middle school sketchbook assignments

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middle school sketchbook assignments

10 Sketchbook Prompts Your Students Will Love!

Wooo! You decided to (or at least thinking about) start bringing in student sketchbooks in your art class! In my previous blog post, I talked about the many benefits I have found from having students work in sketchbooks every single day. These range from enhancing creativity, improving drawing skills to building classroom communities. I genuinely cannot say enough positive things about the possibilities they can create. But the burning question is always: What the HECK do we draw in them? The short answer is- a variety of different things. With prompts I try to find ideas that are simple enough for a beginning artist to complete, but broad enough that an advanced student can expand upon and add lots of details. I also try to give prompts that require them to put their own interests into to allow me to learn more about them. I also open up my supply cabinets and let them experiment with whatever medium they choose- charcoal, watercolor paint, markers, color pencils, gel pens, etc. I have found by giving them a range of options and choices they feel more inspired to actually *do* the assignments. I also try to find time during the week to do the prompt with them during class. This is just a fun thing to do. It gives me an opportunity to make art with them and they see me modeling what I want them to do. With that being said- here are some of my all time favorite prompts I have done with my students throughout the years. These are all images of my students’ artwork! Feel free to check out the packet of these prompts and others in my TPT shop if you are interested in trying them out with your students!

Circle Challenge

“Fill a page in your sketchbook up with circles and decorate each of them however you want. No less than 45 circles.” Why it’s great: This is a great prompt that pushes their creative skills. What are all the different ways you can take a circle and turn it into something else? How many things can make up a circle? (Donuts, fruit, planets, pizza, peace signs, emojis, more..) It’s also a great exercise to create variety in artwork.

Design a skateboard.

Why it’s great: This is the first prompt I give every year. It’s simple and easy for the students to come up with different ideas. Who doesn’t love a good skateboard design??

Watercolor Doodle Strokes

My students love working with watercolor paint. And the ones that are a bit iffy with it, this is a great way for them to get their feet wet in it (no pun intended). Why it’s great: There’s very minimal drawing needed for this one! They pick a color scheme, fill their pages up with watercolor strokes and fill them in with fun doodles. The doodles can be simply line designs or patterns- or they can be detailed little drawings that advanced students will enjoy doing.

Arrows Challenge

Similar to the circle challenge except it’s “fill up a page with different arrows”. Once they have them all sketched out, they pick a fun color scheme. Why it’s great: One of the biggest challenges with my students and their sketchbooks is making sure they utilize ALL their page space. This prompt is a great way to practice overlapping, variety and space usage.

Song Illustration

Everybody and I mean eeeeeeeverybody loves music and has that one song that speaks to them on so many levels. I love seeing what my students’ favorite songs and music groups are. Why it’s great: The majority of this prompt can be text from the lyrics with a smaller, simpler drawing to compliment the design. Good for beginner art students but your advanced kids will come up with a plethora of creative ideas!

Draw something inside of a jar/envelope.

These are 2 different prompts with the same idea. It’s basically a “free draw” prompt but in a more enclosed space. Why it’s great: These give the students a lot of freedom to draw whatever they want but they don’t have to worry about filling up the *entire* page.

Favorite Decades

Dedicate a page in your sketchbook to your favorite decade. You can include everything from music, toys, fashion, fads and trends to celebrities and movies/TV shows. Why it’s great: This is another prompt that allows you to see your students’ interests. It always warms my millenial heart when someone does a 90s spread!

Keyhole Bedrooms

For this, I recommend they look up photo references (you can also show them a few from the internet). Pinterest (if it’s not blocked from your school server) tends to have the best pictures of bedrooms. I recommend dorm room photos as well because the furniture tends to be very simple and not elaborate. I tell the kids to not worry about achieving a realistic perspective on this one… just try and design a really cool looking room. Why it’s great: This prompt is challenging for many students! It definitely pushes them but they usually end up really enjoying it in the end. If you want to incorporate writing, have them write a story about their room on the back of their sketchbook page. 

Rubber Duck Challenge

I did not even know this was a thing until I saw it in one of my many art teacher facebook groups. It’s definitely being used by many teachers everywhere and for good reason. Ya’ll. They are HILARIOUS. I was seriously wheezing laughter when I was flipping through grading them. It makes me want to turn it into a full blown project- which I may actually do in the future. Why it’s great: This prompt is so freaking weird. And the kids LOVE. IT. They come up with SO many great ideas and it always ends up being a class favorite.

