2 Soul Sisters Art Ed is a blog dedicated to art teachers seeking innovative and practical art education ideas. We offer a variety of engaging lesson plans, complete with photos and examples to inspire your classroom activities. From creative projects to effective teaching strategies, our blog provides valuable resources to enhance art lessons and foster student creativity. Explore our site for fresh, easy-to-implement art projects and tips to make art education both enjoyable and educational.
Below you will find other blogs about this lesson from years past. It is always fun to recycle a lesson that is successful. Why should we use mixed media? It helps kids think not only outside the box but as if their was no box at all.
Thinking outside the box (also thinking out of the box or thinking beyond the box and, especially in Australia, thinking outside the square) is a metaphor that means to think differently, unconventionally, or from a new perspective. This phrase often refers to novel or creative thinking.
To think inside the box. is to think in a traditional fashion, bound by old, nonfunctional, or limiting structures, rules, or practices. (As if thinking or creativity were confined or limited by a figurative box. Compare this with think outside the box.)
Where are you with your box? How creative can you get?
This lesson can be tied to any Hispanic Heritage Month lesson. It is a good bridge between art and Spanish in linking the curriculums together is a creative way.
Roosters are fun! At least, the Soul Sisters think so. We have blogged about roosters in the past. Click HERE for more rooster art projects!
These roosters by 2nd Grade were nabbed off Art Project for Kids. Click HERE for the "how to" information. Kathy Barbro is the founder of Art Project for Kids. Look HERE for her amazing blog.
Directions:
We drew the roosters.
We used oil pastels on the roosters.
We painted the background with Dick Blick Liquid Watercolors. Click HERE for information on Dick Blick Watercolors. They are the best!
Have a L👀K!
I am watching Forrest Gump as I blog. Forrest Gump was a great movie. The music is beyond awesome. Classic. Here is a song from the soundtrack. Gotta ❤.
What is Visual Notetaking? Visual notetaking or sketchnoting is a process of representing ideas non-linguistically. (That's a fancy of way of saying, “drawing pictures.”) Visual notetaking can include concept mapping, but also more artistic ways of visually capturing and representing ideas.
The Visual Note Taking Strategy is defined as the process of representing information non-linguistically. This means through drawings or pictures. It can be simple using sketches or doodles or more complex using Mind mapping or Concept Maps as representations.
Sketchnoting is a growing trend in education; it is basically an alternative to traditional note-taking. Rather than making bullet points or writing a narrative, you draw or doodle the key themes from a presentation or session.
Visual notes are graphic outlines that help us record and learn new information. According to Mike Rohde, author of one of the most well-known handbooks in this area, sketchnotes are a form of visual note-taking that aims to capture big ideas using a combination of text, images and other graphic elements.
Now that we have that covered. Check out this link:
This article was so good, I wanted to share in the blog post text:
By Sherrill Knezel
December 28, 2016
The Power of Visual Notetaking
As teachers, we may never know the breadth or depth of impact we have on our students, but sometimes we are fortunate enough to learn that we have shared something valuable with our colleagues. It is even more exciting to find out that a colleague has, in turn, shared that technique or tool with her students.
I have been a passionate advocate for visual notetaking in the classroom since I stumbled upon author and designer Mike Rohde’s book, The Sketchnote Handbook, about two years ago. As an elementary art specialist, I saw that, after incorporating the book’s techniques into my classroom, using simple images to synthesize content and demonstrate understanding came naturally to students. Kids learn to draw before they write, and pictures are how they make sense of the world.
A previous generation referred to this form of notetaking as doodling, but that is starting to change. One reason this effective tool—which uses a combination of images and text to make meaning of verbal or text-based information—hasn’t made its way into many teachers’ hands is that the data-driven testing craze has usurped the time and energy to explore or try any new creative literacy strategies. With new math and reading curricula rolled out frequently, districts barely have time to train teachers the basics, much less explore creative literacy tools.
I decided to affect change within my immediate circle of influence and utilize these visual skills on a daily basis with my elementary art students. For the past two years, I have offered professional development workshops on visual notetaking and literacy to colleagues in my district to increase awareness of this literacy tool. These collaborations span across content areas and grade levels—with teachers in special education, teachers in social studies, and teachers in elementary through high school.
The Science of Memory
The success of visual notetaking is backed by science. The Picture Superiority Effect refers to the phenomenon that we remember pictures better and longer than words or text. If students read text alone, three days later they only remember 10 percent of the information—but adding a picture to the text increases recall to 65 percent. And dual-coding theory says that our brains process and store visual information differently than verbal or text-based information. When students use images and text in notetaking, it gives them two different ways to pull up the information, doubling their chances of recall.
Yet, when I first learned about visual notes, a teacher in my building made a student redo multiple worksheets for "doodling" in the margins, and other students would echo that they would get in trouble with their teacher for drawing.
Why aren’t more teachers providing students with this option? And just as importantly, why are students actually being reprimanded for their natural instinct to record ideas visually?
One recent experience helped me realize the powerful ripple effect of teacher leadership and collaboration. I met Ms. G., who teaches English at the Juvenile Detention Center in Wauwatosa, Wis., during a notetaking workshop I led this summer. She invited me to her classroom to teach her students the technique in a simple way.
A dozen teenagers settled in and opened Beverley Naidoo’s Out Of Bounds, an anthology of short stories about apartheid. For this class, they would read aloud and draw out the storyline on whiteboards. Ms. G. gently encouraged students—there were all levels of reading ability, ranging from elementary to high school—when they stumbled on a name or difficult word. When she stopped the reader, she asked, “What just happened, and what pictures could we draw to show that?”
In notes left on the board from the previous class, I could see that Ms. G. taught her students several techniques from my workshop. They had gotten the hang of using literal images to communicate complex concepts and emotions. They had made effective use of stick figures to show relationships between characters and used words and arrows to add clarity and meaning to their drawings. They had even used different fonts to stress the importance of main concepts and word bubbles to show who was saying what or to give meaning or detail to an idea.
For those 45 minutes, the marker became a transfer of power and a voice in the classroom. Most of the students offered to read a section of the book out loud or suggested visuals that would bring life to the text. Personal expression, demonstration of comprehension, and confident engagement were visible through a dry-erase marker. Students who would have not been able to engage with the text in other ways could still do so through the drawings used to represent concepts. Developing visual vocabulary is just like increasing verbal or textual vocabulary—it takes practice to move it into working memory.
Visualizing Success
The class left me with a reminder that visual notetaking could have infinite possibilities for so many students—minority students, students on the autistic spectrum, students with dysgraphia or dyslexia, English-language learners—if we could just put this tool into their toolboxes as another means to demonstrate their understanding.
Can a simple literacy tool like visual notetaking support learning in the classroom and even increase personal agency for incarcerated students who struggle academically? Ms. G. provides proof: Since that first class, she has used visual notes as an integral part of helping her students learn vocabulary from the books they read and give students the option to respond to a writing prompt with a visual answer first to help them think more deeply and communicate more clearly. One English-language learner who struggled with written definitions of vocabulary drew out his understanding and was able to visually communicate the definitions correctly.
When teaching students to use visual notes, it is so important to foster a safe space for students to take risks and try. In workshops, I find that the main obstacle for teachers is their fear of drawing. Teachers use the "but-I-can’t-even-draw-a-stick-figure" excuse, but I encourage them and let them know that it is actually better if they draw poorly because it isn’t about art—it is about ideas. If a teacher is brave enough to step up to the board and draw poorly while still communicating what she needs to relay, it gives students permission to do the same.
The author Margaret J. Wheatly writes, "A leader is one who ... has more faith in people than they do, and ... who holds opportunities open long enough for their competence to re-emerge." This is true for teacher and student leadership as well. We should strive to show our students and colleagues that we will hold space for them until their competence and creativity emerge. Visual notetaking is one small but powerful way to enable students—and their teachers—to take the lead.
Images provided by the author.
Sherrill Knezel is a K-12 art educator and graphic recorder who has worked in the Wauwatosa School District in Wisconsin since 1992. She teaches at the elementary level and is a member of the Center for Teaching Quality Collaboratory. This essay originated at a CTQ Storytelling Retreat in June.
I think that article connects on many levels of instruction and what the possibilities to integrating art is throughout all curriculums.
The Visual Notes below are from last school year semester exams. I think this was a great way for us to end the school year in art class. We collaborated for a week in class and shared the visuals.
Hope you enjoyed this blog and learned a little that might be of some help to your students. The examples were created by multiple students. I do love the color coded notes. I do that in teaching. I use certain colors for specific classes that I teach.