With over a week of working with other grades at the elementary school in Tacacorí, I’ve seen lots of really great paintings of birds on locally-found stones, and even one or two chunks of cement. After finding around seventy-odd rocks around Xandari that were mostly usable for this art project and scrubbing them all of mud and moss, I decided to assign bringing a rock to school as homework. I figured that even if half of the students forgot to bring a stone to work with, my significant stock-pile would be enough for grades 1-3 and 6, which I worked with last week.
Apparently, many of the kids were excited enough about the project to remember to bring their rocks, because most of them did actually show up with stones to use and I only had to hand out rocks to a handful of students per class. As I knew from previous experience working with first- and second-graders, these classes were a little tougher to handle than third- through sixth-graders, but they were still manageable.
The main issue was teaching certain students not to switch from one color to another without cleaning their paintbrush in the little cups of water I put at each table. With six colors per palette — red, black, blue, green, yellow, and white — made out of old ice-trays, many of the colors quickly became wasted mixes that nobody could use. The pieces of cardboard that I handed out as mixing palettes worked for some, but mostly with the older groups of students, whose work is in the slideshow above.


Reblogged this on We have no Secrets and commented:
Love the idea!
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I found a really nice painted rock in a Walmart parking lot. I would love to get some information on it. The back says #sepr. Would appreciate any help.