I hope these prompts give you a good place to start with your students. Feel free once again to check out my prompt packet on TPT if you would like to try them out with your students. Happy Art Making!

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middle school sketchbook assignments

The Sketchbook Project: The Beginning

middle school sketchbook assignments

THE SKETCHBOOK PROJECT: THE BEGINNING

sketchbook-lesson-1

This was my question:

Would a self-guided approach to art-making work with my 6th grade class?

I always wanted to offer my students their own sketchbooks to bring to art class. They could be used for practice drawing, experimentation with paint-mixing and free choice. But when you have a small art program (15 weeks a year), there isn’t enough opportunity to justify the purchase of a product that would consume a third of your art budget.

But, what if the sketchbook was the only thing you offered the students? Then it began to make sense.

After discussing the idea with the 6th grade teachers, they agreed to partially fund the sketchbooks. This was huge. I could now proceed with the Sketchbook Project without compromising the art budget for the rest of the grade levels.

The idea was for each student to have his own sketchbook but they would leave the sketchbook in the art room. I cleared a few drawers to make room for the 75 books and dove into creating a few starter projects to engage the kids.

This is the brand of sketchbooks I used: Sketch for Schools

THE BENEFITS:

If a student owned his own sketchbook, my hope was this:

  • Take more pride in their work
  • Be able to see their efforts throughout the year
  • Have a place to record art observations
  • Work on past projects

Would students like a sketch book compared to a larger piece of art?

Turns out they did. At the end of the year, after we filled up the pages in the sketchbooks, most students reported that they enjoyed working on their own sketchbooks compared to the larger format papers that we typically used in art class.

Some students missed the larger pieces of art (I know I did) and some students were non-committal with their opinions. The classroom teachers were the ones who reported the biggest benefit: they claimed the students talked about their sketchbooks and art class more than in the previous year.

Over the course of 15 weeks of art (50-minute classes) these are the projects we did:

The Sketchbook Project Lesson #1

Each week I will post the lessons above so that you have the opportunity to see how I approached the lesson, what the children experienced and how I might approach a lesson differently.

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The 6th grade teachers encouraged me to store the sketchbooks in the art room as they suspected that if the students were expected to bring them to art class every week, they might forget them. I agreed.

When the students entered class, I had the sketchbooks on a table in the back of the room. They would find their book and sit at their table. The art supplies that we would need for the particular lesson would be on each table with one exception. I would add the supplies needed for previous lessons on another table in case students finished the current project and wanted to work on an old project.

I soon got tired of this extra prep and trained the students to get their own supplies and put away the supplies. Most of the class LOVED this self-serve approach. I found that although many art projects weren’t the frame-worthy finished art piece, most children took a great deal of pride in their pieces and were thrilled to be able to use whichever art supplies they felt they needed.

The drawbacks to this approach is that there is no specific steps for each art project. I would outline a technique, drawing concept or guidelines, but the students needed to be self-guided and motivated to complete their own art subject. This didn’t happen for every lesson, but for the most part, I needed to be very active making sure that each child was progressing forward.

Often a child was stymied with having to choose what subject he wanted to use. If I noticed this happening, I would sit next to the student and work through a few solutions or starters just to get the ball rolling. I’ll talk more specifically as I work through the lessons each week.

sketchbook-project-set-up

Do you use sketchbooks in your art room or home art studio? Do you use them exclusively or for another purpose? I’d love to hear how you use them. Leave a comment in the section below and share your thoughts and ideas.

Next week: Project #1-Creating Value 

Missed the last installments of the Sketchbook project?

