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Sunday, March 25, 2012

Art and Content Integration - one idea of many

Integrating content from other disciplines into art lessons is an ideal way to strengthen learning and use school time efficiently. When considering an art project that will demonstrate various elements of art, a sumative assessment for example, as well as integrate multi subject learning and cultural awareness, the following web page will provide many ideas:
http://www.princetonol.com/groups/iad/Files/hands.htm

many of these art lessons provide an opportunity to demonstrate understanding of various art elements such as positive/negative space and or complimentary colors/color wheel (just think of Andy Warhol), composition & line/texture work (see aboriginal project), value shading, and more. A few ideas are listed below.

"Hands of a Super Hero" integrates character study with art
"Patterns in Nature" integrates life science into the art classroom
"Hands Collage" could become a multicultural study by researching cultural textiles before beginning.


Art provides English language learners with an opportunity to express things they have no words for and provides them with experiences they can later draw from for writing, reading, or speaking (schema). Additionally, art taps into multiple intelligences. This aspect of MI is another excellent reason to integrate content within art lessons because it strengthens associations for these students that encourage retention.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Instant online education

cosmolearning.com
Learning whatever you want with college lectures is right at your mouse-click... More explanation later...

Saturday, February 19, 2011

A collection of Graphic Novels - focused on diversity, social justice, and current issues

I will preface this entry with a confession; I am a graphic novel junkie. As an artist and avid fiction reader these little gems are my multimedia aesthetic fix. They are full of beautiful images, sounds (in the form of *boom* and *pow*), and often have exciting action-filled plots played out by emotional and intricate characters. While some graphic novels can only be found on the Internet, I prefer, and in fact crave, the smell of ink, glue, and the feel of glossy pages flipping under my fingers. I discovered graphic novels in middle school and they called to my adolescent senses. I was not the only teenager partaking of this textual drug either. And today they are more popular and readily available than ever.

Students, especially those in middle and high school, have a desire and a need to talk about current issues surrounding politics, policy, human rights, and diversity. When we bring such topics into the classroom in a respectful and honest way student voices are validated, current issues are discussed, and motivation to engage with text and learning is increased. I stumbled upon a few graphic novels that cover current issues and could serve as paired text for history, social/political science, current issues, genre study, and/or a mentor text (among other things). These topics, presented in a highly accessible multimedia format, will capture just about any teen at any reading level but can be appropriate for younger students as well.  To provide some grounding for this social justice approach to literacy, I would recommend reading Critical Literacy and Writer's Workshop: Bringing Purpose and Passion to Student Writing by Lee Heffernan. This book offers philosophical insight, practical and applicable tips, and a glimpse of the success that this form of literacy can provide. It reads fast, being only 86 pages in total, and will give you valuable information for this approach.

Read on for an annotated bibliography of these graphic novels, along with some links to lesson plans, discussion questions, and author websites and biographies...

Friday, February 18, 2011

Themed Text Sets - A Resource

Research says that integrating all subjects within a theme support achievement. When one topic is infused within all of the subject areas students are able to make connections between subjects and truly unify their knowledge in a relevant way. Vocabulary is strengthened when themes are used because words are used and repeated regularly. The following resources give sets of themed books to assist teachers with the task of centering learning around a theme.