EDU 543 VAPA Lesson Plan Lesson Name and Content Area: Grade Level: 2nd
EDU 543 VAPA Lesson Plan Lesson Name and Content Area: Grade Level: 2nd
EDU 543 VAPA Lesson Plan Lesson Name and Content Area: Grade Level: 2nd
Describe the students in this class: Use your fieldwork school for
information. (view their web site and find supporting information)
The students that I have observed during Visual and Performing Arts lessons
are in the 2nd grade. Their average age is 7 years old. There are 16 boys and 15
girls in the classroom. The average socio-economic status in the class is
middle-class. The average income per household is $42, 506. Students in Mrs.
Banks classroom have a good teacher-student relationship. Mrs. Banks uses
shared power and responsibility in the classroom with the students. She
provides opportunities for her students to assume responsibility and to
participate in making decisions; she also encourages them to come to her or
turn to a shoulder partner with any questions they may have about a lesson, to
ensure that their questions get answered. Mrs. Banks uses Positive Behavior
Supports as a preventative approach to school discipline and student
misbehavior. She uses the token economy as her positive behavior support.
She passed out tickets that were redeemable for prizes at the student store in
her room. Mrs. Banks has minimal background experience in Visual Arts, but
enjoys drawing, and encourage is her students to do the same even if they feel
they are not good at drawing. She incorporates Visual Arts in her lessons as
often as possible. Some of the learning opportunities were during group
projects, collaborative learning, and field trips. For students in 2nd grade, the
Visual and Performing Arts developmental need is for students to perceive and
respond to works of art, objects in nature, events, and the environment; and
use the vocabulary of the Visual Arts to express their observations. Students
also need to continue to expand their understanding of the elements of art and
apply them as they learn to use basic tools and art-making processes, such as
printmaking and collage.
Students:
Immature
behavior
Aggressive
Behavior
Attention Deficit
Disorder
Issues:
Students not
understanding
the vocabulary
Students painting
one another
Students
Students
throwing
vegetables
Anticipated
Difficulties:
Students get
bored learning
about famous
artists.
Male students
may not be
interested in
painting with
vegetables.
History/Social Science
Content Standards
Biographies: People Who
Made a Difference
2.5 Students understand the
importance of individual
action and character and
explain
how heroes
from long ago and the
recent past have made a
difference in others' lives
(e.g., from
biographies of Abraham
Lincoln, Louis Pasteur,
Sitting Bull, George
Washington Carver,
Marie Curie, Albert Einstein,
Golda Meir, Jackie Robinson,
Sally Ride).
2. Students pose relevant
questions about events they
encounter in historical
documents, eyewitness
accounts, oral histories,
letters, diaries, artifacts,
photographs, maps,
artworks, and architecture.
Explanation:
This standard links to the
visual arts lesson because it
explains the importance of
people (artist) who made a
difference in history.
Students will know that patterns are found in art, nature and our
environment, and will be provided the opportunity to experience
recognition and construction of patterns.
Students will learn how the use of cool and warm colors can affect their
mood.
Students will identify the elements of line, shape, texture, and space in
Matisses masterpiece, Vegetables.
Vocabulary:
Design
Shape
Warm Colors Pattern
Mood
Cool Colors
Texture
Students know how the painting makes them feel, and demonstrates
this using key vocabulary words.
Students know what the design looks like and recognize patterns in the
painting, and demonstrate this during think-pair-share.
Students know how to use pattern in background, and warm or cool
color schemes, and demonstrates this on their completed vegetable
print.
Students can self-assess (critique) their artwork using a formal rubric.
Instructional Strategies:
The teacher will use direct instruction when teaching this lesson by explaining
and demonstrating the lesson before the student start working on the
assignment. The teacher will set clear cut goals and make sure that the
students can interpret and reiterate what he/she has explained. The teacher
will demonstrate what it is that the students need to do and learn to make sure
that students understand what we are trying to accomplish. Their assignments
will be in order of the lessons. These assignments will give students an ample
amount of time to practice what they have learned. By doing direct
instruction, the students will have a better understanding of the material being
presented to them and will more likely use their time wisely during the lessons.
After the lesson has been taught, the teacher will use a combination of whole
group discussion and guided discovery to increase the depth and breadth of
the lesson.
Step 2:
a. Enlist the aid of students in distributing the materials. Each student
will receive a cool
packet or a warm packet of colored paper pieces, a white
piece of construction paper, and a glue stick.
b. Once all the supplies are passed out and students are ready with
their smocks or
painting shirts on, demonstrate arranging pieces on a
page.
c. Working at their desks students will arrange their blocks of color to fit
on their page and glue them on. When they are ready for the next step they
will go to the workstations and do the printing. Students will wear their
smocks for this activity. Have them practice
dipping a vegetable into
paint and pressing firmly on the practice sheet.
d. When the students feel comfortable printing, have them create a
pattern onto the
blocked background using the vegetable stencils. Dont
forget to have students write
their names on their work.
Step 3:
Teaching Tip: Consider playing music during this time to enforce the
idea of rhythm in patterns.
