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Kindergarteners require little or no motivation from a teacher to create art. Encourage and guide ind ividual expression . Help children to be inwardly motivated and to use person symbols. Help children understa nd appropriate behavio r s i n working with ar t materials. Avoid asking questions that may divert their attention from their work. Clearly demo nstrate how to hand le art supp lies and finished work appr opriatel y and rein force proper classroom beha viors. Follow-the- directions projects promote doing without thinking; they are the antithesis to creative expression. Alternative approaches should also be shown or encouraged. H elp every child think in p ositive self-statements s uch as: “I am able to think of new ideas. I am a c apable person. Etc.” Respect the product , but don’t over- emphasi ze it! For the parents: Urge t hem to provi de a safe climate in which their children can feel relaxed an d accepted in their artistic expression. Comm end t he child for wh at she has don e – not fo r w hat she is . TEAC H ING ART TEACHING ART Letitia Kintzel Sarah Howell K

Kindergarteners require little or no motivation from a teacher to create art. Encourage and guide individual expression. Help children to be inwardly motivated

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Page 1: Kindergarteners require little or no motivation from a teacher to create art. Encourage and guide individual expression. Help children to be inwardly motivated

Kindergarteners require

little or no motivation from

a teacher to create art.

Encourage and guide

individual expression.

Help children to be inwardly motivated and to use person symbols.

Help children

understand appropriate

behaviors in working

with art materials.

Avoid asking questions that may

divert their attention from their

work.

Clearly demonstrate how to handle art

supplies and finished work

appropriately and reinforce

proper classroom behaviors.Follow-the-directions

projects promote doing

without thinking; they

are the antithesis to

creative expression.

Alternative approaches should also be shown or encouraged.

Help ev

ery c

hild t

hink i

n pos

itive

self-

state

men

ts su

ch as

: “I a

m ab

le to

think

of ne

w idea

s. I a

m a

capa

ble

perso

n. Et

c.”

Respect the product, but don’t over-emphasize it!

For the parents: Urge them to

provide a safe climate in which their

children can feel relaxed and accepted in

their artistic expression.

Comm

end the child for what she has

done – not for what she is.

TEACHING

ART

TEACHING

ART

Letitia Kintzel Sarah Howell

K

Page 2: Kindergarteners require little or no motivation from a teacher to create art. Encourage and guide individual expression. Help children to be inwardly motivated

Teaching DrawingDrawing clarifies, focuses, and increases children’s

comprehension.It communicates to the world some idea of the child’s

understanding.Discourage erasing, and help children develop

confidence in their ability to put their ideas down on paper.

Students draw things intuitively as they know them.Good supplies to use: thick kindergarten pencils, markers, extra stout crayons, and ballpoint pens

Pages 188-189We would read the book, Rainbow Fish.

Then we would have the students draw their own fish.

Page 3: Kindergarteners require little or no motivation from a teacher to create art. Encourage and guide individual expression. Help children to be inwardly motivated

Teaching PaintingKindergarteners typically love to paint with large

brushes that allow them to convey boldly the strong, clear configurations they have created.

If space permits, allow students to sit on the floor and paint.

To minimize drips and spills, it should be like heavy cream, NOT water.

Use four jars of different colors in a cardboard box with a different brush for each color.

Fill paint containers only to the depth of the brush bristles.

Tap their brushes against the inside of the container/jar to knock off excess paint.

SMOCKS (adult shirts to protect child’s clothes)Newspapers and Warm soapy water.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sw7XYhrhRqg

Page 4: Kindergarteners require little or no motivation from a teacher to create art. Encourage and guide individual expression. Help children to be inwardly motivated

Teaching Cutting, Pasting, and Collage

To assure a pair of good scissors per child, some schools encourage the parents to send a good pair to school.

Have a few pairs of left-handed scissors available.If none are available, try paper tearing.

Remind students to hold scissors carefully.Teach the mechanics: how much glue to use on which surfaces to

apply it.Collages are always fun to create.

Organize trays or shoeboxes of found treasures: wallpaper and cloth scraps, metal foils and textured papers, feathers, and yarn with which to adorn pictures help children become aware of contrasts in solid versus patterned papers, dark and light coloration, and

rough and smooth surfaces.

We would have the students cut out many different shapes from different colors of construction paper. Once they have the shapes, we would have them use their own imaginations to form a picture. They would then have to share with the class what they created.

Page 5: Kindergarteners require little or no motivation from a teacher to create art. Encourage and guide individual expression. Help children to be inwardly motivated

Teaching Fingerpainting

Children discover different types of lines. Children may draw fan shapes and parallel lines. Guide children to use not only their fingers but also the edge of their hands, their palms, and so on as they paint. Fingerpainting can be done directly on washable Formica-type table surfaces as well as on paper. Surfaces may be dampened to facilitate the paint’s movement. Wear smocks, use newspapers, keep soapy water available to rinse hands as children finish. You can create homemade fingerpaint. Clean up can be fun: use a bucket of soapy water, a big sponge, and a rubber squeegee for the task.

WAIT UNTIL YOU SEE

OUR MINI LESSON

Page 6: Kindergarteners require little or no motivation from a teacher to create art. Encourage and guide individual expression. Help children to be inwardly motivated

TEACHING CHALK

• Used outside on a sidewalk or playground• If you are using chalk inside: reduce the

level of dust by fist sponging the paper with water or starch diluted to half strength and then having the children draw one the paper with thick chalks

• Use dark colored paper for giving chalk drawings a dramatic effect

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jukn9cEeXek

Page 7: Kindergarteners require little or no motivation from a teacher to create art. Encourage and guide individual expression. Help children to be inwardly motivated

TEACHING THREE-DIMENSIONAL ART

• Puppetry is an excellent way for children to overcome shyness and develop public-speaking ability.

• Puppets can be made many different ways: paper plates, paper lunch bag, fingers, socks, etc.

• Other three-dimensional activities: construction with boxes and tape, stringing beads, and building with blocks

• Clay allows: touching and feeling experiences• Clay can be pulled apart and smoothed together repeatedly.• Clay can also be made into about anything. It can also be

reused if clay is limited.• Clay can free children’s imaginations!

We would have the students play with the PlayDoh at a learning center.

Page 8: Kindergarteners require little or no motivation from a teacher to create art. Encourage and guide individual expression. Help children to be inwardly motivated

ART CRITICISM

• Describe a way of talking about not only fine arts but also one’s own art and that of classmates

• At the kindergarten level: what we see, what it is called, how it appears, what colors and shapes and textures it has in it, and what ideas it brings to mind

• As children talk about art, accept their approximations and their weakness in logic.

Page 9: Kindergarteners require little or no motivation from a teacher to create art. Encourage and guide individual expression. Help children to be inwardly motivated

• Children like to look at pictures, to hear the teacher tell about them, and to tell about them themselves, so showing and talking about art reproductions can be a simple way to introduce art history to kindergarteners.

• If fine art is introduced as a drawing stimulus for the children, use art folk art or art from prehistoric civilizations, which may bear a surface similarity to young children’s ways of representing forms.

Page 10: Kindergarteners require little or no motivation from a teacher to create art. Encourage and guide individual expression. Help children to be inwardly motivated

• Discussions about aesthetics are not beyond kindergarteners.

• Teacher may ask, “Is it okay for art to show scary things and ugly things, or is it better for it to show mostly nice things and pretty things?”

Page 11: Kindergarteners require little or no motivation from a teacher to create art. Encourage and guide individual expression. Help children to be inwardly motivated

Letitia

Kintzel

Sarah Howell