Wednesday, December 23, 2015



Above: Finished Elephants drying out and waiting to be fired.




             



Elephants: Part 2 

Time is a valuable thing in the classroom, as I am learning. 



Since we ran out of time the last class period, Mrs. Butikofer kindly made space in her schedule for me to come finish up the project with the kids 2 weeks later.  We were tight for time, between spelling tests, recess, and early dismissal, so she set up a table in the corner of the room and I worked with 5 students at a time, slowly rotating through all of them.  Having a small group like that was easy to manage, and it built anticipation in the kids who had to wait their turn.  This made them eager to work on it and not dawdle or fool around.  
I gave the students the option to stay in from recess to work on their elephants, and a handful did!  Any 2nd grader who it willing to give up recess for an art project must really be excited for it. I love seeing their enthusiasm!
What I’ve learned…
However, if there’s one thing I’ve learned from this project, it’s plan ahead for time.  I miscalculated how long it would take to finish the elephants, and if I could do the project over I would have done a simpler project that could be done in an hour and a half, like a rolled out python or something.   Elephants are a very hard project, what with inserting wet newspaper, scoring, slipping, attaching, and forming.  I was pleased to see that 2nd graders could do the project, and I was very proud of them, it is just taking a long time.  
That being said, once the new school year starts, we will start a new habitat project covering the Arctic.   During that time we will squeeze in time to paint the elephants.  I can’t wait to see how they turn out!
In the mean time, enjoy Christmas Break and your loved ones!


Merry Christmas Everyone and a Happy New Year!

Above: Still drying...

1 comment:

  1. Kelli,

    I loved how the elephants turned out! They are so cute and each one carries a unique personality. Although it took a long time to finish, I think the techniques the students learned were invaluable. If you think about it, the first thing a child thinks to make with play dough is a snake because it's so easy! If you had done something simpler like that, you might have been done quicker, but the children would not have had such an enriching encounter with the arts. I think you did a wonderful job!

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