to dash their dreams, and tell them that jobs like that might be a little hard to come by...?
I hope you enjoy this collage artwork from our jobs unit as much as I did!
![]() |
| (Left) "regular person..I want to be like my Mom." So cute. |
![]() |
| (Left) "Police Man...I help people." (Right) "Mail Carrier...I can go travel the world." |
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Friendship Art
While some young children may find it easy to make friends, most are still learning and developing the necessary sills to interact in a positive, social way with their peers. I did a small unit on friendship at the beginning of the year with my Kindergarten class, but felt like the season of Valentines was a good time to bring the subject back up again in more depth.
I definitely feel that teaching and modeling social skills is an important part of my job, as doing so will help them to be more successful students and allow my classroom to continue to be the safe, happy community that I want it to be. My hope is that every student feels a sense of safety and belonging at school, and helping everybody to develop positive friendship skills is one way to encourage that environment.
One of my favorite friendship activities is friendship art. It coincides perfectly with reading this book, which also happens to be a part of our language arts program. Each table group gets one piece of paper, and they work together to create a picture. The rules are that everyone can contribute something that they like to the drawing, but they need to use their own space in the picture to do it. We also talked about the possibility of working together to make a drawing (one person does the tree trunk and the other person draws the leaves) and we decided that it was not nice to make fun of someone else's contribution to the picture.
Each picture turned out differently, and each group worked together in different ways. It also turned out to be a great teaching moment for some of the students who had difficulty sharing the space and getting along during the process. :) All in all, it was a successful activity and every group was excited to share their creation with the class.


More friendship ideas and activities to come!
P.S. We had a fun Valentine's Day Celebration yesterday. I came away with so many yummy treats and cute Valentines. I felt spoiled!
I definitely feel that teaching and modeling social skills is an important part of my job, as doing so will help them to be more successful students and allow my classroom to continue to be the safe, happy community that I want it to be. My hope is that every student feels a sense of safety and belonging at school, and helping everybody to develop positive friendship skills is one way to encourage that environment.
One of my favorite friendship activities is friendship art. It coincides perfectly with reading this book, which also happens to be a part of our language arts program. Each table group gets one piece of paper, and they work together to create a picture. The rules are that everyone can contribute something that they like to the drawing, but they need to use their own space in the picture to do it. We also talked about the possibility of working together to make a drawing (one person does the tree trunk and the other person draws the leaves) and we decided that it was not nice to make fun of someone else's contribution to the picture.
Each picture turned out differently, and each group worked together in different ways. It also turned out to be a great teaching moment for some of the students who had difficulty sharing the space and getting along during the process. :) All in all, it was a successful activity and every group was excited to share their creation with the class.
P.S. We had a fun Valentine's Day Celebration yesterday. I came away with so many yummy treats and cute Valentines. I felt spoiled!
![]() |
| I loved some of the creative ideas--- a couple favorites were Rolos wrapped up like dynamite for "You're the Bomb" and a bunch of glue sticks for "You're the glue that keeps our class together!" |
Friday, May 27, 2011
Creativity: A Process
Have you ever noticed that as adults, we are really concerned about the product of our endeavors? A clean house, a completed task, the perfect outfit, an interesting bulletin board....We tend to think less about the process we go through to achieve that final product.
The opposite is usually true for children in the early childhood years. The product doesn't really matter very much to them- what they enjoy is the process that they go through to create it. Take preschoolers for example. If you put them in front of a piece of paper and give them some paint, they will enjoy spreading the colors around on the paper, experiment with different movements of their hand, and maybe even form some recognizable shapes. You might ask them what they are painting, and they might give different answers each time you ask. They aren't so concerned with what it looks like. They just like going through the process. I've watched some preschool aged children become completely engaged in simply filling up sheets of white paper with colors, and once they are finished they toss the paper aside and start all over again.
Sometimes I wonder if as children get older, we stifle their creativity by focusing so much on a uniform product. Things like art projects that all look identical or following a prescriptive form of writing. Of course, there is a place for those types of activities, especially if you are encouraging students to learn how to follow step-by-step directions. But I think it's important to also foster the creativity that seems so natural for young children, because creativity can be a valuable tool throughout their life. Creativity can promote better problem solving skills and ingenuity in the work force. Similarly, it's the creative artists, writers, architects, etc. that are recognized for their work and contribution to society.