Intro :  The Sketchbook Project:  The Beginning 

Week #1: The Sketchbook Project: Creating Value + Free Worksheet

Week # 2 The Sketchbook Project: Atmospheric Perspective (Landscapes)

Week #3 The Sketchbook Project: Tree Line Drawings

Week #4 The Sketchbook Project: Sonia Delaunay Circles

Week #5 E xpressive Self-Portraits

WEEK #6  Line Drawings

WEEK #7  Farm Animals

WEEK #8  Animal Eyes

sketchbook-project-long-image

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Patty, I’m along time follower and love DSS lessons.This is a great post about sketchbooks. I have always used sketchbooks/ journals with my upper grades 6-8. The kids love them. It gives them a sense of personal space. We not only use it to draw and have small projects for art elements and design principles but for artist statements, doodling, weekly art quotes, poems, writing thoughts, planning outlines, etc… It is usually a 5×7 (50lb) paper book, what size and paper weight do you prefer? Thanks again. Thanks.

middle school sketchbook assignments

Hi Laurie, My vision was that the sketchbooks would be filled with all that you said above but I don’t see the kids often enough. I love what you are doing! Sounds exactly what art class should be like. I have only used the 8 x 10 size. The larger format works best for elementary as we did all of our projects in it. 5x 7 would have been too small for my use. Perfect for yours though, right?

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At times the 5×7 Is limiting. I’m liking the bigger size idea! And la great idea using a bubble wrap envelope for backpack trips!

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My daughter is in 8th grade and her art teacher had her students purchase an 8X10 sketchbook with a bubble wrap mailer (to protect it on trips home in backpacks) at the beginning of the school year. It’s been a great way to see progression in their observational drawing skills.

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At our K-8 school our students get a 5×7 sketchbook in 4th grade, and they use that same book for two years. Then in 6th grade they get an 8×10 sketchbook that they use for 6th, 7th, and 8th. The books mostly live in the art room, but sometimes teachers take them on field trips for journaling and outdoor sketching. We are making an effort to do more with sketchbooks with our middle school kids. I really like the idea of emphasizing an art that is personal and easy for the kids to continue with at home and after they graduate.

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I’m a Kindergarten teacher and try to incorporate art in any way I can during the school year. I also teach an art enrichment class after school for first through fifth graders. I have been using your wonderful lessons with all of these kids. I love everything that you do! I have a question, what is the name of the book that is partly showing in Lesson #8? Thanks for all you do! Kim

Ho Kim, It’s called Eye to Eye by Steve Jenkins.

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I’m piloting using sketchbooks in my 4th grades this school year. Due the fact I don’t have the money for bought journals we made our own. I purchased .17 pocket folders this past summer. The kids designed their front covers, they helped to 3-hole punch 10 sheets of copy paper for each of their folders and secured them using brass fasteners. This allows us to add more pages if we need to. We are keeping practice and brainstorming sheets in one pocket and an envelope with their Artist trading Cards in the other pocket. Each month they have a journal drawing assignment to do. So far the kids love them! The journals are working out so well I am going to be introducing them in my 3d and 5th grades next year! Good luck with yours! 🙂

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This is very resourceful! I was trying to figure out a way use a sketchbook and still use a variety of mediums. This will allow me to use different types of papers as well. Thanks for sharing.

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This year was the first year I was able to purchase sketchbooks for my art majors class (mixture of 4th and 5th graders). I had big dreams to use them as extension activities from our main project connecting to the elements of art. As the year began I realized time was not allowing us to complete our project and the sketchbook activities. I have a few early finishers that do get to both but now most students use it to sketch in when they finish. I am okay with that because they are using their own imagination which can be hard for kids these days. I did notice when our school was able to purchase a nice sketchbook the students took pride in it and love having them. I would just buy a spiral notebook but they didn’t treat it as a sketchbook and never really used it. I would live to have small sketchbook challengers as bell work but since it’s my first year incorporating sketchbooks I will do what I can do.

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I love this idea!

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I’ve been using sketchbooks with 4th and 5th grade for a while now. We make them from legal paper folded in half. I make a different colored construction paper cover for each class and the kids put them together with a long arm stapler. I would love for the kids to use them for their own ponderings, but we rarely have time for that. At this point, we just use them for sketching our ideas before starting a project – either thumbnail sketches or actual size if we’re doing smaller works. A parent artist gave her son’s class of 2nd graders a class set of sketchbooks. It is so wonderful to see those kids take their sketchbooks out to recess! It would be great for all students to have them in class for when they finish other assignments, but I don’t know how to get them from their classrooms to the art room without losing way too many precious minutes of instructional time. It so often comes back to time, doesn’t it?!

