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Cunningham, Kathy – Arts & Activities, 2012
The author's school is only 30 minutes from New York City, so every year when second-graders study towns and cities, the students do a project based on New York City landmarks. This year was the Statue of Liberty. The author introduced Peter Max's famous Pop art to her students, and explained that, as the art world kept changing, artists decided…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Artists, Art Expression
Compton, June – Arts & Activities, 2009
In this article, the author describes a lesson he created for his second-grade classes which was inspired by the children's book, "Why is Blue Dog Blue?", by George Rodrigue. In this lesson, the students make associations between places, food and events to determine the color of their dogs. (Contains 3 resources.)
Descriptors: Color, Art Activities, Art Expression, Childrens Art
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Caine, Vera – Educational Action Research, 2010
Throughout the school year I invited children in a Grade Two/Three learning strategies classroom to participate in a visual narrative inquiry. The intention was to explore children's knowledge of community in artful ways; the children photographed and wrote in what was often an iterative process, where writing/talking and photographing…
Descriptors: Photography, Action Research, Alphabets, Learning Strategies
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Nessom, Jennifer – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2010
The wonderful book, "How Are You Peeling? Foods with Moods" by Saxton Freymann and Joost Elffers inspired a lesson on feelings and expressions for this author's second-grade students. Many students at her school have difficult lives and lots of emotional baggage, resulting in behavioral problems at school. Using the example of Fauvist portraits by…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Studio Art, Artists, Art Expression
Hoffman, Anne Marie – Arts & Activities, 2009
The author was originally inspired by "The Exquisite Snake" exhibit she saw at a local museum. Two hundred contemporary artists contributed to this exhibit, which was an adaptation of the old parlor game called "The Exquisite Corpse" that Surrealist artists used to play in the late 1920s and '30s. The author just loved this idea and decided to…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Games, Exhibits