Art teachers have been sharing some great ideas for fun art lessons for the first day on social media. Some teachers go through expectations and rules and this may be the right thing to do in your school or even a requirement by your management but given the choice, I like to try to get creative straight away and drip feed students the rules and expectations over the first few weeks. Here are some ideas for lessons that will make an excellent, creative first impression:
Making Sketchbooks
Some art teachers really dive straight in and get their classes to make sketchbooks. You would need to be super organised but if you were, what a great first lesson this would be. Sketchbooks with different papers inside are so appealing and there are numerous ways to do this. You could use different ways of making sketchbooks with different year groups.
Why is Art Important?
Why not start the year with the question ‘Why is Art Important?’ Have some post-it notes handy for students to think in pairs to start with and then open the discussion up to the class. Use your environment to talk about what is designed. Reflect on how important art was in lockdown. The video that you can use by Tate Shots ‘Why Study Art‘ makes some excellent points and is clear and concise! You could move onto art careers if you have time.
Exquisite Corpse
Exquisite Corpse is a Surrealist game that asks players to create a collective drawing. In turn, players draw the head and then pass on the drawing to the next player who draws the body and the final player draws the feet. It can be lighthearted and fun and doesn’t really require any drawing skill. You can find a free lesson plan for this game here: Exquisite Corpse.
Embrace the Shake
If you haven’t seen the TED talk called ‘Embrace the Shake’ you need to check it out. Artist Phil Hansen explains how he overcame a tremor in his hand and embraced his limitation and turned it into a positive. Inspiring stuff! You can find it on my art TED Talks page.
Two Truths and a Lie
For a light-hearted start to the year where the focus is on getting to know your class, the game ‘Two Truths and a Lie’ is an easy no-prep game to choose. It’s as simple as it sounds. One person has to say three statements, one of which isn’t true. The class have to guess which is the untrue statement.
Group Painting
A group painting can make a fun lesson for the first day. Divide your class into groups. Give each group a large piece of paper and whatever materials you want. Alternatively, one long strip of paper down the middle of the room could be fun too. You could either give students a theme such as ‘Your Summer’ or ‘Back to School’ or ‘Things I Love’, or ask them to paint to music. I have even read that one teacher placed a dot on the paper and said you can draw anything but you need to incorporate the dot into the composition. Great idea!
Assessment for Learning
If you have some drawing projects planned for the year, you could ask students to draw something with no instruction which, at the end of the year, they could compare to their work after they have been taught to do it. For example, on a page they could draw a portrait and a hand. This is great for them to see the progress they have made and great for you to evidence progress. This could be a portrait from their imagination or of a classmate, or you could give them a mirror.
Make Bad Art
Task your class with making a bad piece of art. Put out a range of materials for them to use. This will lead to an interesting discussion about what good and bad art is. What is bad art? What is good art? Who decides this?
Marshmallow Towers
This is a classic task which you’ve probably heard of before. Group your students and then give each group a set amount of dried spaghetti and marshmallows. Then give them a time limit and the challenge of who can build the highest tower. It’s a great team-building exercise. An alternative way to run it is to give them dried spaghetti and a set length of masking tape and one marshmallow. You then challenge them with making a structure that can hold the marshmallow and the highest structure wins.
Baseline Testing
Many schools complete baseline testing to assess the level their students are working at. If your baseline tests are delivered as fun and creative activities, you could dive straight in with these. I have a fun baseline testing activity that I use which covers creativity, drawing ability, spatial awareness and manual dexterity.
Continuous Line Drawings
Challenge your students to create continuous line drawings of their classmates. Show some good examples and demonstrate what a continuous line drawing is. Give each student a large piece of paper. If possible make them work in pen and use a different coloured pen for each drawing. It’s ok if the drawings overlap slightly – in fact, it looks great if they do.
If you have some ideas for what makes a good first lesson, please comment below. Click the image below to be kept informed about new blog posts and to be able to access 3 of my free resources a month.
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