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I have grades 1-5 create a sketch book from a 1″ three ring binder. They have three sections: Art Starts; Sketches and Notes. They bring them to class each art day. My classes are 45 min. each with about 25 in each class! I see each class 4 days in a row on a 4 week rotation (so every 4 weeks they come back to art). The 1st 10 min. is an art start: I select a piece of art for discussion. They write about the art (encouraging art terms) and then a few read out. Some sketch the art I put up. They must include the title; the artist; the year; the medium. Grades 3-5 are asked to do 3 sketches a week that I look at in class. I am looking for growth, but often only a handful are serious and give some good drawings but it sets a standard. Then there are those who really take off, and never thought they would love drawing. It’s a lot of work, but worth it.

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Our Principal ordered enough sketch books for all our 5th graders this year! We love them! We are using them to record important information about famous artists with samples of art inspired by that artist, made by the kids. We have also used them to do observational drawings in our very own school Pumpkin Patch. I am excited to see where the sketch books will take us. It will serve as a record of how much we will have learned, been inspired by and be a wonderful art keepsake!

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hi patty, i’m a long time follower of your site as well. i started off as an architect and grew to love sketching and conceptual thinking and planning and experimenting [with a pencil on your hand]. as i grew into being an art teacher [K-8] i brought this idea with me. i give my 4th-7th graders a 9×12 sketchbook and most project start with one lesson having them experiment with the idea, concept and making mistakes. i see the kids every week and really want to drive home the idea of slowing down and engaging with projects. when i started i wanted to teach tehm everything immediately, now i try to push the idea of slowing down, experimenting adn accepting mistakes as part of the growing process. some projects i do ‘double-time’ ie. a simpler version, and then a very similar more complicated one. the only rule i have for the sketchbooks is “you are not allowed to tear out any pages”. thank you for your amazing contributions to all of us!

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This is wonderful. I am a K/8 teacher and my 6th grade seems to get lost in the shuffle. They need something of their own and I am going to start this asap. I’m curious about the content the students can put in there. Sometime things are turbulent and kids have some negative ideas they want to put down in their art. What do you think about that? Thanks!

Great question. If art is the way kids need to express their emotions (both good and bad), I say we let them. Encourage, in fact. It’s really not for us to control their creative energy. That is really the reason we do art. However, we can monitor what they do and if (and only if) there seems to be a serious issue, then it’s something to bring to the attention of parents/admin, etc. But if the child is drawing negative things to get attention (you know what I mean)…then gently put a stop to it then refocus on the lesson.

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Hi: I made sketch pads for 100 students from very large die-cut shapes and stapled drawing paper and writing paper inside. We had School houses for Sept, pumpkins for Oct/Nov, gingerbread houses for December/January and etc. They worked very well but were very time consuming to make. This year I was lucky enough to get sketch pads for all of my 100 6th graders. I use them for multiple things. As an opening for the beginning of class with a drawing prompt, thumbnail sketches for larger ideas, and practice drawing of an idea. I also keep them in the classroom so they always have them.

So glad you were able to purchase the sketchbooks. I cannot imagine making them! You are wonderful for doing so.Thanks for sharing!

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Hello. I just discovered your wonderful site and it’s exciting to know that you’re local too! I am a newer homeschool mom to three and I love your idea of the sketchbooks. This could help reduce our paper clutter. I noticed that the projects are using various mediums. Which paperweight would you recommend while taking into consideration watercolors, chalk pastels, and the other sketchbook projects, etc? I would like to purchase the sketchbooks for the kids for Christmas along with some of the other recommended supplies. Thanks in advance for your help.

I’m not sure of the weight of the paper. I included a link to the sketch book I used in the first post of the series. I think it must be about an 80 lb. Certainly good enough for watercolor and tempera.

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how long does it take things in this book to dry…canthey be closed and tossed in the drawer right away?

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A few hours should do it!

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Hi Patty I teacher 10 year olds in NZ and have been using a visual diary/journal this year. I started this as parents were concerned when my class began working on Chromebooks and this was a way to be using their fine motor skills and at the same time they have learnt some art and presentation skills – from zentangles to exploring colours and simple journal pages. My hope was that they would end up with a ‘taonga’ which means treasure – something they would be really proud of. I think we have mostly achieved this and I will certainly continue this with my class next year. Thanks for your lessons – they will be a great help.

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Retired this school year. I so admire your site and tecniques, lessons, I want to follow your suggestions for my own pleasure. Always put my art desires on the back shelf, but I am taking my inner child on your art voyage. I enjoy everything about your site and your creative ideas! Thank you so much for sharing. Irene S.

