Art Integration Unit Plan Template: During Our Great Depression Unit Two Class Periods
Art Integration Unit Plan Template: During Our Great Depression Unit Two Class Periods
Unit Title & Big Idea: (Define the BIG IDEA?) What is the big idea that is being
investigated in this lesson? How will you connect the big ideas about art and artists
work with the art making part of this lesson?
Key Concepts
(3-4)
Essential Questions
(3-4)
Unit Objectives:
lesson? What will students discover and investigate both about art and art
making? What will you ask that will guide the purposeful exploration of
materials and ideas that will produce meaningful content to the creative
production?
What learners will DO? List beginning with the student will
*(NOTE: Evidence of the objectives and concepts attained make up your assessment criteria below)
Students will look at pictures of Dorothea Langes pictures from the Great Depression. Students will be lead through a VTS
session by the teacher. Students will have a discussion over the idea of the photos being staged. Students will talk about how
Lagne shows relationships with her photos. At the next class period, students will take pictures of each other to try to recreate
and create images like Lange. The students will edit these photos on their iPads.
(3-4)
(http://dese.mo.gov/divimprove/curriculum/GLE/)
(http://www.corestandards.org/)
(3-
4)
1. Visual Art
2. Social Studies
Relationships
1.a connection, association, or involvement.
3. an emotional or other connection between people:
Students will need to know about the Great Depression, which is the unit they are in.
What activities will you use to engage students in imagining, exploring, and/or experimenting in this unit?
Describe, specifically, how you will allow the students to engage with the media, the concepts, and other objectives in a
playful manner before they are expected to produce the final work. This section should accentuate how the PROCESS
informs the product
The VTS session will bring out the students thoughts and visual ideas. While they take their own pictures, there will be
opportunities for play. The final pictures will display how the students had the opportunity for play.
How will this unit permit/encourage students to solve problems in divergent ways?
Deeply describe how this lesson allows for students to solve problems, aesthetically as well as scholastically? What about this
lesson allows for divergent outcomes?
Students will not agree on what Langes intended purposes for the photos are. They will have to have a civilized discussion
about their personal ideas.
How will you engage students in routinely reflecting on their learning/learning processes?
What art talk questions can you engage your students in that will help them in reflecting not only on the product, but also
Teacher will call out a few stop, turn and talk with your partner about why you think this is going on or why you chose the
answer you did or why you chose the pictures you did.
How will this unit engage students in assessing their own work?
What opportunities will you allow your students to display, describe, or evidence their learning?
(Describe what student success looks like and what evidence you have that learning has taken place). You should include formative and summative
assessments. (See Beattie and Stewart/Walker texts)
At the end of the lesson students compare their photos to Langes photos to see similarities and differences. Students will write this down as a summative
assessment at the end. Formative assessment will be the discussions during the VTS session and the discussions.
What opportunities/activities will students be given to revise and improve their understandings and their work?
What happens when revision is needed? How will you handle that in this situation?
If students want to, they can retake their final pictures, but they will not be regraded.
What opportunities/activities will you provide for students to share their learning/understanding/work in this unit?
All of the students will be able to see each others photos will they will be posted on the walls.
How will you adapt the various aspects of this lesson to differently-abled students?
How will you differentiate for your diverse classroom population? How will you keep students engaged? What will you do to challenge students who are
highly talented? What have you planned for those who finish early?
If someone is highly talented, they can share with the class what tips they know about taking pictures. For those who finish
early, they can move onto the next assignment or homework.
TEACHER REFLECTION: How will you know that this lesson is successful and meaningful? List indicators.
I will know this lesson was successful and meaningful based off the discussion we have and the pictures the students take in
the end.
References
Silverstein, L. B. & Layne, S. (n.d.). Defining arts integration. Retrieved from
http://www.americansforthearts.org/networks/arts_education/publications/special_publications/Defining%20Arts
%20Integration.pdf