Name- Shirley Boudreaux
TITLE OF LESSON-
Microorganism
GRADE LEVEL - 4th
NATIONAL VISUAL ARTS STANDARDS-
(MA:
Cr1.1.4)Anchor Standard 1: Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work.
Enduring Understanding: Media arts ideas, works, and processes are shaped by the imagination, creative processes, and by experiences, both within and outside of the arts. Essential Question(s): How do media artists generate ideas? How can ideas for media arts productions be formed and developed to be effective and original?
Enduring Understanding: Media arts ideas, works, and processes are shaped by the imagination, creative processes, and by experiences, both within and outside of the arts. Essential Question(s): How do media artists generate ideas? How can ideas for media arts productions be formed and developed to be effective and original?
Conceive:
Conceive of original artistic goals for media artworks using a variety of
creative methods, such as brainstorming and modeling.
(MA:
Cr3.1.4)Anchor Standard 3: Refine and complete artistic work.
Enduring Understanding: The forming, integration, and refinement of aesthetic components, principles, and processes creates purpose, meaning, and artistic quality in media artworks. Essential Question(s): What is required to produce a media artwork that conveys purpose, meaning, and artistic quality? How do media artist’s improve/refine their work?
Enduring Understanding: The forming, integration, and refinement of aesthetic components, principles, and processes creates purpose, meaning, and artistic quality in media artworks. Essential Question(s): What is required to produce a media artwork that conveys purpose, meaning, and artistic quality? How do media artist’s improve/refine their work?
Construct:
a.
Structure and arrange various content and components to convey purpose and
meaning in different media arts productions, applying sets of associated
principles, such as balance and contrast. b. Demonstrate intentional effect in
refining media artworks, emphasizing elements for a purpose.
(MA: Re7.1.4) Anchor Standard 7: Perceive
and analyze artistic work
Enduring Understanding: Identifying the qualities and characteristics of media artworks improves one's artistic appreciation and production. Essential Question(s): How do we 'read' media artworks and discern their relational components? How do media artworks function to convey meaning and manage audience experience?
Enduring Understanding: Identifying the qualities and characteristics of media artworks improves one's artistic appreciation and production. Essential Question(s): How do we 'read' media artworks and discern their relational components? How do media artworks function to convey meaning and manage audience experience?
Perceive:
a.
Identify, describe, and explain how messages are created by components in media
artworks. b. Identify, describe, and explain how various forms, methods, and
styles in media artworks manage audience experience.
(MA:
Re8.1.4) Anchor Standard 8: Interpret intent and meaning in
artistic work.
Enduring Understanding: Interpretation and appreciation require consideration of the intent, form, and context of the media and artwork. Essential Question(s): How do people relate to and interpret media artworks?
Enduring Understanding: Interpretation and appreciation require consideration of the intent, form, and context of the media and artwork. Essential Question(s): How do people relate to and interpret media artworks?
Interpret:
Determine
and explain reactions and interpretations to a variety of media artworks,
considering their purpose and context.
(MA:
Cn10.1.4) Anchor Standard 10: Synthesize and relate knowledge and
personal experiences to make art.
Enduring Understanding: Media artworks synthesize meaning and form cultural experience.
Essential Question(s): How do we relate knowledge and experiences to understanding and making media artworks? How do we learn about and create meaning through producing media artwork.
Enduring Understanding: Media artworks synthesize meaning and form cultural experience.
Essential Question(s): How do we relate knowledge and experiences to understanding and making media artworks? How do we learn about and create meaning through producing media artwork.
Synthesize:
a. Examine and use personal and external resources, such as interests,
research, and cultural understanding, to create media artworks. b. Examine and
show how media artworks form meanings, situations, and/or cultural experiences,
such as online spaces.
(MA:
Cn11.1.4) Anchor Standard 11: Relate artistic ideas and works with
societal, cultural, and historical context to deepen understanding
GRADE
LEVEL EXPECTATIONS (GLEs)-
Big Idea 2: PS 2 Interacting With Others in Ways
That Respect Individual and Group Differences C. Personal Responsibility in
Relationships Identify and practice the skills used to compromise in a
variety of situations. DOK: Level 3
Big Idea
4: AD 4 Applying Skills Needed for Educational Achievement A. Improvement of
Academic. Self-concept Leading to Life-long Learning Apply study skills and test-
taking strategies to improve academic achievement. DOK: Level 3
B.
Self-management for Life- long Learning Apply time-management and organizational techniques
necessary for assignments and/or task completion. DOK Level 3
RATIONALE and GOALS FOR
THIS LESSON-
Having an understanding of
physical and behavioral adaptations
that help plants and animals survive in a given environment. Being able to see
what microorganism look like and identify them in a drawing. This classification
is important to helping scientists clearly identify any species. To study,
observe, and microorganism concentrated conservation. It also assists as a way
of remembering and differentiating the types of microorganism, classifying the
relationship between different microorganisms, and providing precise names for
them. Gives students a strong background in indentifying what a microorganism
is.
ENDURING BIG IDEA:
Without basic microorganism there would be no life,
without life, man does not exist. This is an investigation into living microorganism,
so that each student has an understanding of what and microorganism
looks like. Through the use of visual images, language arts, movement and
science. Students will discover what a microorganism might look like through their
own artwork.
