"I'm
finished, now what do I do?" is a frequent topic of discussion on
the art education list serves. Below are suggestions from art educators
all over the country.
FOR MANY
GRADE LEVELS
From
Marty Reid: Drawing
Drawer Add
some of your own ideas.
From
Michal Austin: List
of Drawing Ideas Save
the file and print your own to post in your room. Add your own ideas for
number 16 and 68.
One
Day Project Ideas - Many levels
ELEMENTARY
Many of
these activities are good for middle school students, too.
From Lin
Altman: When someone finishes
early, I check their work to make sure they didn't rush through, then
they are allowed to "practice draw". I've found that if I call
it "free draw" they tend to not produce quality work. I keep a
large supply of photos from stock photography books and the kids
(2nd-5th) pick what they would like to work on. This is on going and the
drawings are kept in the art room until finished. K through 1st get
"draw starts".
"Draw Starts"
- First, I demonstrate on the white board. I choose a child to come up
and make a random mark on the board, then I make something out of
it (i.e. an animal, face, etc.). We do this when there is extra
time and the kids love to stump me. After they have the hang of
it, I give the a piece of paper and I make the mark. They must elaborate
and no snakes, worms or letters.
From
Roberta Dunkel: I too do this but
have used the term "free draw" but put a tag on it that it has
to be something in the room - not a rainbow (ho hum) or their name
written over and over etc. They have many drawers of magazine tear
outs on animals, people in sports, landscapes etc. to use for research.
I am a "saver" of all kinds so the classroom is a great place
to store my "research file". I will start calling that
"practice draw" - a much more "professional term".
Also I have art history books to read and write paragraphs for those who
always rush and have nothing to do but pester me and the kids in
the class. This "opportunity" seems to slow them down a
bit.
From
Sandy Bacon: I also have drawing books available. I
have some art games, puzzles and during are medieval lessons, wooden
blocks for building castles; even the older kids loved this. I
have loads of books in my art room library. If you have a
computer, perhaps some students could work with art software or cool
interactive website. I found a great
one for Leonardo during our visit to the Renaissance. I also have
a chore list for kids if I need help I also have my
archeological dig site research info, found objects, fossil rubbing
plates, real fossils, magnifying glass and little brushes (tons of stuff
related to the dig) available for the kids to look at and explore.
From
Linda Woods: We call those days
when they can draw anything they want all period long "free
draw." My kids love those days, but I don't do it very often.
I love to see what they do when they are free to draw what they want,
but some kids just don't have the motivation to stay busy all period
long, especially in 5th and 6th grade. It works best with younger
kids, in my opinion. I have free art days, rather than free draw
days, I suppose, as I have that magnet
sculpture game that is so awesome that a bunch of them love to play.
Some kids draw, some play with architecture games (stamp set and magnet architecture
from Metropolitan), some play my "who, what, where?" game,
which is a box filled with cards of three colors. The pink ones
are people, animals, or things, the green ones are action or verbs, and
the purple ones are places. So, if they draw a card of each color,
they get a wacky idea to illustrate, such as "A hula dancer (pink)
on a subway (purple) telling fortunes (green)." Other things
I have are "scrap monsters", where they use scraps off the
scrap cart, pretty much in the shapes they find them, to build monsters
or animals or people. Some kids like to build with paper, but NO
WEAPONS or airplanes. I have an origami box with instructional
books in it and paper. I have a Pictionary game. I have bins
with various things to draw in them, such as seashells, and lots of
little sculptures from the dollar store. I have a calligraphy bin
with pens in it. I have a bin with modeling clay that gets
recycled. And I have a huge list of suggestions for things to draw
on the inside of the cabinet door where these bins are stored. I
know we all try to keep them going as long as we can on what the
assignment is, sometimes repeat the assignment in smaller ways.
From Linda Woods: (From
a different post -some ideas repeated)- On those days when kids are
finished early, I have a lot of centers for them to work in if I can't
get them to work further in the medium we are using. My favorite
by far activity is a huge box of metal scraps from the hardware store,
as well as 4 sets of a scrap metal sculpture set that I dumped in with
the hardware store stuff...it's a magnet
sculpture activity...Endless creativity has come out of that box of
junk. It's about 100 bucks worth of metal junk, but it occupies kids
happily for hours, and I like that they aren't always doing "free
draw" for an activity when they are finished. I always see
about 4 to 6 kids who are DYING to share that box when they finish...not
always the same ones, either. I also keep modeling clay that must be
recycled throughout the year for an activity. What they make can go on
display, but when the clay in the free box diminishes, the sculptures
that have been on display get recycled. I have architectural stamp
sets from the Metropolitan, Architecture magnetic shapes boards,
computer architectural activities, and lots of other kid
sites that they can venture into...Switch Zoo, Super goo, Animated tessellations,
tons of books with great ideas to use with paper, etc. So, my
kids' free time is free choice, but there is a lot of meat to the
choices. Some choose to draw, others work 3-D, some are on the
computer, I have a courtyard with flowers and lots of trees right
outside my room, so a few kids might even be in the courtyard with
drawing boards. (I can watch them through the glass). There
are lots of other activities in my activity cabinet I have not
mentioned, as well as a LONG list of "what can I do when I'm
finished" posted inside that cabinet on the door. Note: Linda
also has materials on hand for sewing and friendship bracelets.
"Who?
What? When? Where?" Game from Linda Woods: Another
thing that you can have for your kids to do when finished is the
"who what where" game. Cut strips of paper in three
different colors. My strips are pink, green, and purple. My pink
strips have nouns or subjects on them. The green strips have
action. The purple strips have places or locations on them.
Kids draw one of each color strip to construct a wacky sentence.
Then they draw the sentence. For instance:
Pink: A polka dotted penguin
Green: Square dancing with hippo
Purple: in a submarine
You can add adjectives to your noun choices, you can add details to any
of your choices to make it more fun.
So, a list of pink choices might be:
A lazy lizard, A wild-eyed elephant, An affectionate alligator, A
sleeping frog, etc.
A list
of my green cards or strips might be:
waltzing with a whippet, standing on his head, shaking off drops of
water, eating a triple decker ice cream cone, etc.
A list of purple choices might be:
on a cruise ship, At a baseball game, in a toy store, on a beach at
sunset, in your bedroom, at a summer camp, on a diving board, etc.
Kids love this, especially younger ones. Sometimes they just want
to make up LONG strings of sentences and not draw anything. I
always try to push the drawing aspect of it. Some kids make a book
of silly stuff. Another thing to do with this is to encourage
detail. Kids can add anything else they wish to their drawing or
use it as simply an idea starter and not even use all of the words in
the sentence to draw their pictures. Some kids laugh so much at
the silly sayings that they want to rush their drawings to keep making
new combinations.
From Michal
Austin: I have several centers
for my elementary students - they are listed on my site under Art
Teachers' Pages.
From Michal's site: I have several different
centers on my cart. I store these in plastic shoe boxes that students
can take back to their desks.
Stamping Center: Contains an ink pad and several
different stamps. Some are from cheap children's kits found at the
dollar store, some are higher quality. 4 1/2x6" paper is included
in box.
Collage Center: Various types paper, stickers,
sequins, ribbons, etc. 1 1/4 oz. glue bottle and 4 1/2x6" white
paper included in box.
Chalkboard Center: Colored chalk, erasers, and 2
small chalkboards.
Markers Center: Assorted types of markers - Overwriters,
tropical, stampers, etc. 4 1/2x6" white paper included.
Origami Center: 6" square colored paper and origami
books. Students may trade me for true origami paper after they have
demonstrated mastery.
Imagination Station: Variety of coloring sheets
such as Optical Illusions, Famous Artworks, etc.
Art Games: Art puzzles, Tangoes, Izzy,
Architecture WonderBoard, etc.
Art Toys: Mini Etch-a-Sketch, Magnetic faces (the
ones with the face enclosed in plastic and you add "hair" with
the magnetic wand), optical illusion games (separate the rings type
games) etc.
Art Library: Books on several topics: Variety of
"How to Draw", Optical Illusion, Artists, I Spy, Related books
of interest
Not shown: Texture Center: Various textures for
rubbing including sandpaper, screen, mesh, texture rubbing plates. 4
1/2x6" paper included.
Modeling Center: Modeling clay, various tools
including mini rolling pin, "Crayola" tool kit, plastic table
cloth (appox. 2' square)
From Tracey: I
have the old tried and true "How to draw" book pile. I also
have a pile of "Anti-coloring book" type worksheets ready.
Cleaning for extra credit works with some kids (some of the
extra-squirrelly students are wiz-bang cleaners/organizers). Also I'm
lucky enough to have 4 computers in my classroom, so I use the
interactive Sanford Artedventure site or Painter 6 or Goo. The trick is
to have something that is absorbing but not more interesting than the
project you are doing, so they won't rush through to get to the extra
stuff.
From
Susan on Long Island: I
have a small table in my room and a small bookcase nearby. Both
are labeled "On-My-Own". On the shelves are a wide
variety of art activity books, art puzzles and games, non-firing clay,
books about famous artists, drawing paper, markers, watercolor paint and
brushes, building sticks, and a bag of those colorful foam sculpture
pieces. When a child is truly finished, or sometimes when there's
10 min. left in my 40 min. session, and I've finished a lesson, I tell
the child(ren) that he or she may go to the "On-My-Own" table.
The kids seem to love the independence and freedom to choose whatever
art activity they want to do
From
Ann Gray: I
have many activities in my room that the students can do when they
are finished. They have to show me their project first so that I can
verify that they have completed the rubric that I made for that
activity.
I have a laminated manila envelope with 60 ideas for drawings - a
student may pick 2 without looking, and choose their favorite. Years
ago, a teacher in another district gave us another idea. I have 2 more
laminated manila envelopes. One has nouns, and one has very creative
adjectives. A student picks one card from each, then has to illustrate
the phrase. My favorite example is a student years ago who drew the
words "frightened pickle." He drew a large bumpy dill pickle
with a frightened expression and brought it to show me. I asked him what
it was frightened of. He added a menacing looking upright vacuum cleaner
with a face where the light is, and said that the pickle was afraid that
the vacuum cleaner would suck him up! I have used these 2 envelopes when
I was doing cartooning, also.
I have many drawing books that I have collected over my 21 years of
teaching. There is always recyclable paper on a shelf nearby. THEY MAY
NOT TRACE! I have 2 crates of activities that I believe use skills
needed in art and across the curriculum. I have several puzzles that
range from easy to more difficult (I teach 1-5). I have several building
sets: Zoobs, plastic straws with connectors, and shapes that connect on
edges and in their centers. I have several sets of shapes
that can be laid out to make a picture, and then a rubbing or a drawing
can be made by copying the shapes. I have 2 tangram sets in plastic
boxes that came with sets of cards to show how to put the
shapes together. I have 2 magnetic sculpture sets. And, the favorite of
almost everyone, I have many bags of modeling clay. Three years ago one
of our grade levels donated plastic tote trays with low edges that they
no longer used. I have 20 of them, and the students must work inside of
them with the clay.
All of my activities are divided up so that more students can use them
(I usually have 40 in a class at a time). I used to keep them in Ziploc
bags, but they always tore and quit "zipping," so I'm trying
plastic containers with lids that I got from the dollar store this year.
Occasionally, if one group finishes an activity before the other groups
in their grade level, we will have a day where we all
use these activities.
A lot of these have taken me years to accumulate. I have a very small
budget, so I have either purchased them myself, or used money from our
PTA.
Alphabet
Books From Susan Michael (elementary
- middle school) The kids might enjoy creating alphabet books or number
books for younger kids. I made small journals out of regular
construction paper and used heavy weight construction paper for the
cover (half a sheet for 1 cover.) I punched small holes along the spine,
wrapped embroidery floss around and threaded through the holes and tied.
The pages were just slipped in under the embroidery floss, but could
also be strung through. A book about shapes could also be done. Some
simple dot to dot pictures might be fun too. This could be tied in with
a service project. It might also work to get the composition books, have
them decorate the cover, and let them do word family reading books.
Origami
- from Laurie Reber
(elementary - middle school) I have found that kids love to do origami.
I teach junior high school, so I am not sure how it would work with
really young ones, but if you had instructions with diagrams for very
simple designs for the really young ones and have the paper pre-cut,
they can just grab the instructions/paper and take it back to their
table to work on it. I am having my students make about 9 paper cranes
each (will be over 1800 total) and we are going to thread them onto
fishing line and hang them at the entry to our school on World Peace
Day. The cranes will be a visual reminder as they will represent the
number of US soldier fatalities in Iraq. The number keeps rising, so my
students work diligently to represent each one with their paper cranes.
See
also Art Games.
MIDDLE
SCHOOL
From
Becky Thornton: I let mine do an
extra credit replica of the art project (2D drawing) that we have just
done. They do this about 8 1/2 x 11" size. I give them extra
credit and tape it in my lesson plan book. It is nice to have student
examples there and they look good. Good for those who are looking
at plans!
From
Bill Sechler: I usually have the student do another drawing
or painting either in the same assignment specifications or allow for a
negotiated subject/medium choice provided their effort on the
"finished early" piece was acceptable. I do not allow students
to be off task or do their own thing instead of the assignment, if
quality is not in their skill range, quantity usually is. I also explain
that the time allowed for a project is for them to take full advantage
of, to do excellent work.
From
Robin Lea: I
have students create their own sketchbooks and for the last 12 pages or
so I include drawing exercises. This way any early finishers know
to work on exercises and not bug the others. You could have a
folder ready with these exercise. I have all sorts of exercises-
upside/down drawing, mirror image drawings, the Mona Brooks exercises
"Drawing with Children". You get the idea any exercise that
introduces or re-enforces their drawing skills.
From
Heather Leal: I
have a selection of how to draw books, some cartooning books and a
couple of computers with a game - The Logical Journey of the Zoombinis (
a cool game that teaches/reinforces logical thinking and math processes,
but without any math that is obvious). They also use it for drawing and
I have an old copy of Kid Pix that some enjoy - they remember it from
elementary. I also have lots of art books to look at. Usually if kids do
have extra time, it is only 5 or 10 minutes, so they really enjoy
looking at the art books. They also have sketchbooks to work in and I
usually post some kind of drawing idea for extra credit- like when
we returned from our vacation (we are year round) the extra credit was
to draw something they did on vacation OR draw something they wish they
could have done on vacation. I don't have any centers that are messy or
have materials that can be ruined if I am not paying attention
From
Kara LiCausi: When the students finish projects early in my
class I allow them to use the computer (Kid Pix and a variety of art
games from the web). There is also a list of sketchbook ideas posted in
my room that they can choose from...or they can draw whatever they like
in their sketchbooks. A favorite is allowing them to make their own
little sketchbooks...I provide all the materials and leave boxes of neat
scrap materials for them to collage with. I also find that Middle School
students are always very eager to help the art teacher...so whenever I
need help displaying or labeling artwork...they are always willing to
take on the task! We make Reference Binders in the beginning of the year
(as a homework assignment) where they have to make 10 separate subject
areas (such as flowers, cars, seascapes etc.) so that they have a
constant source of inspiration for their work. When they finish early,
the kids love looking through magazines or printing pictures off the
computer to add to their binders.
Collage
Portrait From Alanna Tait: At the beginning of the semester,
I make a large silhouette of each student by having them stand in front
of the board while the overhead projector produces a cast shadow and I
trace their profile on a large sheet of paper. When there is extra time,
the students make a collage of magazine pictures that represent them (ie.
different foods, sports, expressions). They enjoy doing this and
it works well for a quick fix for a substitute teacher.
From
YR Brown
A.
Interview teachers regarding their favorite artist or creative
endeavors. Make posters and post around the building.
B. Create work that could be sold for fundraisers: greeting cards,
wrapping paper, gift bags, gift tags, etc. You could advertise the
items for each season and take orders and/or sell items at the school
store.
C. Write books for primary age students that feature the students
artwork and/or an artist exemplars work.
D. Create a deck of Artist Trading Cards.
E. Create a computer graphics version of a work completed. Scan the work
in and use a computer
graphics paint or Photoshop program.
F.
Build in beginning, midpoint and end self assessment activities.
G. Use a reflective journal that would allow the learner to think about
the learning objectives, how
they will approach the lesson.
H. Require thumbnail sketches and/or mini-models per project.
I. Require medium test...creative play with a type of paint or drawing
medium. Have the learner document in pictures and words what
happens when using the medium.
J. Use Webquest as a means of building knowledge on a theme, artist or
movement.
K. Have the learner interview an art exemplar. This will build on
the content delivered in class and offer a real world connection to the
curriculum. For example I am planning a lesson where the learners
will use egg tempera. Through and internet search I connected with
the artist Don Jusko. He has agreed to be an expert that my students can
contact via email to ask questions about egg tempera and painting. If
studying a dead artist... have students write interview questions and
other student do the research to answer them.
L. My son was a very active student and I suggested to his
teachers that they allow him to read in class material that related to
what they were studying. We also asked that he be able to interview
staff about their experiences with certain material he was studying.
In our case we could have learners ask other teachers who their favorite
artist is or what art related activities do they participate in as an
adult. The information gleaned from these activities could be used
to publish a newsletter or a website or a series of posters, similar to
the "READ" posters we see in libraries. These activities
would be empowering to the learner and greatly advance the value of the
visual arts program in your school and district.
See
also Drawing
Drawer and Drawing
Ideas.
See
also Art Games.
HIGH
SCHOOL
Most high school teachers have sketchbook assignments the students work on.
Students write critiques of work completed or have research topics they
are working on. Students generally have an idea what the next project
will be and move on to the planning stages for that project.
Independent
Project for High School - Grace Hall
This is a project that
I've done for many many years. It has proven to be a great way to
keep kids interested, motivated, and on task the whole time they are
in the art room. This is what my students work on when they complete
their other assignments early. This is a way of allowing the student
to make choices about what and how they create art. The assignment
is given at the beginning of the year. They are assigned to do 2 or
more per term, the first one due at mid-term, the second at the
final. Students are encouraged to work on this project during any
free time they have in my class, because I say they have no free
time. If they do, then they have chosen to use time they could be
working on their project. There is also a space on my rubric about
using time wisely while in class. The Independent Project takes care
of all kinds of objectives! See the student solutions on Grace's
Artsonia Site (link will take a while to load - well worth the
wait)
Altered Books - from Pete
Lopeman
This
is a good 'free time during lesson' activity. Buy a few old
paperback novels. On the first page of the writing (not the title
page or frontispiece) you, the teacher, pick out a couple of words
on that page from any lines which make some sense and circle them.
Then students colour/shade/crosshatch draw a picture around the
words leaving them readable. The page should be completely filled
(apart from the few words chosen). The books must stay in class, and
can be picked up by any student to work on. Eventually, the book is
filled with drawings etc with oddly chosen words on each page. The
work can be linked with Tom Phillips' work 'A Humament'.