tell me a story
DESCRIPTION
Tell Me a Story An Interdisciplinary Unit connecting English Language Arts with Visual Art for 8 th graders. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Joseph Cornell "Ideals are like stars; you will not succeed in touching them with your hands. But like the seafaring man on the desert of waters, you choose them as your guides, and following them you will reach your destiny."--Carl Schurz, Address, Faneuil Hall, Boston, April 18, 1859. From the series Great Ideas of Western Man. 1958. Mixed Media.
Tell Me a Story
An Interdisciplinary Unit connecting English Language Arts
with Visual Art for 8th graders
Eighth grade is a turning point in the life of a young adolescent. Middle school is coming to an end and the students will soon be entering High School. The student becomes a teenager in the eighth grade and attempts to leave “childhood” behind with this new title. In this same sense, it is a time when children’s stories are no longer read, and a different kind of story begins to be appreciated. Students study myths, biographies, and works of fiction geared to send a mature message to young adults. This unit is designed to accompany the English Language Arts curriculum and teach visual methods to portray the different kinds of stories the students have been reading. It examines the many ways in which artists, both of fine and written arts, tell stories.
Betye Saar, The Liberation of Aunt Jemima, 1972, Mixed Media Assemblage
ENDURING UNDERSTANDINGS• Artists and writers reflect on
their personal histories when creating meaningful works of art.
• Often equally engaged in the process of writing as they are in painting, drawing, or sculpting, contemporary artists are inspired by both visual and literary sources.
• Stories are told in both visual and written modes.ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS
• What makes art meaningful?• What inspires contemporary
artists?• How can artists tell stories?
Marmaduke, Brad and Paul Anderson, 2011
Unit ObjectivesLesson 1: Students will be able to define myths and fables and express them visually.
Lesson 2: Students will analyze character development in fiction writing and develop their own comic strip.
Lesson 3: Students will be able to differentiate between assemblage and collage and combine the two techniques to create personal narratives in a box.
Overarching: Students will demonstrate knowledge of the different ways artists andwriters have chosen to tell stories in both the contemporary world and in the past aswell as gain the skills to tell their ownstories using visual dialogue.
Joseph Cornell, Bel Echo Gruyere, 1939, mixed media.
State Standards Addressed
MASSACHUSETTS VISUAL ARTS FRAMEWORKS1. Methods, materials and techniques. Students will demonstrate knowledgeof the methods, materials and techniques unique to the visual arts.2. Elements and principles of design. Students will demonstrate knowledgeof the elements and principles of design.6. Purposes of the arts. Students will describe the purposes for which works of dance, music, theatre, visual arts and architecture were and are created, and, when appropriate, interpret their meanings.7. Roles of artists in communities. Students will describe the roles of artists, patrons, cultural organizations, and arts institutions in societies of the past and present.10. Interdisciplinary Connections. Students will apply their knowledge of the arts to the study of English language arts, foreign languages, health, history and social science, mathematics and science and technology/engineering.
MASSACHUSETTS ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS FRAMEWORKS9. Making Connections. Students will deepen their understanding of a literary or non-literary work by relating it to its contemporary context or historical background.13. Nonfiction. Students will identify, analyze, and apply knowledge of the purposes, structure, and elements of nonfiction or informational materials and provide evidence from the text to support their understanding.16. Myths, Traditional Narrative, and Classical Literature. Students will identify, analyze, and apply knowledge of the themes, structure, and elements of myths, traditional narratives, and classical literature and provide evidence from the text to support their understanding.
Lesson 1:Illustrating Myths
& Fables
Lesson 2:Fiction in Four
Frames
Lesson 3:My Story; My Box
Tell Me a Story
Kara Walker, Ancient Greek,
Roman & European
works
Finding the Moral
of the Story
Watercolor
Illustration
The Absolutely True Diary of a
Part Time Indian, Trenton Doyle Hancock
& Marvel Comics
Inventing a
Character
Creating a four-frame comic strip
Joseph Cornell &
Betye Saar
Collecting symbolic objects & images
Combining collage &
assemblage: My Box
Lesson Overviews1: Illustrating Myths and
Fables
Maurice Denis, Orpheus and Eurydice, 1910, Oil on Linen
In this lesson, students will discover how to
illustrate a scene from a myth or fable though
investigating artworks from our past. They will
explore the moralistic quality of such stories
and bring out the moral/message in their
own watercolor painting.
Botticelli, La Primavera, 1445, tempera on wood
Linda Kay, Aesop’s Fable: The Wolf and The Kid, 2009,
watercolor
Lesson Overviews2: Fiction in Four Frames
In this lesson, students will investigate qualities of interesting characters from comic strips and books and use the knowledge to invent their own exceptional characterin a four-framefictitious comic strip.
Bill Watterson, Calvin and Hobbes, 2011, web comic
Charles M. Shultz, Peanuts, comic strip
Lesson Overviews3: My Story; My Box
In this lesson students will reflect on a story
about themselves that they will share by
creating an assemblage/collage
combination inside of a box the way that artists Betye Saar and Joseph
Cornell have done in the past.
Becky Peabody, Memories of Last Summer, 2006, Mixed Media
Becki Smith, Choose Wisely, 2009, mixed media
Frank Turek, Lonely Man, 2007, mixed media
Conclusion & Assessment
Linda Kay, Aesop’s Fable: The Wolf and The Kid, 2009, Watercolor
Students will be able to represent and understand different methods of story telling in both visual and written means. They will revisit the genres of fable, myth, narratives, and fiction that they explored in language arts. Students will be assessed based on their knowledge, effort, behavior, and understanding. This will be decided by class observation and discussion as well as by personal interaction with the teacher.
“Tell Me A Story” Unit Grading RubricExcellent Good Average Needs
Improvement
Illustrating Myths & Fables
Fiction in Four Frames
My Story; My Box
Effort & Behavior
Extra Comments:
Empty Boxes will be filled with comments from teacher in the appropriate column.