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Love this — The kids at my school (1-6) all have visual diaries on their booklist at the start of the year. The kids were SO EXCITED to get them back at the end of last year, particularly if they had some pages left! I use it mostly for visual research (grades 5/6, looking for ideas in books and online) and trialling guided ideas before making a good copy. I’m trying to train the kids to not be so anxious about getting ideas on paper and not being too fussed about making mistakes. Most of the younger kids will ask for their visual diary as a reminder of what they’re doing whether they’re just starting their good copy or not.

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for my years 1-6 the students buy a $1-2 scrap book which has 64-72 pages . The paper is a bit like what we call butchers paper or slightly heavier that photocopy paper but it works works for the children to do drawings add notes glue in work sheets . i use small pieces of drawing paper or cartridge or coloured card for the wet on wet work samples so they can glue them into the scrap book / visual diary. The back of the book is for them to do their free drawing in if they finish early. Given that the year 4-6 do 3 major projects and and a couple of small ones there is sufficient pages for them to do a Full years work and less heavier- less bulky to get out and storing them . the typical art sketch book is a minimum of $ 10 -20 . I had upset parents when i changed them over but when i explained the savings it meant they could get items like crayons oil pastels etc with the savings . As my parents supply certain items in their book list . I was able to save quite a bit of money for them.

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Patty, I love the Sketchbook Project! Where can I find the available lessons that are posted? For instance the ‘Eye to Eye’ close ups. I’ve been wanting to do a project of close up animal eyes! Is there a way to get all the lessons in this project? I am a member and a Sparkler and love your beautiful website, projects and creative ideas! Thanks for all you do!

I didn’t do any extended lessons of this project. Everything is posted here. No plans yet to offer full extensions but you never know!

Great! Thank you for your quick reply! I think the Sketchbook Project would make a great packet or individual lessons! ? ?

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What type of paints did you use on the value sheets? Thanks in advance.

Liquid tempera 🙂

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Don’t have money for sketch books but have made them from wallpaper books…Wallpaper books for the cover ,copy paper for the pages..then I take the sewing machine and sew down the middle. I also have had the students make them from cardboard ,two page sizes and a small one for a spine, cover with fabric, glue a piece of paper over the folded raw edge of the fabric. Tie a string or yarn around the spine . Kids slip their work under the yarn. They decorate the outside with buttons etc. Look quite artistic.

If one were using this for also notetaking, etc., and say taking notes on an artist, you want to give the students a sample of the artist’s work, would you have them glue it in?

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Do you have an updated list of sketchbook list. I saw you mentioned adding it to the store when it was updated but I wasn’t sure how to search for it in the shop. Thanks.

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I have visited the site linked for your sketchbooks. Can I ask which book specifically you purchased (ie. beginner, intermediate, etc)?

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I love the Sketchbook Projects. Thanks!

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I love it! I will be teaching art again next year , and I will be a Sparkler.

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We look forward to having you in The Sparklers’ Club! You can join the waitlist now https://deepspacesparkle.lpages.co/the-sparklers-club-waitlist/

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amazing art lessons! thanks

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Patty I need a shopping list to set up an art camp and I thought you had one at one time if you could look around and see if you do that would help me by product so that we’re not wasting money

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I do use sketchbooks at home. I like to sketch random things that turn out to look awesome.

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I think this is awesome.

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I would like to implement this and had some questions. What paper did you use in the sketchbook? did you go with a mixed media or keep it to a sketch book quality? specifically what paperweight would you use? With that in mind when you did watercolor or painting skills and projects did you simple staple in the sheet once you were done?

I am a first year art teacher and love your site and have found valuable insights and ideas. Also just bought one of your PD course- excited to get started.

