Monday, September 30, 2013

Beautiful Oops-ing in Kindergarten


One of my favorite books to read to kindergarteners is Barney Saltzberg's Beautiful Oops.  Besides being a great interactive and multi-surface board book that is really fun to read and explore, t's a great reminder that projects may not go as planned, but often "mistakes" are the catalyst for something even more exciting.  Developmentally, kindergarteners are just starting to compare their work to how they think it "should" look, so it's a good time to introduce the idea that an "Oops" can be a new creative starting point.

I gave students construction paper with holes cut out, and offered them several materials to work with, including tissue paper, pattern-paper scraps, glue, tape, scissors, string and pipe cleaners.  They made some incredible creations that will soon be gracing the hallways.

First graders explore 3D color wheel


First graders have been experimenting with color and color mixing in several media, starting with tissue paper, then reading Mouse Paint by Ellen Stoll Walsh and making overlapping apple prints with primary colored tempera paints.  To further explore and contextualize this learning, this week we used model magic to create physical color wheels, introduced through reading Leo Lionni's Little Yellow and Little Blue together.  This process is great for visual and tactile learners, and manually mixing balls of primary colors into secondary colors is great for motor skills (and lots of fun)!  After creating their own color wheels, students got to mix the rest of the colors together and make unique browns, which sparked a conversation about color ratios.  They used their resulting brown clay to create sculptures to take home.  Here are some of the moments of color mixing delight: