Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Assessment in Art Education


Assessment is key in education and the reformation of education. It helps educators dictate goals and create lessons. Being in a middle school classroom for my fieldwork I can definitely see why assessment is important. Not only because my mentor teacher has discussed it with me but also just observing the classroom and watching her grade projects. She has explained to me what she looks out for while assessing the students work. She even does a ‘do now’ at the beginning of class and at the end of class she tries to leave time for review.  And during these two times, she asks questions and gives students participation points for answering questions. This is a way that helps her assess students at the end of the quarter. I really like how she uses that technique and I would definitely consider that for when I have a classroom.
I never realized how a portfolio could be used for assessment. I also really love this technique for a classroom. A portfolio will hold all of the information a teacher, principal, parents and the student need to know about their artwork. And they can take it with them all throughout school. It would hold the students artwork, artist statement, table of contents of what is inside the portfolio, a cd with works on it, research materials, anything you can think of really.
Formative assessments are very useful in a classroom. It allows a less pressured, free flowing conversation to happen between students and teacher. It allows students to get feedback on their artwork without the pressure of it being graded yet and allows students to go back and fix things that maybe need changing.
I have also noticed that both formative assessment and summative assessment are used in the classroom for my fieldwork. Summative assessment is used at the end of the class and the beginning of each new day. My mentor teacher tries to ask students review questions to see if the students have retained any new information they have learned.
Overall I have noticed that in order to assess a students work or progress you have to explain what you are going to be looking at so the student has the opportunity to get a good mark. For example if you’re assessing a project and take points off for things the student hasn’t done but the teacher hasn’t explained what the requirements were fully. My mentor teacher also has grading rubrics for each project. She prints out a numbered list of the exact things she is going to be looking for when she grades the projects. Its clarification, clarification, clarification.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Arhtzee

Welcome to Arhtzee!
By Kim, Danielle, Gina, and Natalie



Arhtzhee is a game for teachers to aid in lesson planning. It is a fun, portable, easy game!

Players: 1-4

Octadie Key
Red - Big Ideas
Yellow - Post-Modern Principles
Green - Material Exploration
Blue - Assessment Strategies

Object of the Game
The object of Toss-A-Game is to toss the octadie to create a lesson plan incorporating the four resulting sub-categories that you roll.  The game can be played individually or in a group.

Rules
1.  To begin, place the four octadie in the box.
2.  Shake and roll octadie.
3.  After rolling, you may choose to use the four sub-categories displayed on top, or you can re-roll any or all of the octadie.
4.  You may only roll a total of three times.  The result of the third roll is final.
5.  You may use the four sub-categories rolled at any point; you do not have to use all three rolls.





Our teacher example from our results from playing Arhtzee!


And the great thing about this game is that you can alter the octadie in a way that fits your specific curriculum.  Here are the templates to make the dice!





Wednesday, March 7, 2012

NAEA Convention 2012 NYC

The NAEA convention last weekend was so much fun. I met a bunch of people and got tons of stuff. Everything from lesson plans to supplies and samples. The people were all so nice there and very informative and helpful. I attended a couple of the discussions, Chuck Close for example. I had a really hard time hearing him but the little I did hear I believe he was talking about his career and how he stumbled upon art and has done it ever since. I also attended a summer art workshop in which the speaker, Sara Cress, told us about a summer art activities program she put together for younger students (pk-5th grade i think) and her high school students who were thinking about becoming art teachers, were able to volunteer and put this on their resume and see if they actually enjoyed teaching children. This is her website http://sarahcress.com/ and you just have to click on 'presentations' on the top blue/teal area and you can scroll down and see the summer art activities and everything she did to make it come to life.