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Hi Heidi! Mabre with the DSS Creative Team here. First of all, so glad that you are teaching art and are enjoying the site. We know you will love the course and can’t wait for you to get started! In regards to the sketchbook project, some teachers have a budget and are able to buy sketchbooks for students with mixed media paper, which can be nice, but it can also be nice to have students get involved and make them, instead. We have found that a 12″x18″ colored piece of sulphite with 12″x18″ white sulphite paper stacked on top and a long-arm stapler can do the trick. Students end up with a 9″ x 12″ sketchbook. The white sulphite will hold up well to a decent amount of water-based media but you can always staple or tape special, extra pages (like watercolor paper with technique examples) in too. Your choice! 🙂 Hope this helps!

middle school sketchbook assignments

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middle school sketchbook assignments

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Sketchbook Ideas

Sketchbook Ideas for High School - Middle School Compiled from TeacherArtExchange mailing list

Sketchbooks Assignments from Christine Sumner Lyman Sketchbook Assignments - Amanda Linn Advanced Placement Assignments

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From Marcia Thompson (Archives 9/2/97)

I used the single idea book with my 8th grade students as well last spring. We called ours a theme book. My students made their own hard bound books, chose a theme and made each page a beautiful work of art based on the theme.

They were beautiful! I plan to use the same idea in place of a sketchbook second semester. By the way, one girl made 4 theme books during the semester and another one made a book about movie stars with fold outs and pop outs and a hand made box to fit the whole thing in that was about 14X18" (35.5 x 45.7 cm). Whoever donated this idea originally -- thanks!

sketchbook

From Linda Kelty

Creative thinking: the wind, sadness, happiness (other emotions represented with symbols, colors, etc.

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Fantasy art: mythological interpretations, invented creatures from actual live creatures, fables and fairy tales.

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Story illustrations: for stories they've read or written. to redo those they don't like, or to emulate or reinterpret those they do like.

Portraiture. Figures. Animals. Transportation forms. Functional object design, such as the book-bag or wind suit they'd like to have. "Lautrec of the 90's" poster designs for an event they are involved in. Formulate an idea and work it out on paper for a new...

From Mary B

I use them for notes, journaling and sketching; also for a short test at the end of our 6 week (27day) period; honors art class has weekly sketch assignments. I have gotten ideas for sketches from the archives. I refine my sketch list each year to keep it interesting. Some ideas: - Bookmarks for the school library - Junk food with wrapper - Part of a vehicle - Instead of a hand... your foot ( no socks or shoe) - Something not pretty (one of the 8th grades favorites) - An interior of something (once a student did the inside of a jar of peanut butter) - Inside of closet - 3 unlikely objects together - Your Mother's or Father's choice - Part of any object (mystery draw) - A scene that depicts peace

From Sharon Hodges

* Illustrate your favorite poem * Draw the contents of a trash can * Drawing of a house plant (real or artificial) * Draw an object with a surface texture. * Draw tools used in certain professions * Draw a tennis shoe * draw a grouping of leaves * Draw something you might find in a department store display * Draw a large jar and fill it up with something (candy, toys, rock, etc) * Design a school desk * Draw your favorite snack food * Draw an object melting * Draw a bowl of fruit, shade it. * Draw hands holding something * Draw a mechanical object * word picture: select a word that bring to mind a mental picture, *Draw the word as the shape of the object. such as the word apple in the shape of an apple, or apples spelling out the word. * Draw popcorn * Keyhole: what would you see through a key hole

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It wasn't until I got into grad school that I realized that sketchbooks are for more than just making drawings. They are a journal or diary of my thought processes that I can refer back to for more ideas later. I use to just draw in sketchbooks. I now: draw, paint, write, collage, attach Xerox copies of articles from art magazines or any magazines, and paste up pictures or scraps of paper or whatever I find interesting. (Picasso did all five too.) For the painting I put down a border with drafting tape which can be pulled off later.

