1. Petapixal Norman Rockwell
2. Word Press - Norman Rockwell
Blogging A - Z Challenge has allowed me to not only share several of the activities I participate in with my storytelling students and writing students but also to learn so much myself. This post is near and dear to me because I worked with my 4th grade class for about six weeks to accomplish a STORYTELLING Museum for the entire school to visit. We had a blast and the students enjoyed telling their stories based on the artifact they chose. I had gathered several art pictures from our art curriculum for the students to choose from. Many of the pictures chosen were Norman Rockwell paintings which suited my students to a tee. I told a baseball story based on one of Norman Rockwell paintings as a model of what I wanted my students to accomplish at the end of our museum collection development. The students worked in groups of two or three and some even went it alone and did a fantastic job. It was February and our writing abilities had grown by leaps and bounds by this time so the writing process was intact. The kids worked in their groups developing their own tales based on the picture itself. I asked the kids not to read the artist notes on the back of the posters mainly because I wanted their ideas to be fresh and their own. The main idea was to make ANY connections to the art itself. Above are some prints from Metropolitan Museum of Art and some wonderful websites/blogs dedicated to Norman Rockwell are below. Norman Rockwell Websites/blogs: Share his pictures on a large screen or the students could use iPads/computers showing the painting as they tell their connecting stories: 1. Petapixal Norman Rockwell 2. Word Press - Norman Rockwell The Metropolitan Museum of Art offers pictures online to use for educational purposes for free. I chose a few that I hope to use with my storytellers real soon. If you can't find any pictures from printed art calendars or schools, these museum paintings and artifacts from museums are perfect! I loved this activity. To conclude, I've included other museums that provide public domain or fair use images for educational purposes. Linking from LibGuide: University of Dayton
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