Sunday, November 2, 2014

Week Nine

This is my last week student teaching under my current CT and although I was excited to finish up the first half of my student teaching experience, I am a little bummed to leave some of the relationships that were beginning to form in the middle school.

On Tuesday I went up to Stout and had the opportunity to present to the upcoming fall and spring student teachers on student teaching and the edTPA. I remember the confusion and stress of what was to come, and wanted to calm the students down, to know that they are as prepared as they will ever be to student teach, and the bulk of learning how to teach will come in the first placement. I learned a lot about when and where to step out of my comfort zone and how to deal with many classroom management situations. I gave the students a couple of things that I wished I would have learned prior to student teaching, but am very happy to have learned it, such as exit slips and using collaboration along with questioning for formative assessment. I found that the students were mainly worried about getting a CT who they worked well with. This was on my first slide: to be open, honest, and ask questions to your CT. I definitely understand this concern, but have to say that I am incredibly lucky with my placement and that this honesty was always there.

This last week of school consisted of wrapping up the high school Studio Art quarter. All of the students who were unable to take the class another quarter were very sad to take down their studios and so was I. I experienced some of the best critiques of my life while in this classroom and really enjoyed watching unexpected relationships form around the artwork that they were making. Some of the students really found their niche in Art, while others had the opportunity to experiment with Art like they never had been able to do before.

The middle school students continued on with their first projects and became more situated into the classroom. It was a good experience to be able to watch different groups come and go through Art as well to see that there really is no norm in what the classes produce and that every single class is going to be different.

Week Eight

Wednesday was the very end of the first pent of my cooperating school. This means that we were finishing up all of the projects and my cooperating teacher and I went around the room and did Final Portfolio Reviews. Each student from fifth through eighth grade filled out a rubric about how they thought that they did in the last year relating to the standards and essentials of the class.

Fifth grade was still finishing up their Romare Bearden collage project and I really had to crack down on some of the students to complete the project and get going. 45 minutes is not very long to get all of the work laid out for a collage and then continue to be creative and get work done. Sixth grade finished up their masks, while seventh and eighth grade finished their still life drawings. My CT and I went around the classroom doing Portfolio Reviews. This was a crazy time especially for the students who were not caught up on work. I had to complete the grading of all of the projects in the class and grade half of the students in each class in three days. I really enjoyed doing Portfolio Review for all of these students, because I never had a chance to do anything like this until halfway through college. I hope to do this someday in my classroom, but if at all possible I would try to begin the review a little bit earlier since I would be doing the entire room of students. All in all, it went well and Pent 2 began halfway through the week.

My CT was gone at an Art Education Conference, so I was in charge introducing the rules and the new projects for the brand new group of students at the Middle School. I also had the opportunity of running Studio Visits at the high school on my own. I was very excited to have this experience so that someday teaching the first day of rules and projects will not have to be as overwhelming when I am completely on my own. All went well, but things got crazier on Friday afternoon as the students began getting riled up for the weekend. The younger grades are very talented this round, while the older grades are a little more rambunctious.

My CT is slowly taking over the classes once again as we turn more into team teaching the lessons of the beginning of the pent once again.

Friday, October 17, 2014

Week Seven


After talking to my high school student who aides at the middle school, I wanted to try not being constantly on the students to be quiet. I introduced what we were doing in class, asked if any of the students wanted the radio on once it was quiet (about three fourths of the students did) and then I let them go off to work and then only gave minimal reminders to be respectful to others and be quiet during the class period. The students were working on glazing their clay projects, so they were working in larger groups of four. The students were not able to listen to the radio, the noise level was way too loud, and the students did not work as quickly and their work was in general more sloppy than it could have been. The following day I explained to the students that I tried to give them more freedom and to not constantly be quieting them down, but the work and pace was not up to par. The students need to be respectful to those who need a more quiet classroom environment.

