Artists Inspiring Other Artists to Become Better Educators
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Welcome!
The purpose of this blog is to give Guilford County School's Art Educators a place to communicate their thoughts and share ideas. I enjoyed reading all of the terrific comments that were being delivered through email and felt that as professionals we needed a place to discuss what is on our minds.
We learn so much from one another. For many of us, we are the only visual arts teacher in our school. It is so rewarding when we get a chance to get together and talk about art, what is working well in our classrooms and what needs improvement. In addition to monthly meetings, this blog can be a source for discussions that can't wait until the next meeting.
Please don't think of this as one more thing that you have to put on your Things To Do List. Respond if you feel like it, share some pictures if you have time, but otherwise just consider this a professional forum for your voice.
This is a nice site. I have posted a link to this post over on my blog, "Art Sub Lessons."
ReplyDeletehttp://artsublessons.blogspot.com/2011/12/handouts-for-subs.html
jan
Love your work sheets I was hoping to be able to print them. Do you have a link to print from?
ReplyDeleteSo, I printed out the first bar graph exercise- do you have any finished examples? I'm thinking I must have done something wrong, can't quite figure out what it's supposed to be :) The kids loved doing it though, and it provided some good entertainment for us trying to figure out what it was supposed to be in the end. Got some very interesting ideas...
ReplyDeleteI have no idea what the bar graph should look like either. It would be nice to see a finished one so I could see how close I got! Not sure if my students would want to spend all that time and then have no idea what they made. Please post an example :)
ReplyDeleteflip it upside down..it is the profile of a man with a mustache
ReplyDeleteThe East Bar Graph is upside down. The image turns out to be the profile of a man.
ReplyDeleteGreat worksheets for snowdays!
ReplyDeletethe renaissance word search has a few columns of letters cut off on the right hand side. fyi
ReplyDeleteWhat book I this from
ReplyDeleteA bit late to the game. But if anyone else is like me and looking for the source for "Stalactite City" I figured out that it is from "Mark Kistler's Imagination Station"
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