Students will sketch the landscape of their ecosystem microorganism. Students will find a component of their
ecosystem and study it closely; by sketching it in detail, then writing
about it.
ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS –
What is a microorganism?
Where dose your microorganism come from and in what ecosystem?
KNOWLEDGE BASE AND KEY
CONCEPTS-
Term -
"organism" (from Greek
ὀργανισμός, organisms, from ὄργανον, organon, i.e. "Any
living structure, such as a plant, animal, fungus or bacterium, capable of
growth and reproduction".
Understand what
a microorganism looks like in its true size.
Understand how
artists create artwork within the fiber world.
OBJECTIVES-
1. The student will create
a true size microorganism from a fiber media.
2. VOCABULARY- ecosystems,
organism, sketch, landscape, survive, population, community, plant, animal,
producer, consumer, herbivore, carnivore, prey, bacteria, plant, insect,
extinct, unicellular organism, muiticellular organism, microscopic,
microorganisms, cells, tissues, organs, plastids, algae, fungi, animals, life
span, evolution, reproduction, horizontal gene and transfer.
3. Understand how artist
create artwork within the fiber world.
LESSON VIGNETTE
1.
Introducing the students to the lesson of living microorganism
through a Powtoon presentation that sends them on a mission, just like “Mission
Impossible”, your mission is to create a living microorganism and introduce them to the
artist, and what the final project could look like. (5 Minutes)
2. Concluding with a VTS lesson of Katy Stone’s
artwork. (15 Minutes)
3. Artist work (Shirley Boudreaux, Katy Stone, and
L (5 – 10 Minutes)
3.
Make an art journal out of copy paper and floss. (30 Minutes)
4.
They will sit down and draw out what they investigated in their science
class about organisms. Then add
vocabulary words and definitions. (20 Minutes)
5. Final – They will go back to the group mat. Then, they will, by a show of hands,
tell what was their favorite part of the lesson or what they enjoyed about it.
(15 Minutes)
6. Clean Up (10 Minutes)
ASSESSMENTS/RUBRICS:
The students will go back to the group mat. Then, they will, by a show of hands,
tell what was their favorite part of the lesson or what they enjoyed about it.
They will tell their partner, one at a time, about their own microorganism
art journal. After each student has taken their turn.
After they have shared their art journal, they will
write about it in their art journal about what they experienced in this lesson.
This is using formative assessment by looking at each other’s work and summative assessment by writing
about the project.
STUDENT ENGAGEMENT AND
ADAPTATIONS FOR SPECIAL NEEDS -
Students with special needs might need help with
drawing out their microorganism.
A larger pencil can be used to help with holding it. They may need help with
identifying what a microorganism
looks like and the wording. They can use a computer for the written
assignments. They may have extra time to finish their drawing and for the
investigation of their project. A teacher or aide can help with pouring the
paint.
MATERIALS, TEACHING
RESOURCES/REFERENCES-
Teaching resources:
The fiber artists are Shirley Boudreaux, Leisa
Rich, and Katy Stone. These
three artists show the students three different viewpoints of what a microorganism
looks like. These artists work in
the fiber world.
List of materials for this project:
Powtoon, power point, pencils, copy paper and color
pencils.
TEACHER REFLECTION:
If the students are able to reflect on this project
in a positive manner, then I would consider that to be a success. Each student shows that he/she has
pulled information from the arts and sciences to where they have an
understanding of what a microorganism
is. They also understand the relationship between
being inside and/or outside the class by utilizing their critical thinking skills on their field trip and in
their homeroom science class.
List of indicators
They can write, talk and draw about what they
learned through their art making process. The use of a pencil to draw a microorganism
is evidence of hand to eye coordination. Working with paint colors that related
to living microorganism
and having an understanding of what fabric can be used for.
Hi Shirley!,
ReplyDeleteI'm impressed with how in depth your lesson plan is, very thorough! I love that I can see some Inquiry over Subject for this lesson through cross curricular. The filed trip makes a terrific jumping point, and I think having other teachers present is a fantastic way to build community not only with your students but with your staff as well. I am curious about the timeline of this lesson, how long you would plan it to take?
C Noltkamper, this lesson is over four days, 90 minutes class period, with one week of drying time between week two and three.
ReplyDeleteShirley,
ReplyDeleteI love you are blurring the cross curricular boundary. Fabulous! As always, you have gone above and beyond. Its great you exposed your students to VTS, that in and of itself is a fabulous strategy for all sorts of things.
Your lesson investigates many things and allowing it to spread out and take more time is probably a good thing. Fourth graders are awesome and can do fabulously amazing deep work. I always allot more time for exploring process so there is time for formative discussion, small group and eventually whole group. (With work in-between) The kids take away a lot when they share and question each other. It is during these discussions you can also really employ the “why” questioning. What did you choose that color? Why is this important? (Or, conversely, I sometimes ask “why not?)
I would encourage you to steer away form asking about “favorite parts” of the lesson,(at least as an opener) and invite a deeper reflective questions like “What is something you discovered?” Or, What can you teach you parents tonight about_________? It is here where they unveil their thinking and share with you insights they've gleaned and things they've learned. The focus is a different one… favorite tends to be biased by “fun” or “cool” Nothing wrong with that, but it is not as likely to unearth deeper thinking.
BTW, LOVE you are also sharing your work with them and modeling your own artistry!!!!