Fifth grade is working on their Romare Bearden musical instrument collages. This is a difficult project for them, because it is not a cookie cutter, step by step process. The students need to be innovative and think individually to create their collage that shows unity by using repetition and patterns. First we drew quick instrument sketches, then enlarged, cut out the enlarged instrument, and then continued on to trace that onto more special or colorful paper. Next the students began designing their background with all sorts of paper scraps, puzzle pieces, sheet music, etc. Some students struggle working quick enough to lay out, work on their background, and then get the okay to move on and glue. I did not let the students glue until they showed understanding of pattern, unity, repetition, and that they had a plan for their composition. At a certain point it they are struggling though I have them glue, and then glue the instrument on top, and then add more to the composition and background. The students also had their fish dishes completed, I graded them, and then when things are quiet in fifth grade I get to hand back the student's fish and their assessment sheet. I call up the students who are working hard and individually go over their fish, how they felt about it, how successful it was, and why they received the grade that they did. The students are very excited about seeing their dishes, so this is an incentive towards working and being on task. When students are constantly asking questions, not working independently, or not following directions, I do not have the opportunity to hand back the fish dishes.

 I assigned artist statements to sixth, seventh, and eighth grade a week in advance and told them that I can grade them and turn them back with suggestions for edits if they did not get a full grade. The student can rework their artist statement and turn it back in to be graded again. I also learned how to load, unload and run the kiln for the sixth though eighth grade clay projects.

Sixth grade glazed their clay rattles and once finished continued taping their aluminum masks to the leather and embellishing with raffia, beads, and leather. During this lesson I realized that I really need to make sure to set criteria, be clear on instructions, and go over every single step in the lesson. Many of the students really struggled, because I just showed some options of what they could do, and did not show each step of tying things on, etc. The following day i needed to reroute and review what the criteria is for the embellishments and that everything needs to still be symmetrical and add, not detract to the success of the piece.

Seventh and eighth grade are working on glazing their clay buildings and clay shoes. If they did not finish they needed to come in during resource time and/or recess to finish glazing. The pent ends next Wednesday, so there are only three days left of class and all of the work needs to be glazed and assessed by then. All of the students also need to finish up their still lifes with either the marker designs for eighth and the multi media value for seventh. In eighth grade I had to send home my first behavior sheet for the parents to sign. I brought the student out into the hallway to talk about why the student's behavior was disrespectful and not allowing her to work up to her potential and also making it difficult for others to focus in the classroom as well. After the talk, there was less disrespectful disruptive behavior.

To work on:
  • Managing noise level 
  • Establishing criteria
  • Going over every single step of the process/assume each needs to be explained in depth

Monday, October 13, 2014

Week Six


This was my first week at 100%.

My biggest challenge began with 5th grade. Since this class is so huge, 27 students, and there are so many students on IEP’s and that need modifications, I cam constantly running and classroom management is very difficult. At the beginning of the week we worked on glazing their fish plates, and then putting the clear glaze on top. The students needed to leave some white space on their fish and also need to apply the three colors of glaze that they chose in a pattern. Many of the students did not listen to directions on criteria so even when I went over them again and they all could repeat them; the directions were often not followed. I could have asked the students to look at their work and ask, “Is there any white space open?” “What should you do next?” “How can your fish be improved?” After this project I gave the students a rubric to fill out on behavior and time management to assess how they have been doing in class. They were to write a personal goal on the bottom of the paper. Many of the students did not take this seriously or apply it to themselves. I went over the answers and handed them back to students giving them the opportunity to go over their answers one more time and reflect on where they really are in class. After this I gave a presentation on Romare Bearden that went very well and pushed students to look at art relating to their own lives. After this presentation the students worked very hard and were actually quiet enough to be able to put the radio on for the rest of class while they sketched instruments for their Romare Bearden collage. I went through all of the behavior rubrics and assessed where each student is on the rubric behavior wise and gave them a goal or two to work on for class time.

Sixth grade was very focused last week and began working on their Multi Media Metal Tooled Masks. The students began by brainstorming twelve symmetrical mask ideas. They reviewed it with me to make sure all were symmetrical, then the students continued to enlarge it onto tracing paper folded in half to make the large areas perfectly symmetrical, then added at least five patterns to the area. The students then received a piece of aluminum, taped the tracing paper design onto the aluminum and then etched it on. After making sure the patterns and textures stood out enough, the students covered the mask with India ink, picked out a piece of leather to mount it on for next week, and will continue by scratching off the extra ink with steel wool and cutting out the mask.

