About this Site and Me

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Flower Mound, TX, United States
Hi, I am an artist, wife, mom, gamer and the Elementary Art Educator at Donald Elementary, a sweet and wonderful school in Flower Mound, TX (outside of Dallas). This is a great place to see how we are integrating studio habits with technology and interdisciplinary connections. I also love to share my "wisdom" (Re: Experiences. From mistakes.) about teaching Elementary Art. I love what I do, and I've been doing it for a long time. Creating and teaching Art is what I live for. Enjoy.
Showing posts with label zentangles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zentangles. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Cure for Standardized Testing Brain Fry: Zentangles?!

Here's a post from last year. Thought I would repost it as it as just as meaningful! Because I am a gluttonous ding dong, I didn't even believe myself.

Tried regular lessons yesterday=FAIL
Did this today=awesomeness

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Gotta admit-I was on the fence with Zentangles. I mean, they are fancy doodles, right? But STARR is upon us and that means crazy schedule changes and fried kids. I decided to try it out.

I explained how we want the fried side of the brain to take a nap, and how to bring out the side in charge of creativity and imagination.

I did this with all my 3-5th graders.  

This is what a fried 4th grade brain looks like after days of state testing. 


What my room sounds like: quiet with Pandora Calm station. So peaceful.

 No one talked talk for 45 minutes. 


 I loved the intense focus and concentration, the powerful attention to detail and the observation skills this project used.

 Kids reaction: BEST PROJECT EVER! Really???





They want to keep working on them. And I can't wait to display them :)










Friday, October 25, 2013

One point perspective: Flying Boxes

5th grade: Flying Boxes


This year, my students have demanded we focus on Observational Drawing Skills. Of course, this means introducing and reviewing the Laws of Perspective (which I start in Kinder--overlapping, horizon line, etc. Right?)

love love love teaching 1 point perspective! Once the kids get it, the glow on their faces is priceless.

Guiding Idea: Lines can create depth. Students used geometric lines to create flying or infinity boxes. They used Zentangles to create the shading. They could add color if desired.

Dylan is quite happy.
Students used Zentangles to fill in their value.


When they finished, they took pictures of their art with Snapseed for their e-portfolios, and then experimented with filters to manipulate their creation.




ooohhhh how coooooooool!

Friday, May 17, 2013

super close up: zentangles


I like to push my students to take a work of art as far as it can go. Who, me?

 Of course, knowing when to stop is a huge issue for artists. Case in point, check out these zentangles! I wasn't happy just letting them make a doodle, ooohhhhh nooooo, we had to blow it up!!!

This turned out to be a really cool project. I compared it to writing an essay. Imagine if you pulled one sentence or one thought from that essay and turned that into another story. Ah yeah! So that's where creativity comes from!






To teach my kids how to tell when they are finished, they are trained to look for the "strong" and "weak" areas of their piece. Once they have identified their strong areas, the parts they love, they are to leave it alone! So hard. Because we all want to keep working on that area! It's so pretty! Leave it alone.

Even harder is looking for the weak spots, the parts that we don't like. The parts that make us squirm or doubt or frustrate. You know what I am talking about! That's the part you get to work on.


When my 5th graders finished their zentangle ( my standardized testing week project), they used a viewfinder (a piece of paper with a rectangular hole) to find a strong composition. We reviewed some basics: Rule of 3, no splitting the middle, look for the strong, interesting areas that "read well". Yes, I talk this way to 10 year olds. They get it.

Using observational drawing skills, they re-drew what was in the viewfinder onto larger paper. I had Crayola Construction Paper Crayons, so many kids opted for black paper. Because those are cool! Some choose to work in marker on lighter paper. 

This is where "strong" and "weak" really came into play. Since this was so abstract, they really had to be honest with themselves about the process of their work. Very difficult concept, but they are 16 days from Middle School, sooo, yeah...

Once they finished, they attached the zentangle onto the paper, some choosing to create depth using scraps or cardboard.

The finished work is quite striking. And no two are alike in any way.