Comly TAP 2010: An Interdisciplinary project exploring literacy, science, social studies, and art with the 3rd Graders of Comly School, their teacher Mrs. O'Donnell, and fiber artist Marie Elcin in collaboration with the Philadelphia Arts in Education Partnership and funded by the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts
Showing posts with label Student Understanding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Student Understanding. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
River Model Prep
To prepare the students for our river model project and incorporate some reading practice, Cindy found a great 2-page story about 3 kids making a relief map model out of dough. A lot of art vocabulary was used, like modeling and representation, and Cindy defined dough in a very tactile way that should have them sparked for working with the model magic on Friday! Cindy and the guided reading specialist pulled aside particular kids for guided reading groups to help them through the story while I kept an eye on class progress, answered any vocab questions, and redirected some of them to where to find the answers for the comprehension questions at the end. It was interesting to see how so many of them gloss over or write simple/easy answers, but when prodded or questioned to think about the "why" then they are able to provide a more in-depth answer. There's a lot of copying going on, even artistically, and I wonder right now if it's just a strategy that helps the below-level students keep up and how much to allow it.
While we waited for students to finish the reading we passed out sketchbooks and gave kids time to color some of the sketches they had done on our trips. It was nice to revisit the experience that way. Some of the kids debated about what they saw when/where.
The kids had plenty of time to draw a design for their river model, which I hope will make the creation of it on Friday an easier process. It allowed for some problem-solving and checking of student understanding.
I think we're ready to make some models!
While we waited for students to finish the reading we passed out sketchbooks and gave kids time to color some of the sketches they had done on our trips. It was nice to revisit the experience that way. Some of the kids debated about what they saw when/where.
With everyone ready, I asked the kids what the reading was about (making a model out of clay). I asked them if they remembered seeing any other models when we were on our trips (the swing bridge at the canals, the Delaware river map at Penn's Landing, and the pollution watershed model at Riverbend). I told them we would be making our own river models and so we needed to brainstorm what important things should be on the model. With "Parts of a River" written on the board the kids helped fill in the spidergram (water, land, tributaries, mountains, source, mouth, animals, plants, roads, houses, bridges, boats, buildings, urban, suburban, rural).
When we got to the last 3 words about community types a student hopped up and brought me a chart they had made with Cindy showing urban, suburban, and rural in concentric rings with pictograms of what one might see in each spot and how crowded or spread out they'd be (I love seeing how much drawing Cindy uses in her lessons- is this a new thing? Even in the math lesson I saw at the end she asked the kids which way it was easiest to solve the problem-- and stressed drawing a picture). This gave us a quick review and opportunity to talk about communities we've seen and experienced, and compare the kids' more suburban life with my city life.
With that I told the students that we'd be making our own river models that share all the physical river features (and we circled source, mouth, land, river, tributary, and meander) but that they'd be able to choose whether their model showed a rural, suburban or urban area. I passed out the mdf boards we'll be using as a base for the children to trace in their sketchbooks and make a plan. I asked them what we call that plan an artist makes before they start a project (Sketch!). The kids had plenty of time to draw a design for their river model, which I hope will make the creation of it on Friday an easier process. It allowed for some problem-solving and checking of student understanding.
I think we're ready to make some models!
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Literacy Goals are Moving Along!
Yesterday, after spending 2 weeks doing DRA's (Developmental Reading Assessments), I see some good progress! After 8 weeks in school, the children that I gave the assessments to had made considerable gains. One student went up 2 levels! Using art as a basis for teaching writing skills and supplementing those with Guided Reading (small group reading at their level focusing on comprehension skills), is starting to show some definite progress in both reading and writing. We have completed 4 pieces of writing, from graphic organizer to rough draft to edited copy. From those 4 pieces, all students have gained at least 2 points (10%) improvement. This improvement in only 8 weeks is very impressive to me. I have been teaching third grade for 7 years, and am quite impresssed. Most students have raised their scores even more. We are beginning our 5th piece tomorrow, with a compare/ contrast essay on the Nile River and the Amazon River. Both rivers have been stitched on the students Map of the World Fabric Piece.
We have done 2 Main Idea/Detail activities, Teacher modeled first, then student completed independently. The first was on a piece of non-fiction on Rivers, the second on Canals. This literature follows our theme. Informational writing follows this format also, however the students find it much easier to recognize the Main Idea when they have written it themselves! This intricate web of daily activities wrapped around our Teaching Artist and activities is starting to blossom, and the evidence is slowly emerging!
We have done 2 Main Idea/Detail activities, Teacher modeled first, then student completed independently. The first was on a piece of non-fiction on Rivers, the second on Canals. This literature follows our theme. Informational writing follows this format also, however the students find it much easier to recognize the Main Idea when they have written it themselves! This intricate web of daily activities wrapped around our Teaching Artist and activities is starting to blossom, and the evidence is slowly emerging!
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Saturday, October 9, 2010
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Day 4: Furtraders Narrative ;Cindy's Response
As usual, Marie has done an incredible job of capturing the essence of the lesson in her writing (the previous blog)! I will add that the students noticed a similarity in one of the Van Gogh paintings to The Gleaners. That observation led to a discussion that Van Gogh and Millet were from the same area, and may have seen some of the same types of activities in the community around them. We noticed that the "mood" in Van gogh's similar painting was much 'darker' and briefly discussed the artist's purpose of what he wanted the viewer to see or experience. This observation gave the students an experience in "Author's Purpose", another reading goal we haven't yet explored.
I'd like to note that this experience of writing, brainstorming and recognizing Problem/Solution is a skill not usually fully understood this early in the Third Grade school year. We have only been together for a little more than 3 weeks, and the students seem to have mastered the concept. This will help the students immensely in their reading comprehension. I had never thought to use illustrations or artworks as a springboard for this concept, what an incredible learning experience for me!
As is always the case, time is the enemy in the classroom! There's never enough of it. After Marie left, the students wrote out their Problem/Solutions based on The Furtraders, and they were great! EVERY student exhibited understanding of the concept. I collected them, assessed them, and they are ready to be glued into their sketchbooks next to the foursquare they had used to organize their thoughts. Remember, the foursquare also required them to write and choose who the characters were and the setting, another reading goal!
I'd like to note that this experience of writing, brainstorming and recognizing Problem/Solution is a skill not usually fully understood this early in the Third Grade school year. We have only been together for a little more than 3 weeks, and the students seem to have mastered the concept. This will help the students immensely in their reading comprehension. I had never thought to use illustrations or artworks as a springboard for this concept, what an incredible learning experience for me!
As is always the case, time is the enemy in the classroom! There's never enough of it. After Marie left, the students wrote out their Problem/Solutions based on The Furtraders, and they were great! EVERY student exhibited understanding of the concept. I collected them, assessed them, and they are ready to be glued into their sketchbooks next to the foursquare they had used to organize their thoughts. Remember, the foursquare also required them to write and choose who the characters were and the setting, another reading goal!