Seventh grade finished up their clay slab houses, which ended up being a very successful project. They will be glazing them next week. I was observed by my supervisor on Wednesday when I gave a demonstration on adding value to their still life compositions using either warm or cool colors using a mixture of oil pastels, colored pencils, and/or water colors. I had to redirect a couple of times and explain some blending tips using black and white oil pastels. Overall this lesson went very well and the students continued to work on the piece the rest of the week and will continue into next week. My observation went even better than next time, and I was told that my next thing to focus on is in my lesson plan; making sure to put down all of the criteria for the project in it. Although I told all of the students everything they needed with the project, I need to have it written down in my lesson plan. My lessons are very in depth, but I do not show all of the depth in my lesson plans.

Eighth grade finished up their clay slab shoes this week. The students who added a lot of extra details or made their own template really took a lot of time to make the project theirs. I found that these last couple of projects was really successful because the students took so much time to make them their own; they are not just standard stock art projects. Eighth grade continued on this week with their still life adding at least six designs from their expressive/constructive line worksheets that they were completing in their free time. The students added these designs with pencil and then outlined them with sharpie. Next week the students will color in these designs using six colors of their choice.

Thursday night was parent teacher conferences at the middle school. Conferences lasted for four hours, and sadly we did not get to talk to as many parents as we would have liked, because since art is on the pent schedule and not the quarter schedule like the rest of the school, it was not listed with the rest of the grades that the students were receiving. Students had the opportunity to show their parents some of their artwork hung all around the school. It was kind of a shame that the conferences took place in the gym and not the classroom, because then the parents would have the opportunity to see the environment that the students are working in and what they are working on currently. However, it was a good opportunity for me to socialize with some of the other teachers seated around me. All in all it went well and I had the opportunity of learning how conferences work from a teacher’s perspective.

Goals:

  • Work on project criteria being stated in lesson plans
  •  Find a happy medium of noise in the room

Friday, October 3, 2014

Week Five

This week I am teaching at 75%. I am now teaching 6th, 7th, and 8th grade lessons. All three classes are working with clay, and it was quite the process.

5th grade is currently working on Autumn Radial Design Cutouts. The students were told to fold each square piece of paper three times. Many of the students had to learn the hard way when they did not follow directions and only folded the paper once and cut a design. The student then made a symmetrical design, but did have radial symmetry. The students then had to rip it off and redo the process. The students got to learn which colors went together well and how to create a successful design. As an adaptation two students worked with scissors, cutting out just symmetrical shapes and gluing them on construction paper similar to a Matisse. Next the students continued to use stencils to draw shapes on the construction paper. Many of the students who finished their projects early came over to help these two or three students who had very adapted projects which created much more motivation. All of the students were interacting and it was really inclusion at its best. All of the students were learning.





Sixth grade created clay rattles. I demonstrated the project and the students brainstormed afterwards. The students were very excited for the project. Students were also asking questions and enjoying the demo, which I found very exciting. The sixth graders are much easier to entertain and motivate than the older ages, however I knew that I would not really actually know what they got out of it and what they remembered until the following day when they began constructing the rattles. I began the next day by having the students come up row by row and show me their brainstorm sketch to go over how they are going to create their piece. We talked about what will work and what needs to change. Next the students began. I realized many of them did not remember exactly so I went over step by step how to begin the process while asking students to help explain with me as a collaborative review. This helped a lot. The following day the students wrapped up their project, added details, and when they completed they helped their partners, worked on free drawing, or I gave them some options to help clean up the sinks and the paint from their last Picasso project.
Clay Rattle

Seventh grade is making clay slab buildings. I demonstrated the construction of the building and then the students began brainstorming. The next day I begin with handing clay out to the students. I was frustrated with myself because I did not think out or plan a way to hand out these clay slabs well. I should have had the students wrap the armature in newspaper the day before, but instead I had the students wrap the armature, and once that was complete they came up and got clay. It could have gone better, but I learned some good strategies without making a huge mistake or screw up. Next the students began creating their pieces. I realized that I needed to go step by step through the process so I walked them through similarly to how I did with the sixth grade and went through step by step what needed to get done as review. The following day I demonstrated adding details to the building. I reviewed where we were at and what had to be done. I gave mini demonstrations around the classroom for small things that students wanted to do with their piece. Overall it went very well and the students are getting a lot done.
Slab Building

