Thanksgiving Break

Art Club Students are the heart and soul of Parkway!
Thanks to Mitzi Willis for all your help!

We had a successful day painting the windows at Parkway Elementary at the beginning of Thanksgiving Break.  I don't imagine I could call the past week I have had a "break".  
The first Sunday of Thanksgiving break, I met my Art Club Parents, students, and a few Teachers on campus and we got our creative juices flowing!!!  We painted the front windows of the campus in festive holiday decor.  I could not have asked for better volunteers.  They worked their hind ends off for me and I am so pleased with the results.

We used plain ol' latex house paint.  All in all, I spent about $300 on paint, mostly in pints.  I only bought one gallon of paint and that was for the white.  This will do the windows probably 2 times.  I actually plan to use the left over paint to decorate the bathrooms across from my classroom in inspirational quotes.  You know the ones...."be the rainbow in someone's day."  

That of course will have to wait for Christmas Break!  

Here is a little peak at how our day went!  


The Week Before Thanksgiving!

Is there a crazier time in the Art Room than the week before Thanksgiving Break?  I am trying to get all my lessons for the first semester finished, uploaded, and filed!  PHEW!  The work seems never ending when I have a raging case of the "I DON'T WANT TO's!" Many of my classes have finished the last lesson of the semester and needed just a short, 45 minute lesson to fill these last few days of class.

My 3rd and 2nd Graders are finishing up their lessons from a few weeks ago.  My 4th and 1st graders are enjoying a one day, super quick lesson. 

4th Grade Modern Landscape

This lesson from Deep Space Sparkle reviews our knowledge of WARM and COOL Color Families and CONTRAST. Students drew a modern landscape with oil pastel on black construction paper.  We filled our drawing with chalk pastel, choosing a warm or cool color pallet for the land and trees and the contrasting family for the sky. 


1st Grade Winter Owls


We watched the cutest video by Marshall Baya to learn more about the Snowy Owl.  



After discussing the coloring, and addressing the issue of me coloring my eyes and beak wrong in the video below, we drew our owls with a black oil pastel and filled our owl with white chalk pastel for texture.  We also did a little splatter paint over the top so our snowy owls could have a little snow!




Australian Unit at Parkway

1st Grade Painted Platypus


1st Grade Painted Platypus



As many of you already know, I LOVE my Deep Space Sparkle Membership and use it all the time.  I found these lessons from the Australian Bundle and fell in love with them.  

My 1st Graders enjoyed learning about the Platypus and drawing their little platypus on a rock.  In this lesson, students watched a short informative video on the Platypus, we discussed the unusual features of this "extra parts" animal. LOL!  

We drew it with oil pastel and painted it with our Tempera Cakes. 





2nd Grade Ice Cream Sandwich Boxes


Second grade is busy creating their Clay Ice Cream Sandwiches. This has been a 3 week lesson due to the every changing school schedule.  Gotta love that unexpected pep rally thrown in without notice! 
This year for our EOY Art Show Ceramic Theme we will be Parkway Elementary Pastry Shop.  All grade levels are doing a dessert of some kind. I'll make a separate post for 1st grade's spilled ice creams. They turned out so cute!!




3rd Grade Koala Selfie



Third Grade studied the Koala and his unique self. Students explored VALUE, Color mixing, and SHAPE.  We drew our Koala's with oil pastel and colored our tree and leaves with 2 or more colors of oil pastels.  Then, we painted out koala's by creating different values of gray by double loading our brush with black and white.  

This was a 2 day lesson.  The second day we added texture to our Koalas with chalk pastels over the dry tempera paint and painted our background. 

Day 1 Video



Day 2 Video


4th Grade G,Day! Mate!


In this lesson we explored color mixing through double loading our brushes and Aboriginal Dot Painting. The first day we painted the background and started our dot painting.  The second day, we finished our background, drew our Cockatoo and cut and pasted it to our background. This lesson tested the students patients with all the tiny dots they had to put into the background.  Many, especially my boys, became frustrated with the tediousness of the task. 


They turned out so cute and I let the students choose the color they highlighted their bird with. 

Day 1 of G,Day! Mate!




Day 1 G,Day! Mate!






TAEA Presentation 2018



I sent this picture to my Principal and said I found her portrait after STAAR Testing! LOL! 

