Unit: Heroes: By: Kyle Fleet Grade Level: High School Rationale
Unit: Heroes: By: Kyle Fleet Grade Level: High School Rationale
Unit: Heroes: By: Kyle Fleet Grade Level: High School Rationale
Key Concepts:
Heroes are not perfect
Heroes stand for something
Heroes make a difference
Heroes can be unnoticed
Heroes help
Heroes can be false
Heroes may have abilities others want
Heroes can be fantasy
Personal heroes can be depictions of one’s self image
Heroes beat the odds
Major Themes:
False Hero: Politician
Death
Men/women with a dream or vision
Make believe hero
Unsung hero
Confronting conflict
Essential Questions:
How do heroes make a difference?
What qualities do heroes have?
Who are heroes?
Can a hero go unnoticed?
Are heroes celebrities?
How can we use our technology sources to be heroic?
What can we do to be heroic?
Unit Objectives:
• Students will learn about themselves and what is important to them by looking at
heroes.
• Students will explore current events and roles heroes are playing in society.
• Students will look back on their own lives and show appreciation for a hero from
their past.
• Students will observe the role of the media and technology on celebrities and
heroes and relate it to their own lives.
Integrated Studies
• Students will be looking into the mass media and it role on celebrities and heroes.
• This lesson touches on history through lessons on aesthetics and critique.
LESSON ONE
Behavioral Objectives:
1. Students will give examples of someone they think of as a hero.
2. Students will write a short essay about their definition of what defines a hero.
3. Students will examine the power art has to create an alter ego and how that
relates to the creation of “superheroes”.
4. Students will illustrate one superhero power that would be most beneficial to
them and their world.
Materials / Supplies
• Paints
• Markers
• Paper
• Old Magazines
• Glue
• Scissors
Assessment
When the students are all done they will swap illustrations with the person next to
them and work through the assessment worksheet for this lesson.
SUPERHERO CRITIQUE
Behavioral Objectives:
1. Students will read and discuss the essay “Media and the Rise of Celebrity
Culture” by Amy Henderson.
2. Students will discuss the role of media and technology on fame.
3. Through researching Time’s Top 100 People the students will gain knowledge of
how people are using their fame to make a difference.
Materials / Supplies
• “THE TIME 100” Handout
• Student access to the Internet or a pile of printed articles on “THE TIME
100” heroes and pioneers.
• “Celebrity / Hero presentation.”
Hero Identification:_______________________________________
Behavioral Objectives:
1. Students will discuss the role of publicity on heroism.
2. Students will relate their own lives and their role in society to the “bigger picture”
of celebrity Heroes.
3. The students will discuss the role of modern technology on their availability to
publicity.
4. Students will make a poster using collage and a list of ways their access to
technology can be used for heroism.
Materials / Supplies
• Paints
• Colored Pencils
• Markers
• Scissors
• Glue
• Poster Board
• Scrap Magazines
Behavioral Objectives:
1. Students will look at monumental works of art and describe what they see.
2. Students will gain knowledge of the subject being represented through
researching the history around it.
3. The students will discuss/critique a specific piece.
4. Students will illustrate one heroic attribute of a person from their own lives with
out using the actual person.
Materials / Supplies
• Clay
Instructional Strategies / Procedure
1. Start the class off by showing the students “Ladder for Booker T. Washington”
and the “Vietnam Memorial.” Ask them a few questions to get them questioning
he design choices the artists made.
• What do you think the ladder represents?
• Why is it shaped the way it is?
• Why is it wooden and not metal or plastic?
• Is the Vietnam memorial an appropriate choice?
• Why do you think Maya Lin made it just a wall? Why a wall that gets
bigger and smaller?
• Why is the Vietnam memorial built into the ground?
2. Pass out a couple articles about Booker T. Washington and the war in Vietnam.
Have the kids read through them in order to gain a little background information.
3. Next show them “Ladder for Booker T. Washington” and the “Vietnam
Memorial” again.
4. Ask them the same questions from #2 to make them rethink the artists design
choices in relation to their new knowledge.
5. Have the students think of one hero from their lives and represent them in a
formal sculpture.
6. The sculpture will be molded out of clay and should fit in a 6 in. x 6 in. box. (This
is only a size requirement. They don’t have to actually put their sculpture into a
box when they are done.)
• The sculpture will also have to have five design choices that represent
a characteristic of the hero they chose and be able to defend their
choices in a group critique.
7. When the students are done with the production of their sculptures they will get
together in a group critique and present their pieces.
Assessment
The students will receive the rubric for this activity before they begin the
production of their sculptures.
Rubric: Formal Monument
NAME____________________________
0 1 2 3
Thought Couldn’t give Had one – Only had Gave
Process any logical three of the
four meaningful
explanations five design
meaningful explanations
for design choices design for five
choices design choices
Critique Showed no Very little Participated Participated
interest in participation at least constructively
participating in the group twice during in the
in critique critique critique discussion at
least three
times.
Thought Process______
Critique ______
TOTAL ______ /6
LESSON FIVE
Lesson Idea: Confronting Conflict - Heroes confront conflict, some are won, some are
lost, and some are ongoing
Behavioral Objectives:
1. Through the use of an image presentation students will begin to understand some
of the cultural conflicts that have gone on and are going on today.
2. Students will understand the usefulness of art and how artists are using it today to
confront certain conflicts influencing them.
Assessment
This project will have a total of ten points:
TOTAL………..10pt
LESSON SIX
Behavioral Objectives:
1) Students will look at artworks that bring attention to the general public or a people
in need of a voice.
2) Students will be reminded that every body has a voice and the ability to make a
difference.
3) Students will give recognition to an unsung hero from their life that is making a
difference or has made a difference.
Assessment
Students should be able to defend five design choices they made by writing a list
of the choices they made and in one sentence describe why.
LESSON SEVEN
Behavioral Objectives:
1. Students will look at works by Andy Warhol and discuss “flashbulb memories.”
2. Students will stop and think about how they want to be remembered.
CRITIC’S IDENTIFICATION____________________
ARTIST’S IDENTIFICATION________________________
7. List your five design choices and what they are saying
about what’s going on in your flashbulb memory. 2pt.