Eighth grade is working on slab shoes. I demonstrated the process and the students brainstormed the first day. The second day the students began working. This was a big day. Many of the students decided to create their own template as enrichment. These templates were very good, but it is a lot more work. There were some problems where it worked better for students to just redo the step, but it went much faster the second time. On the third day I demonstrated adding detail. I also had to give a talk on clean up and making sure to get things done. If the classroom is not clean yet, they cannot leave. The next day the room was much better.
Slab Shoe

To work on:

  • Being okay with a little bit of noise as students are talking to desk partners (finding a good noise level for work time)
  • I need to work on being more concise with my directions when I ask for students to stop doing something
  • Work on putting instructions and steps on the board

Friday, September 26, 2014

Week Four

This week I took over the seventh grade class and continued with the eighth grade, so I am now at 50%!

I ALSO FINISHED MY EDTPA PORTFOLIO!!!

During my free time I am watching demo videos for the upcoming projects since I will be teaching clay to 6th, 7th, and 8th grade. Sixth will be making clay rattles, seventh slab buildings, and eighth slab shoes. I am working on my lesson plans to really be successful and helpful for me. I have step by step procedures and what I want to talk about and cover, questions I will ask during the demos, and step by step instructions for the demonstrations. These are longer demos, so I will demo one day and then the students will do the project I demonstrate the following day.

This week I also put up my display case of the Alexander Calder Wire Sculptures. It looks very nice on the black background. The students get to display an artist statement, a title/name card, and their wire sculpture either hanging or standing on the shelves.

The high school studio art is coming along. This week was very distracting both at the high and middle schools due to homecoming week. The high school students are learning that they really need to get going with their projects and finish up their work quicker, especially the AP students. I ran studio visits this week on Friday and the students shared one of their books about an artist or style that they are using for inspiration from their pieces.

Fifth grade finished their animal designs and then continued on to make patterned fish using found objects as stamps and tempura paint. The students got to choose four colors on black paper, then the fish was cut out. Next they are making clay fish dishes. My CT rolled out slabs, the students traced a fish pattern, and then used the found objects to make imprinted patterns in the clay. Then the students got a banding wheel, a paper bowl, draped the clay fish over the paper bowl, attached a coil or slab foot on the bottom, wrote their name on the bottom and then left it in the kiln room to dry.





Sixth grade is continuing to learn primary colors and mixing secondary and intermediate colors from the primaries in shapes on their Picasso inspired portraits. It was pretty impressive to hear some of the very low students recite the intermediate colors, when only a week or two ago on a pretest they did not know the primaries!

Seventh grade finished up their pinwheels and then I began setting up and teaching the students still lifes. Seventh grade has never done a still life before like this, so I had them travel to each still life, rotating clockwise to all four every 6-7 minutes. At the end of the day the students set out all four of their large marker drawings and talked to their partners and decided which was their favorite. The following day I did a demo on using a pencil as a tool for measurement and angles.

Eight grade finished their wire sculptures, Frank Stella pieces, and then I began teaching still life lessons. The eighth graders did still lifes last year, however they will be finishing them in a different way this year. The students chose which still life they would like to do after the demonstration and then continued to do a sketch of the composition of the still life they chose. Next I demonstrated the final pencil drawing and cleared up any confusion that came up during the sketch. The students continued on silently drawing their final piece. Friday I did a demonstration similarly to the seventh grade to teach how to use a pencil as a tool for measurements and angles.






This week was pretty chaotic, because so many things are being finished up and the students are all at different places in the projects. A lot of students are coming in during their resource time to finish up work that wasn't finished. Students are not punished for having things done on the ending date, because many of these students put extra time into certain areas to do an excellent job with their artwork. Teaching still lifes was successful. All of the students worked quietly during work time, which is completely necessary for still lifes because they students need to be so focused. During seventh grade I turned on the radio while they were working at each station. At the end of class my CT asked the students whether they liked working on still lifes with the radio on or if they liked it better silent. I did not realize that normally when she teaches this lesson she keeps the room silent. The results showed that most of the students liked working with the radio, but I was surprised that many students liked the silence as well. I asked eighth grade the same question, and most of them liked working with music as well. I am thinking about doing a little bit of both for the following drawing days.

