Teaching Resource tags
- Key Stage: KS1
- Subject: Art and design
- Teaching Tool Type: Lesson plan
- Year Group: 1, 2, Reception
A KS1, Years Reception, 1 and 2 Art lesson plan
Written by CURRICULART
Song bank link
Twinkle, twinkle, little star (Traditional)
Subject links
Art and Design QCA Unit 3B: investigating Pattern
Music QCA Unit 1: Ongoing Skills
Duration
45 mins - 1 hour
To create a piece of class artwork to complement singing work on Twinkle, twinkle, little star.
To explore using the visual and tactile qualities of materials to match the purpose of a piece of work.
To explore ways of creating and making patterns.
Share the Learning objectives with the children at the start of the session.
Talk about galaxies and the stars. What is a star? Do they know the names of any stars, star constellations or galaxies? What qualities do they think stars have? How could they represent these qualities in their artwork?
Plasticine
Cotton buds
Cocktail sticks
Coloured plastic straws
Coloured matchsticks
Scissors
Make your own class galaxy.
Break off a piece of plasticine the size of a walnut.
Play with it and knead it to soften.
Place it on a table top and squash flat with a fist so that it makes a disc about 7mm thick.
Cut your cotton buds/straws roughly in half — they don’t need to be even lengths.
Prod them into your disc at 12, 3, 6 and 9 o’clock to make bright rays of light.
Now add in some more sticks of different lengths in between.
Finally, stick all the stars onto a window to make your own galaxy. They should stay fixed for a long time.
Support
Group the children in mixed ability groups/pairs to work.
Offer prompts of support to less able children.
Extension
Encourage the children to evaluate and improve their work as they go along. Can they identify what factors make the best stars?
Look at the galaxy together as a class. What do the children think of the patterns they have created? Which stars do they like best and why?
Sing Twinkle, twinkle, little star together using the class galaxy as a starting point. Does a visual stimulus change the way they sing the song?
Peer talk
Self evaluation
Success criteria
Questioning
All children will:
Work in small groups to contribute to a piece of class artwork.
Some children will:
Explore different ways of using pattern and colour to match the purpose of the project.
Evaluate and improve upon their own work as they progress.
A few children will:
Identify ways of improving the class artwork in group discussion.
Understand how a piece of visual art might affect how they sing and how they feel.