So I just returned to the classroom, high on paint fumes and free samples from our annual Texas Art Educators Association Conference.  I always get so much from these few days of commiserating with like minded, artsie folks.  It helps me remember I am not alone in my over populated classroom.  That there are others with more difficult circumstances than I and that we are all KILLING IT!  Art Teachers are a resilient and resourceful group of individuals and I am proud to be a part of their community.

I presented twice this year.  My first presentation addressed the logistics of my annual End of the Year Art Show.  I discussed how my preparation begins on DAY 1 of art class.  I tell the students about the show, inform them they will not take artwork home for the entire year, and give them a few minutes to grieve the loss of bragging rights at home. After a mournful moment of silence I tell them all hope is not lost.  I introduce them to ARTSONIA



I have no affiliation with Artsonia, but I LOVE this resource for my students and parents. If you have not looked into this resource for your classroom, please do. It has been a game changer for my students and parents.

I have a 1st - 4th campus, so most of my students are familiar with Artsonia and how it works.  Although it is an online portfolio as well as a fundraising sight, I mostly utilize it for students to go home and share their successes with their family and friend.  This kind of takes the sting out of having to leave their artwork with me in their classroom box.


My husband is always so excited to help me do a classroom construction project (insert eye roll)!  We took a weekend and designed these shelving units, on wheels of course, to fit 20 copier paper boxes per unit (40 boxes in all) for Classroom Portfolios.  The first year, I tried individual portfolios, with each student having a folder of their own, but I almost killed myself filing all the artwork in the correct folders.  This system requires my Art Club students to come in on their free time (usually rainy recess time) and file artwork into the classroom boxes.  We just throw it in and sort it out at a later date.  The week after Spring Break, students get all their artwork back and choose their 3 pieces they want to go into the Art Show.  If they need to finish a piece, the next week I offer  extra work time for those wanting to finish or refine artwork for the Show and Art Stations for those not working on finishing up pieces. 


Banners are 6' in length, black bulletin Board paper.  Artwork is attached with two dots of hot glue at the top of each piece and banners are stapled to the walls with 4 staples, one in each corner. 
I have 2 parent work days and set up stations in the hall and in the classroom for parents to glue artwork to banners.  Banners are stacked in the Music room, FLAT to prevent the curling of the artwork.  (Found this out the hard way the first year when I stored the banners by class, rolled up.) If we do not have enough artwork to fill the last banner for a class, I usually pull artwork from the NO NAME! NO FAME! boxes for that grade level.

Art Club delivers the banners to the Cafeteria for teachers to hang up outside their classroom the a day or so before the Show. 






Teachers are happy to help and all the artwork gets hung.  The only thing I will do differently this year is run a blue tape line along the hallways to mark the height for hanging the banners so all look uniform. 

I host a silent auction at each show called the Empty Bowls Project.  Many of your are familiar with this grass roots movement and know it usually involves a dinner.  I haven't quite wrapped my head around how to incorporate this into the Show so we hold a silent auction where we sell student made bowls to raise money for our Backpack Program.

Each year my attendance has increased by about 200 guests.  Last year's solid count was 650.  This was from the sign in sheets and does not count the people who bypassed the sign in table.  I estimate that there were about 100 that did not check in. 


My second session  addressed a clay Bobblehead from Elementary, through Jr. High to High School and was presented with two colleagues of mine. Wayne Gaddis, Pine Tree High School Art and Nicole Davis, Spring Hill Jr. High Art were my co-presenters.  I offered the basic strategies at the Elementary level, Nicole offered advice for the Jr. High attendees, and Wayne brought it home with the advance skills for the High School teachers.  It was great fun and we look forward to presenting again next year. 
Nicole Davis, Spring 
Wayne Gaddis, Pine Tree High School Art





I can not take credit for this lesson.  All the glory and accolades go to Cassie Stephens and the genius that is she! She has an incredible video that I was able to use for my lesson.  I had my students practice on Wednesdays for 4 weeks before they actually do the final product.  Wednesday's are our PLC days, aka babysitting day.  I see a class and a half every 45 minutes while our classroom teachers have an hour and half Data/PLC meeting.  I see each group of students every 3 weeks, so these days are really a wash.  We use this time to practice clay or other skills I need extra time to impart.

This is the video I use........