(Etc.)
Student Work:
1. Students critique a reproduction of a masterpiece artwork, and create a
KWL Chart of what they know about art.
2. Students correlate vocabulary words with information on KWL chart,
and complete vocabulary definitions.
3. Students create their own vegetable pattern print using a packet of
colored paper pieces, a white piece of construction paper, a glue stick,
Tempera paints: yellow, orange, red, blue, green, violet, folded layers of
paper toweling, and cut vegetables: Bell Pepper, mushroom, squash,
carrot, cauliflower, potato, radish, etc.
4. At the end of the assignment, students will critique their artwork, and
the artwork of two other classmates using a formal rubric.
Student Grouping
For activity one, the lesson will begin with the teacher explaining the lesson in
a whole group discussion. The teacher will engage the students in teacher talk
and model completing the response and observations chart using think alouds,
with the assistance of the students. The teacher will end with whole group
discussion on Matisses masterpiece Vegetables.
For activity two, the lesson will begin with the teacher giving direct instruction
to the whole group. After instruction, the teacher will change to guided
discovery, as the students experiment and learn to make their own vegetable
prints.
Difficulties:
Solving Difficulties:
The teacher will go over the vocabulary with the students to give them
a better understanding. The teacher will also give students a worksheet
to give them greater knowledge of the vocabulary.
The teacher will demonstrate how to arrange their blocks of color to fit
on their page. Once students are ready to work on their own, the
teacher will arrange the blocks of color onto paper with the students,
using an Elmo or overhead projector for all students to see.
The teacher will demonstrate how to dip the vegetables into the paint
and press them firmly onto the paper. Once the students are ready to
work on their own, the teacher will dip the vegetables into the paint and
press them firmly onto the paper with the students, using an Elmo or
overhead projector for all students to see.
Adaptations:
The teacher will use an Elmo or overhead projector as he/she feels necessary. The teacher will front load
vocabulary and instructions to ELD and Special Needs students. The teacher will also write the directions on
the board and give them orally so that all students can comprehend.
ELD Learner:
Rationale:
ELD students work best when they are grouped with students who are fluent in
English. Grouping them this way encourages ELD students to speak English.
ELD students will not get much accomplished if they are grouped together, and
they will most likely not understand the material being taught. Therefore, they
need someone who can interpret or better explain the information to them. If
necessary, the teacher will rearrange students to better accommodate the ELD
students. The teacher will also give students handouts with the vocabulary and
instructions so that they can go over them beforehand and use concrete
examples to activate their background knowledge.
Rationale:
The teacher must remember there is a reason for every behavior. And although
many behaviors can be the result of a students family life or peers, often
behavior issues are the result of a student struggling in school. These students
do not respond well to reasoning, physical punishment, excessive isolation,
taking away privileges and social reinforcement, and verbal/social rewards.
Therefore, the teacher should apply some academic strategies that have been
shown to shape student behavior in powerful and positive ways. The teacher
should use behavior management strategies such as:
Reflection:
While planning instruction for a diverse population in this content, I have learned to respect and appreciate
the different cultural and stylistic differences and become aware of unconscious assumptions and behaviors
that may influence our interactions. It has also increased my instructional creativity, innovation, and problemsolving skills. I have learned that in order to properly conduct a visual and performing arts lesson plan all
students need to be included. Having students learn about different cultures gives them an appreciation for
the visual arts. Having a lesson that integrates with other subject areas broadens the students knowledge
base and makes them think in greater depth and breadth. This guides students to think outside of the box,
and have an open mind about things that are different from themselves.
The area of the lesson plan that was easiest for me was the student work section. I enjoyed being creative
and designing my own worksheets for the students to complete. Designing and creating your own worksheet
can be cheaper and more efficient for you and the students, because you get to input the information you feel
your students should master on the worksheets.
The area of the lesson plan that I feel that I need knowledge/skill in order to present the lesson in a proficient
matter to my students is in the actual are of art. My basic art skills are very weak, and I would need to have
time to practice before presenting an art lesson to the students. A little more knowledge and input in this area
would better my classroom instruction for my students.
Use form below for finding out about your students prior to planning
your lessons/fieldwork
Skill needed for TPA 1 and 2
Getting to know your students - Work Backwards: What questions can you ask to
get the information in this case study? Turn each statement into a question and
provide a source or a person you could ask to get this information.
Chan is a 10-year-old fourth-grade English learner. He is from Cambodia and lives with a single mother, two younger
brothers, and a baby sister. His mother works long hours and is often not home when he returns from school. His extended
family in the United States includes one aunt and two grown cousins and his grandparents. Chans family immigrated to
the United States two years ago. His written Cambodian language is mostly forgotten, but he is to communicate with his
family orally.
Chan reads English two years below grade level. He has difficulty using correct grammar when writing or speaking. Chan
is a happy and social boy who enjoys friends. He is well liked and works well in small groups. He is seldom or never
absent from school. The CELDT results indicate an overall score in the beginner to early intermediate range, and he has
been identified as an English learner.