Things to work on:
  • Quit saying "So..." so much
  • Relax while teaching
  • Take time for students to raise hands, and really look if anyone has his or her hand up

Friday, September 19, 2014

Week Three

While teaching my students, the relationships are really coming along. The students are treating me like I am the teacher, but also I can tell that the students are comfortable with me to talk and also listen to me. My CT taught these middle school students while she was working at the elementary school. This way she really knows the students difficulties and strengths. She is so helpful when I am working to know how to deal with situations with specific students.

This week I taught I lesson in the high school Studio Art Class on Photoshop. The students will be using it to edit photos if they decide to use photography as one of their credits. Many of the students are also interested in doing typography projects, so we use Photoshop to posterize the chosen image they want to use. I will then print these images out for the students when I have time to use the print facilities at Stout during my first Student Teaching Seminar. Talking to my CT after the lesson she told me that I use "So..." way too much. I also need to be concise with the words that I use and make sure I don't babble when things get quiet. I also should have asked the students at the end how much they learned during this lesson and what else they would have liked out of it. Before teaching I asked the students how many had used Photoshop and only one or two of them had. I also asked after if this lesson was helpful. They all agreed yes, but I should have asked for more specific feedback. The students got a lot done this week and their first project was due on Wednesday. All of the students had to turn something in even if they weren't finished, because my CT needed to get something in on the grade book. This way my CT will have enough grades in the book, but the students can also edit their work later and get it regraded and replaced in the grade book.

 
Photoshop Handout


Fifth grade finished up their patterned animal. The students completed drawing their animal, outlined it in sharpie, brainstormed six different patterns, and then glued it on a black piece of paper to matte it. This flowed very well off of the first lesson and basically just grew and added more of the principals and elements of art and design. This class is moving very slowly due to the large class and many of them are lower level. However, many of the students are finding success. There was one new student that got added into this class as well. He is very well behaved, but another body in the classroom does make it more crowded and is another pull on this class. Many of the students didn't quite understand how to matte their project correctly and my CT covered this in the Assessment Rubric. She introduced it to the class since this is the first of many that they will be filling out at the middle school. The students learned that if they made a mistake or could have done something better they can talk about this on on their assessment sheet and also fill in questions talking about what they really learned and what they thought was successful there. I also really enjoyed that my cooperating teaching really set her curriculum and works with her Professional Learning Community to focus on the principles and elements of art and design. She asked the students and pointed to the posters on the wall referring to which they covered during the first project and asked how they grew and what they learned during this project.

Sixth grade worked on Picasso paintings this week. My CT presented and described what cubism is and then had the students begin a color wheel using colored pencils. She was observed on Tuesday when the students did practice sketches and a demo of Picasso pieces. The students learned how to see the face from different planes and abstract the shapes of the human face. The students did four sketches, and then chose one with help form their partner, and then continued to draw out the final one larger. They continued to outline the piece with black sharpie. They finished their color wheels and then wrote where each color will go from the color wheel on their painting.




Seventh grade is continuing to work on their pinwheels. The students finished the Op Art, and then worked on the final, Georgia O'Keeffe water color lesson.

Eighth Grade this week was my edTPA lesson. Overall it went very well, and also went much better than my lesson from last Friday. Monday I reviewed the lesson I taught and also continued each day to make sure the students knew what they were doing step by step on the board. I gave the students time to talk to their partner and review vocabulary and then bring it back together afterwards. I found that the students really did learn the vocabulary words, but I also struggled because some of the students took more time with the project while others worked quickly and more minimally. There was success in both routes that the students went though and that's what I wanted, I wanted students to find their own solution to the project. I should have just offered for them to continue their Frank Stella project while they were on their free time instead of trying to push them to keep working and talking about what else they could to with the sculpture when they decided to be done. I also could have written out my reflection sheets better and have had them more clear. This was a great experience though and I feel much more confident and comfortable in front of the classroom now.

Things to work on and learnings:

  • I really liked how the curriculum is based around the principles and elements of art and design, and making sure the students know all of these.
  • I need to work on my questioning skills.
  • Do not say "So..." or "You guys..." use "next" or "8th grade class"
  • I also need to work on writing all of my objectives on the board before the lesson.
  • I find that observing my CT is much more purposeful now to compare my teaching to hers and to apply things that are successful and try different ways to do things.
  • Always state objectives as well, because even if I don't teach my lesson as well as I'd like to, the students will still know what to do.