This presentation highlights how to create more flow in a students' art making process. Emphasizing process over product in art education creates a student centered approach. Different strategies and techniques are incorporated into the author's lesson plan format: Question Formulation Technique, Artful Thinking, Studio Thinking, Big Ideas, and the Spiral Workshop featuring ideas by Olivia Gude and others.
2. MAKING ART RELEVANT
TO OUR 21ST C. STUDENTS
Putting emphasis
on the end product
instead of the
process of making
art can frustrate
student and
teacher alike.
Emphasizing the
process helps light
the way for artistic
exploration.
3. MY OWN
“ART TEACHER SOUP”
SO MANY ART IDEAS
AND THEORIES!
Many people are
talking about ways to
heighten student
engagement in art
making. My graduate
studies and years of
classroom experience
& experimentation
have led to a lesson
plan that blends many
great ideas and
methodologies
together.
4. My pedagogy has
grown as I have
synthesized the
resources, ideas,
methodologies and
strategies I have
studied. The lesson
plan format I am
currently using is
intended to create
more flow in the art
making process for
both teacher and
student.
A NEW APPROACH IN
MY TEACHING - FLOW
5. I don’t offer up this
plan as “the” way to
teach art, but as one
approach a teacher
can use to create
more student
engagement in K-12,
community or
museum art
education programs.
THERE ARE MANY
PATHS…
6. This lesson plan approach
incorporates the language
and/or ideas of the
following:
• Question Formulation
Technique
• Studio Habits of Mind
• Big Ideas/Enduring Ideas
• Artful Thinking
• University of Illinois in
Chicago Spiral Workshop
• Olivia Gude (the BIG
voice in my ear!)
PRIMARY RESOURCES
7. QUESTION FORMULATION
TECHNIQUE
Many of our
students don’t
utilize
questioning in
their learning.
This book and
website teach
students how to
ask their own
questions.
8. SEE QFT IN ACTION
Watch this video to see how QFT is used in the art classroom.
You can also view a PPT that includes the students’ reflections from the
lesson highlighted in the video.
9. STUDIO THINKING 2
Instead of talking to
my “students” about
what goes on in the
“art classroom”, we
try to replace our
language with
“artists” working in a
shared “studio
space”. We practice
Studio Thinking,
using language real
artists use when they
make art.
11. Big Ideas (or Enduring
Ideas) are things
common to all people
like: love, fear, dreams
or home. When
students center their
art making in a Big
Idea, they begin to tell
their own story and
connect their art to
their unique life
experiences. See Dr.
Christina Bain’s PPT
presentation about Big
Ideas.
BIG IDEAS
12. Artful Thinking is a
process of looking,
thinking and
questioning. When
added to the art
making process,
students enter
more deeply into
the art they see
which leads to
connecting more
deeply to their own
art making.
ARTFUL THINKING
13. The University of Illinois in
Chicago’s Spiral Art
Education workshops
encourage flow in student art
making. Edited by Olivia
Gude, this site features
examples of investigation,
questioning, thinking and
meaning making in student art
making. This resource brings
together the components
outlined in this presentation
and is one inspiration for
creating flow in my own
teaching practices and my
students’ learning
experiences.
UIC SPIRAL ART
EDUCATION
14. BRINGING IDEAS
TOGETHER
Objectives for the art making
process in my lesson plan:
• Create more student engagement
• Build in more play and
investigation
• Use Big Ideas, Enduring Ideas
• Incorporate language from Studio
Habits of Mind
• Use questioning strategies
• Emphasize process over product
• Build in reflection throughout art
making process, not just at the
end
15. INTRODUCTION
Start the project
with a fun,
exploratory
investigation/disc
overy activity. Let
your students
play with
materials and
techniques.
Studio Habits: Stretch & Explore, Develop Craft
16. The teacher or
student selects
a Big Idea to
create individual
meaning for the
student’s art
making.
IDEATION
Studio Habits: Understand Art World, Express
17. RESEARCH
Research can be
inserted in any
part of the
process –
students can
research artists,
ideas, techniques
and processes at
appropriate times
during their
creation process.
Studio Habits: Understand Art World, Envision, Develop Craft,
Stretch & Explore, Reflect
18. QUESTIONING
Engage in a quick
questioning
process (QFT or
Artful Thinking)
for the
student/artist to
create the driving
questions for
their art project.
Studio Habits: Understand Art World, Reflect, Envision
19. Record Big Ideas,
questions,
potential answers
to questions,
observations about
materials and
process, and
design ideas in
their sketchbook to
document their
thinking.
VISUAL THINKING
Studio Habits: Envision, Observe, Reflecting
20. Organize a plan in
their sketchbook (real
world 21st c. skills):
size of work, materials
needed, processes
artist proposes to use,
source of inspiration,
then submit the
proposal to the
facilitator (teacher) to
support
implementation of
their plan.
PROPOSAL
Studio Habits: Reflect, Develop Craft
21. Time to create!
The student/artist
should be itching
to start their work
with all of the
exploration,
questioning and
thinking they have
done! It’s time for
some serious,
focused play!
IMPLEMENTATION
Studio Habits: Develop Craft, Engage & Persist, Observe, Envision, Express,
Stretch & Explore, Reflect
22. REFLECTION/ASSESS
MENT
Reflections and assessments
should be an ongoing process by
both instructor and student.
Formative assessments can be
group critiques, informal
conversations with instructor, or
notations or questions that arise
during the creative process and
are noted in their journal. There
should be a shift to assessing
the process instead of the
product, which relies heavily on
effort and persistence
throughout the project.
Studio Habits: Observe, Reflect, Persist, Understand Art World, Express
23. Student and teacher
should reflect on the
process and the product
through a variety of
questions that the
student answers. An
Artist Statement can be
written as a culminating
activity. Formal
assessments can be
made first by the
student and discussed
with the instructor to
agree on a final grade.
COMPLETION
Studio Habits: Express, Observe, Reflect
24. TIME FOR FOCUSED
PLAY
Teaching and learning are
creative acts and yield the
best results when we are in a
“flow state”. Try out these
ideas in your art studio and
“play” with them! Find
things that resonate with you
and your students and weave
them into your teaching. Let
your teaching practice
bubble up from your own life
experiences to create your
own artful teaching style!
25. RESOURCES
• Artful Thinking - http://www.pzartfulthinking.org/index.php
• Bain, Christina. (2008). What’s the Big Idea? Retrieved from:
http://ntieva.unt.edu/download/teaching/Curr_unit/What%27stheBigIdea.
pdf
• Miller, Christine. (October 15, 2013). Christine Miller – Question
Formulation Technique. Retrieved from: https://vimeo.com/76950785
• Miller, Christine. (April 09, 2014). Essential Question Strategies &
Question Formulation Technique. Retrieved from:
http://www.slideshare.net/tagartteacher/qft-presentation-w-o-embedded-
video-33325098
• Miller, Christine - photographs and/or artwork in this presentation
• The Right Question Institute - http://rightquestion.org/education/
• Spiral Workshop – Art Education Program, School of Art and Design,
University of Illinois in Chicago.
https://www.uic.edu/classes/ad/ad382/sites/SpiralWorkshop/SW_index.ht
ml
• Studio Thinking (8 Studio Habits of Mind). Retrieved from:
http://www.artiseducation.org/research-tools/tool/studio-thinking-8-
studio-habits-mind