Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts

Monday, October 20, 2014

Treehouse Fun

Hi Friends,
Look what I found
I found a treehouse.
I found a big treehouse.
I found a big, tall treehouse.
I found a big, tall treehouse in the forest.
I found a big, tall treehouse in the forest by a creek.
This is not Jack and Annie's treehouse.
Peanut is not in this treehouse.
This is not Jack and Annie's treehouse.
This treehouse is not in Frog Creek.
This is not Jack and Annie's treehouse.
I don't see the Amazon River.
This is not Jack and Annie's treehouse.
See you soon,
Madame Villeneuve


Les citrouilles en automne

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Thursday, November 28, 2013

Pop Art/Graphic Novels

What is Pop Art?
Pop Art is a form of art that depicts objects or scenes from everyday life and uses techniques of commercial art and popular illustration.  It emerged in the mid-1950s in Britain and in the late 1950s in the United States.
One of the most notable pop artists
 was Andy Warhol (1928-1987).  
Another notable pop artist was
 Roy Lichtenstein (1923-1997).

Take a mini-tour of the Stedelijk Museum (click on the play symbol)in Amsterdam, Netherlands.  This museum is an international museum dedicated to modern and contemporary art and design.
Click Stedelijk to visit the online museum site.

Click pop art to see some pop art images.
Click comics to see an art idea.

To Make a Word Pop for a Graphic Novel

Choose a word (click word) that pops (click pops) like:
POWER   VAROOM  POP  BANG  SPLAT
WOW  STOP  WHAM  ZAP   POW

Print the word artfully. 
Create a detailed "bubble or frame" around it.  The bubble or frame might be soft like a cloud with curved lines or sharp like an explosion with short straight lines.  
Add other meaningful details if you like.
Choose primary colors to complete your "word".

 "Pop Art" 
From Madame Cann's Class









Saturday, March 23, 2013

Catch a Star

Grandmaman had a wonderful morning with a group of very talented four year old artists.  We began the morning with a story about a little boy who wanted very much to catch his very own star, "How to Catch a Star" by Oliver Jeffers.
Logan listens to the story and makes a plan of how to catch his very own star.
Logan prepares his paper by choosing where to put his star stickers, pushing them on and then painting the watercolour paper with water.
Logan's "Catch a Star"painting

Brief steps for the project:
Tape watercolour paper to a board to create a border.
Lightly draw a horizon or beach line (curvy or straight).
Using the edge of a tealight for wax, trace over the horizon line.
Place a large star sticker where the sand will be.
Place a variety of star stickers in the sky. 
(Choose a number and size of the stars to focus on.)
Using the edge of a tealight for wax,  make wax streaks in the sky for shooting stars.
Paint the sky with water, then paint over with your choice of sky colours with watercolour paint (wet on wet technique).
Paint the sand area with water, then paint over with your choice of sand colours with watercolour paint (wet on wet technique).  Sprinkle salt on sand.
When the painting is dry remove the star stickers and the tape.

It is January 2014 now and Sadie invited Grandmaman to her nursery school to paint stars. These little artists were three, four or five years old. Before we began our painting we read the story "How to Catch a Star" by "Oliver Jeffers" and then we sang "a twinkle song" to the tune of "Frère Jacques".
Twinkle, twinkle,
Twinkle, twinkle,
Little stars,
Little stars,
Catch me if you can,
Catch me if you can,
In the sand,
In the sand!
Sadie paints around her stars.
Sadie proudly shows off her "Catch a Star" painting.
Today we used larger stars with a focus on the number five.
We talked about the different formations we could place our stars.

Oliver, at 18 months decided that he would like to create a star painting as well.  He chose big stars and little stars and with a little bit of help from Grandmaman to take the backing off the stickers he placed them on the watercolour paper.  Once he had placed them on the paper, Oliver had fun pushing hard on them to make sure they were well "stuck".

 Next Oliver took a tealight (wax) and made marks all over the paper to create shooting stars
 (wax resist technique).
 
Finally Oliver painted the whole paper with water.  Once the paper was wet he painted some areas with yellow watercolour and other areas with different hues of blue(wet on wet technique)

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

A Crooked Christmas Tree

This art project is a wonderful way to extend learning after reading "The Little Crooked Christmas Tree" written by Michael Cutting and illustrated by Ron Broda.

Art Project: Christmas Card

1.        Prepare watercolour paper by cutting or tearing to size (ripple watercolour paper is a good choice).  The card can either be a single sheet to be attached to a card later on or a folded piece of watercolour paper.
2.       Tape to a board using green painter’s tape. 
3.       Demonstrate each step of the activity before the children do each step.
4.       With a pencil sketch a curved line the length that you want the tree.
5.       Give each child a length of thin green painter’s tape.  Attach small pieces of tape to the curved line from top to bottom.  The pieces will get progressively longer.  At the bottom attach a trunk.
6.      With a tealight rub a section at the bottom of the card which will resist the paint and become snow.
7.       Put a circle sticker in the sky which will be a full moon.
8.       With a large watercolour brush paint the entire card with clean water.  Before it dries paint the card with the desired colour.  I used blue but other colours could be used.  More than one colour can be used but choose carefully.  Also if two colours are used the children need to be extra careful not to paint, paint, paint, paint over and over.  Muddy paint can be made  this way.
9.       Sprinkle salt if desired.
10.    Let dry then take off all the tape and the circle sticker.


Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Owen and Mzee

The friendship between Owen,
  a young hippopotamus,
 and Mzee (mm-ZAY), 
a giant tortoise, 
began after the tsunami that ocurred in the Indian Ocean on December 26, 2004.

Today, Owen and Mzee live together 
at Haller Park, 
an animal sanctuary outside 
of Mombasa, Kenya, Africa.


Click "Play" below, to see the story of Owen and Mzee as illustrated by the kindergarten and grade two students at Ecole Oriole Park School.



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 Click Mzée and Owen to go to a website to find out more about Owen and Mzee


Here are some poems written and illustrated by grade two students at Oriole Park School.

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