Doodle 4 Google 2013 Launches for Students

Google is encouraging K - 12 students to go wild with their artistic ideas and create some all new Google logo Doodles. 

This year Google are asking kids to visualize their best day ever in a Artistic manner that incorporates the Google logo.

The K-12 student who wins will find all their effort worth the while.  Along with seeing their drawing become the homepage doodle for a day, the top-ranking child gets a $50,000 technology grant for their school, a $30,000 college scholarship, a Chromebook and a Wacom tablet to foster that now-obvious creative talent. Budding young artists need to get their entries to Google's real or virtual doorsteps by March 22nd.

Just think, if you are the winner your artwork will be seen by billions around the world.

Creative Halloween Ideas for Crafty Teachers

With Halloween fast approaching you might like to get your kids in the 'Spooky' mood by getting craft with them.

Scribbled has some of the most original Halloween ideas on the web that not only look great but will keep your kids engaged in the classroom.

All of the tasks have great photo tutorials and are very simple to follow.

Take a look at Scribbled's Halloween craft ideas here.

 

Why we should value art more in the curriculum

As we become more dependent on data driven results in maths and literacy to gauge our kid’s intelligence and academic performance the first area to generally see budget and time cuts is the arts. However, there are compelling reasons why art should remain an important part of a K -12 curricula even if it means sacrificing in other academic and extracurricular areas.

 Plato mentions art schools as early as 400 BC.  Art education became popular in the late 19th and early 20th century and continues to be taught in public and public schools today.  Art education was retained as a part of the core curriculum in the “No Child Left Behind Act” in the United States.  However, unlike other areas of the curriculum, schools are not required to assess students in the arts, nor are they required to report on their progress.  Therefore, many schools are decreasing the amount of time that students spend studying the arts.

 

Why Is Art Important?

 An art education curriculum is important to students at all grade levels.  At the elementary school level, art education helps students enhance their language development.  Students are encouraged to describe their art and the art of others. This requires them to use descriptive words and to develop critical linguistic skills.

 

At the high school level a solid foundation in the arts can lead to different work opportunities.  A student may decide to become a traditional painter, sculptor or woodworker or follow a more modern career path and become a graphic artist or a web designer.

 

At all levels, art education teaches students to be creative, to be thoughtful and to take pride in their work and it teaches them how to accept and use constructive criticism.  It also reminds makes them more aware and mindful of their surroundings. 

 

How to Fund Art Education?

 As with most academic subjects, the majority of the funding for art education comes from the local school budget.  However, school boards, principals and concerned parents should be aware that there are other sources of funding available such as an art education grants.

 It may be useful to consult your local board of education to see if there are any state grants available to help offset the cost of the art teacher or art supplies.

 Additional art education grants are available through private organizations.  IN the United States the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) promotes art education for all students, not just those with exceptional talent.  The organization believes that art is very important to the education of all children from prekindergarten through high school.

 

Art Education Curriculum

 There are many different art education curricula available.  Each art education curriculum takes a different approach to achieve much the same goals.  There is no one curriculum that is right for art education across all schools just as there is no one algebra curriculum that works in every high school.

 Local art teachers and principals will need to work together to study different art curricula and art education resources to determine which is the right fit for their school.

 

Opportunities for Serious Artists

 While art education is undoubtedly important for all students, talented and serious artists often need more art education than their school can provide.  Accordingly, many communities have established charter schools or other special high schools that focus on the arts.  The budding artists are able to spend more time intensely studying their craft while still receiving all of the core academic education that their peers in the regular high school receive.

 

When schools decide their annual budgets they undoubtedly face difficult challenges because there is a set amount of money and many worthwhile programs which require funding.  Yet, it is the responsibility of those school boards to make sure that students receive the best education possible.  Art education becomes important in that regard as it helps create confident, insightful and sensitive children who become excellent students and productive members of the adult society.

A Paintbrush that works on the iPad

The iPad has one of the sharpest, most responsive touch screens on the planet, and its art apps are incredible. They’re like blank canvases with Photoshop powering the backend. Mistakes can be made and fixed. Experimentations are a filter away. Art is malleable at a whole new tactile level.

“All this magic and still we are expected to finger paint,” writes the team from Artist Hardware. They’re a long-standing art company responsible for some of the most popular paint brushes on the market today. And they recently fundraised a new project on Kickstarter. It’s called the Sensu, and it’s a “paintbrush” that works on the iPad’s capacitive screen. It goes on sale this May for $40.

Click here for the full article.

Discover the Masterpieces of the world with 'Google Art Project."

Google Art Project is an online platform through which the public can access high-resolution images of artworks housed in the initiative’s partner museums. The project was launched in 2011, in cooperation with 17 international museums, including the Tate GalleryLondon; the Metropolitan Museum of ArtNew York City; and the UffiziFlorence.

 

The platform enables students to virtually tour partner museums’ galleries, explore physical and contextual information provided about artworks, and compile their own virtual collection. The "walk-through" feature of the project uses Google's Street View technology.  The virtual images of artworks were reproduced at extremely high quality, and each partner museum selected one artwork to be captured as a Gigapixel image (with over 1 billion pixels).

 

With great resources for educators there is literally no limit to what can be done with this in the classroom. 

Google art Project will never substitute a trip to the Louvre in Paris but it certainly will make you far more appreciative and understanding of what is in front of you if you are lucky enough to get there in person.

 

Below is a video that  critiques a famous painting from the 1870's that you could use with students in your history, literacy or art class to great use.

Access Google Art Project here.

Great Art & Craft ideas for Teachers and Students

Scribbled.com.au is a highly creative site for those who want to learn about innovative art and craft ideas.   

Scribbled is packed with activities to suit all abilities but best of all everything is laid in in step-by-step directions with photographs to support them.  There are a number of themed ideas for all major events of the year with new crafts and activities being added each week.

Teachers will also love the video tutorials and printables to jazz up their classrooms.  There are also  activities and games particularly aimed at younger children.

Take a look at scribbled today and release some of your creative energy.

Great Art & Craft ideas for Teachers and Students

Scribbled.com.au is a highly creative site for those who want to learn about innovative art and craft ideas.   

Scribbled is packed with activities to suit all abilities but best of all everything is laid in in step-by-step directions with photographs to support them.  There are a number of themed ideas for all major events of the year with new crafts and activities being added each week.

Teachers will also love the video tutorials and printables to jazz up their classrooms.  There are also  activities and games particularly aimed at younger children.

Take a look at scribbled today and release some of your creative energy.

Science Lesson Plan: Ideas in Motion: Illustrating Basic Science Concepts

Thanks to By JENNIFER CUTRARO AND HOLLY EPSTEIN OJALVO from the NY Times for this brilliant Lesson

Overview | What can we learn from comics or graphic novels? How do visual representations of science concepts aid our understanding of them? In this lesson, students explore different ways of representing topics in science. They address whether entertainment can also be educational, and write their own comic strips that explain science concepts. Read more…