Friday, May 16, 2014

Chrysalis', Butterflies and Children's Book Week


As we celebrated Children's Book Week and waited for our chrysalis' to turn into butterflies,  we set a goal to see how many ways we could connect reading, science and art this week.  We had a lot of fun and a lot of great conversation.  We chose the non-fiction book It's a Butterfly Life by Irene Kelly to guide our thinking.  We read the book each day and each day new things caught our attention.  Here is what we focused on during our reading conversations:

Day One:  What new things can we discover about caterpillars, chrysalis' and butterflies?

Day Two:  What are some of the extraordinary things about caterpillars, chrysalis' and butterflies?

Day Three:  Did this new learning change any of our thinking about caterpillars, chrysalis' and butterflies?

Day Four:  How are reading and butterflies alike and how are they different?

We enjoyed conversation about these topics as we read and re-read the story.  Then we embarked on a few art and science projects to capture our thinking and learning.  


This is the first project, it is made with oil pastels:

We followed these directions to make this project.  We did it exactly as explained except one child chose to use purple instead of blue for the background. The shading takes quite a while so I explained the steps and then read and we engaged in our reading conversation as they worked, pausing to give the next set of instruction reminders when most were ready I printed the template larger for the oil pastel part of the project and smaller for the anatomy party.  We used this information plus what we read in the book for the anatomy labeling project.

Our second project was a bit more abstract.  We made a butterfly fact chain.  We began by water coloring card stock.  The brighter the colors the better.  As the paint dried, each child looked back over our conversation notes and chose their 5 favorite pieces of learning.  They then chose a solid color of paper and cut out 5 rectangles.  The smaller the rectangle, the more the finished project will look like a butterfly.  They then wrote one piece of learning on each butterfly and folded them back and forth like a fan.  To create the butterfly look, simply fold the folded fan in half.  Once the facts are complete, the students cut 5 rectangles from the water colored paper and followed the same folding process.  Then we stretch out white thread and tied on the watercolor and fact butterflies with yarn.  The finished projects are fun to look at and make great conversation starters as kids share which facts they chose to include and why.  It was a simple but fun project with a lot of room for great conversation.

As our week of thinking and learning came to an end we concluded that reading, art, and science all are beautiful because they help us think in new ways and share that thinking with others they all work together to give us deeper understanding and our learning would be incomplete with all three parts.  



Our final project was a joint piece of art inspired by these directions.  We just used painter's tape to mark off the word READ before we started.  We felt like it was a great way to tie together art, science, and reading and it was a lot of fun to make together.

We can't wait for our chrysalis' to turn to butterflies and we can't wait to see what new reading adventures next week will hold.



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