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Cross-Curricular Summary Activity
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CC BY
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 Each student writes a one paragraph summary of a chapter of a book and then illustrates their chapter. It can be used for a book the whole class is reading so then all of the summaries are collected and bound together to create a “summary book” of the book read. This activity can be used for both fiction and non-fiction books in any subject and any grade, although this activity is linked to upper primary SOLs. This activity assesses reading comprehension and practices all writing skills. It also includes Art SOLs, and if you have students create their final products on the computer, then you would be incorporating the Computer Technology SOLs as well. If it is used for a non-fiction text in a different content class, then the activity would also cover those SOLs. It can be used for EL classes in middle school also. 

Subject:
Cross-Curricular
ESL
English
English Language Development (ELD)
Reading
Visual Art
Writing
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Assessment
Homework/Assignment
Lesson Plan
Author:
Laura Brown
Date Added:
07/30/2020
Narrative Art: What's Your Story?
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC
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Shared narratives can be found in art from many cultures and throughout time. Use this resource to encourage students to explore diverse narratives, discover their own personal narrative, and express that narrative through their own work of art.Using provided engagment strategies students are able to hone Critical, Creative, and Communication skills using works of art in the Virginia Museum of Arts collection. Discussion prompts and activities offer instructional oppotunities for building Collaboration and Citizenship skills. 

Subject:
American History
Communication and Multimodal Literacy
Visual Art
Writing
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Author:
VMFA Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Date Added:
07/26/2019
Narrative Art: What's Your Story? Art in your life.
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC
Rating
0.0 stars

Shared narratives can be found in art from many cultures and throughout time. Use this resource to encourage students to explore diverse narratives, discover their own personal narrative, and express that narrative through their own work of art.Using provided engagment strategies students are able to hone Critical, Creative, and Communication skills using works of art in the Virginia Museum of Arts collection. Discussion prompts and activities offer instructional oppotunities for building Collaboration and Citizenship skills. Symbols that we find in literature and the use of figurative language to describe artworks go hand in hand.  Find two pieces of artwork that move you one in Virginia and one in an international museum and create multiple examples of 10 different types of figuative language.

Subject:
American History
Communication and Multimodal Literacy
Visual Art
Writing
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Author:
Caroline Wray
Date Added:
12/12/2019