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Done by one of my more advanced students- my challenge was the bowl of shells. |
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Drawing by the same student for comparison. |
Ahh, the dreaded still life. It's not that I don't see the value, but it is hard to jazz it up for the elementary crowd. We started with just a basic drawing. The 2nd graders just blew through it, without much concern for my oh so careful directions/instruction on scale/proportion and size. So, I considered that a warm up, and we did the same still life again, only using a very simple view finder. I introduced it as a tool, and asked that the students try it- even if they never used one again, just to have the experience. Since the drawings were much bigger, and much clearer the 2nd time around, I broke out the tempera cakes, and let the students paint. We then compared/contrasted our two finished works with a simple questionnaire, where I asked questions like which was easier, which was more challenging, which was more fun, etc. I think they got the idea of a still life, and we are all ready to move on to the next thing. On a side note, I have been working on challenging the more advanced students, so when I set my still life up, I included some harder items, which were strategically in the view of the students in need of a challenge. I also know that I need to put things in place for the ones that struggle. An example of this was that I put blue tinted water in the bottles, to make them easier to define.
Maybe You'll Have The Next Carrie.
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