Creativity is defined as the ability to transcend traditional ideas, rules, patterns, relationships, or the like, and to create meaningful new ideas, forms, methods, interpretations, etc.; originality, progressiveness, or imagination.
I think we should celebrate and encourage individual creativity in kids. One way to do that is to promote the process of creating something by supporting unique approaches and ideas, and letting kids use their imagination. Sometimes I feel like teachers especially feel pressure to have their students produce "presentable" artwork that will look good on the bulletin board. Sadly, I think this leads to teachers taking too much control over student's artwork, and in that case it's no longer about art- it's about following directions. Unfortunately, I've observed this kind of scenario in classrooms before, where a student proudly brings a finished product up to the teacher, and the teacher criticizes it because it doesn't look like it should, or even worse, changes it so that it meets the teacher's standards. This sends the message to kids that creativity and uniqueness are not valued, and that their individual ideas don't matter. My question is, does it really hurt anybody if a student chooses to do an art project a little differently than you envisioned? So what if they want to paint the sky purple? If we focus too much on a perfect product, kids will be much less likely to take the risk of being creative.
In my experience, I have found that if I give kids room to be creative, they will often think of things that I never would have thought of. They create masterpieces that are more unique and creative than anything I could have done myself. I love it. I love witnessing that creative process, and seeing the confidence and satisfaction that children feel when their creativity is celebrated. We never know where their creativity may lead them someday. I, for one, would never want to hinder that journey.
The opposite is usually true for children in the early childhood years. The product doesn't really matter very much to them- what they enjoy is the process that they go through to create it. Take preschoolers for example. If you put them in front of a piece of paper and give them some paint, they will enjoy spreading the colors around on the paper, experiment with different movements of their hand, and maybe even form some recognizable shapes. You might ask them what they are painting, and they might give different answers each time you ask. They aren't so concerned with what it looks like. They just like going through the process. I've watched some preschool aged children become completely engaged in simply filling up sheets of white paper with colors, and once they are finished they toss the paper aside and start all over again.
Sometimes I wonder if as children get older, we stifle their creativity by focusing so much on a uniform product. Things like art projects that all look identical or following a prescriptive form of writing. Of course, there is a place for those types of activities, especially if you are encouraging students to learn how to follow step-by-step directions. But I think it's important to also foster the creativity that seems so natural for young children, because creativity can be a valuable tool throughout their life. Creativity can promote better problem solving skills and ingenuity in the work force. Similarly, it's the creative artists, writers, architects, etc. that are recognized for their work and contribution to society.
Creativity is defined as the ability to transcend traditional ideas, rules, patterns, relationships, or the like, and to create meaningful new ideas, forms, methods, interpretations, etc.; originality, progressiveness, or imagination.
I think we should celebrate and encourage individual creativity in kids. One way to do that is to promote the process of creating something by supporting unique approaches and ideas, and letting kids use their imagination. Sometimes I feel like teachers especially feel pressure to have their students produce "presentable" artwork that will look good on the bulletin board. Sadly, I think this leads to teachers taking too much control over student's artwork, and in that case it's no longer about art- it's about following directions. Unfortunately, I've observed this kind of scenario in classrooms before, where a student proudly brings a finished product up to the teacher, and the teacher criticizes it because it doesn't look like it should, or even worse, changes it so that it meets the teacher's standards. This sends the message to kids that creativity and uniqueness are not valued, and that their individual ideas don't matter. My question is, does it really hurt anybody if a student chooses to do an art project a little differently than you envisioned? So what if they want to paint the sky purple? If we focus too much on a perfect product, kids will be much less likely to take the risk of being creative.
In my experience, I have found that if I give kids room to be creative, they will often think of things that I never would have thought of. They create masterpieces that are more unique and creative than anything I could have done myself. I love it. I love witnessing that creative process, and seeing the confidence and satisfaction that children feel when their creativity is celebrated. We never know where their creativity may lead them someday. I, for one, would never want to hinder that journey.
| "A worm hiding in the grass." By a Kindergarten student. |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)









