Mrs. Gandara’s class has been studying Utah wildlife and
environments. I printed out a variety of Utah animals with a description of
what they look like, their environment, and how they behave. The students got to choose which animal they
wanted to learn about and they were asked to read the description and highlight
any sentence that described the environment that their animal lives in. Then we reviewed different types Utah
Environments such as Deserts, Forests, and Wetlands. I was impressed with how much the students
knew.
Today the students were assigned to draw a landscape of an
environment that their animal belongs in.
I asked them to specifically include plants that would be found in their
environment. I showed a few examples of
specific plants that are found in Utah for Deserts, Forests, and Wetlands. I just focused on the ones mentioned in the 4th
grade science standards.
I reviewed some of the landscape drawing techniques that we
had been over a few weeks ago and walked them through drawing horizon lines,
object placement, scale, and some coloring techniques. We just used colored pencils and crayons
today, but they will add watercolor to their landscapes next week.
Utah Landscapes
Subject Concepts
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Art Concepts
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Content
Covered:
Reading
Informational Text
Describing
Utah environments
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Content
Covered:
Perspective
drawing
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State Standards & Objectives (USOE/UEN):
Reading:
Informational Text Standard 1
Refer to details and examples
in a text when explaining what the text says explicitly and when drawing
inferences from the text.
Reading:
Informational Text Standard 3
Explain
events, procedures, ideas, or concepts in a historical, scientific, or
technical text, including what happened and why, based on specific
information in the text.
Science Standard 5, Objective 1
b. Describe Utah's wetlands (e.g., river, lake,
stream, and marsh areas where water is a major feature of the environment)
forests (e.g., oak, pine, aspen, juniper areas where trees are a major
feature of the environment), and deserts (e.g., areas where the lack of water
provided an environment where plants needing little water are a major feature
of the environment).
e. create models of wetlands, forests, and
deserts.
Objective 2
a. Identify common plants and animals that inhabit
Utah's forests, wetlands, and deserts.
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State
Standards & Objectives (USOE/UEN):
Visual
Arts Standard 2,Objective 1
a.
Discuss how
height placement creates an illusion of depth in artworks.
d. Identify evidence of depth, shadow, color, and mood in
artwork.
Objective
2
a.
Draw the base of a distant object higher up on the drawing page than the
bases of objects that are meant to be in the foreground.
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Learning
Outcomes:
·
The student will be able to read informational text and pick out
information about a specific animal’s environment.
·
The student will be able to describe Utah’s wetlands, forests, and
deserts.
·
The students will be able to identify common plants and animals that
inhabit Utah.
·
The student will be able to refer to the details and examples of a
specific environment given in informational text and translate that
information into a visual depiction.
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Learning
Outcomes:
·
The student will be able to draw
a landscape using perspective techniques such as creating depth through
height placement, shading, and the location of objects within the page.
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Lesson Plan
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Objectives:
This lesson will give students the opportunity to
study informational text and learn about Utah wildlife. Students will visually translate what they
have learned by drawing a landscape utilizing different perspective
techniques.
Assessment:
·
Student’s animal handouts can be assessed
to see if they have properly highlighted descriptions of the
environment.
·
Drawings can be assessed to see if
successfully utilize perspective techniques.
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Materials
Needed:
Vocabulary
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Lesson
Sequence:
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