Sketchbook Choices and Ideas

Studio In Art by Mrs. Sumner-Lyman

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SUGGESTED ACTIVITIES

Draw a portrait using light and shadow- place the light from different angles than "normal" -under the chin, behind the head, in front of the face. Study your feet and shoes. Draw them in different positions and from different angles and views. Draw studies of your hands. Try a variety of positions or overlapping them. Draw a figure in an environment from your observation- in motion, and standing still. Draw in imaginary place- remember to show rich details. Do a self portrait. This can be full body view or face only. Accuracy !! Gesture drawings of people, things, or animals in motion. Contour line drawings of figures or objects. Draw several studies of your eyes, nose, and mouth in a variety of positions and poses. Focus on drapery and pattern: a shirt over a chair, a sheet around a banister, etc. Draw everything you can see from where you are positioned: this can be from imagination, like if you were in a hot air balloon, ant sized, etc. Draw a man made object. Draw a metallic object and everything you see in it. Draw or design any kind of vehicle. Draw an object of interest from 3 different views. Draw using 2 point perspective. Draw the inside of a mechanical object. Filling the page with them, overlap two dimensional forms and pick a direction for the light to hit them from. Shade accordingly. Draw your reflection in any shiny surfaced object. Draw a landscape from observation. Remember to show foreground, middle ground, and background. Draw your home and what's around it. Draw family members with things that they cherish. Draw the interior of your room and what's in it- from wherever you're sitting: on floor, up on bed, from ceiling looking down. Study the forms, shapes, lines and textures and colors of trees. Draw animals from life ( if you can't see them live, copy them from a reference book.) Draw a plant with as much detail as possible using line contour and line variation. Arrange a still life and draw it with shading. Draw bottles and cans- have the cans crunched up for lots of detail and contrast to the bottles' smoothness. Draw dishes in a drainer, with shading. Create a fantasy building and landscape. Create a series of positive and negative space designs. Draw a piece of furniture and use color to show the textures and shadows. Draw a still life with one to three pieces of patterned cloth in it. Show color and patterns. Focus on textures in a drawing.

More Sketchbook Choices

(JUST IN CASE YOU NEED MORE INSPIRATION)

Using color (no black) and light (white) create a Impressionist style landscape drawing- remembering to optically mix colors by placing compliments next to each other. Transform an object from a realistic view to a Cubist representation (using several different view points within the same frame) in a progression of 4 steps. Draw yourself using a strong light on one side or angle of your face, focusing on the shapes of the shadows of your facial features- excellent shading practice. Try several studies of DRAPERY- a towel, shirt, or blanket draped around or on another object to create lots of wrinkles; focusing on shapes of folds and creases and the shadows that are created by them. Advanced drapery- try the same exercise with a patterned cloth in color. Take out a library book on any artist of your choosing and duplicate their art work. - Please make a Xerox copy of it for my reference. Create a series of drawings of people in motion- playing sports; doing housework; etc. Try to overlap several views of the action as it progresses- use light sketchy lines; it will help. Design a tattoo for someone particular- a celebrity; teacher; etc. Draw from imagination with s much rich detail as possible- if you were awakened by a crash in the middle of the night; what would it be from? Draw yourself 50 years from now; including your surroundings, possessions, etc. Illustrate a favorite story of yours told by a grandparent; uncle, or other relative. Design a CD cover for a musical group ( no gangster rap, peace signs; pot leaves, or conventional, unoriginal or violent imagery will be accepted !!) Draw your greatest fear; your biggest hope; or your dream for your future. Draw a series of animals in motion. More Sketchbook/Drawing Ideas - (Archive) List from Michal Austin 150 Sketchbook Ideas from Niskayuna Central School. Read through and select ideas appropriate for your students.

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Weekly Sketchbook Drawing Assignments for Middle School Art or High School Art

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middle school sketchbook assignments

Description

This is the perfect start of the year/intro to drawing assignment to pass out to students. This is a handout contains 16 unique and creative weekly sketchbook assignments for students to complete.

This is the handout that I print and pass out to students at the start of the semester. I fill have students fill in the due date section, and assign one sketch a week. If this feels like too much, one sketch could be assigned bi-weekly.

This is a great way to fill up students class time when they finish projects early!

Check out my sketchbook cover projects here:

Sketchbook Quote Cover

Zentangle Cover Project

Consider giving my page a follow to see new projects and resources.

Interested in using more creative projects in your classroom???

CLICK HERE to view full curriculums and bundles!

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  3. 10 Stunning Sketchbook Ideas For Middle School 2023

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  5. 10 Stunning Sketchbook Ideas For Middle School 2024

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  6. 10 Stunning Sketchbook Ideas For Middle School 2024

    middle school sketchbook assignments

VIDEO

  1. School sketchbook tour part one

  2. middle school sketchbook tour ✨

  3. what should I draw? (pls do know this will be my school sketchbook)

  4. Sketchbook Tour ⓻ travel sketches, art school projects & car illos

  5. 🎨 ART SCHOOL SKETCHBOOK TOUR ✨ (nov 2019

  6. my FIRST semester in ART SCHOOL!! sketchbook tour, assignments and more!

COMMENTS

  1. 100 Sketchbook Prompts Your Students Will Love

    Draw junk food and the wrapper. Draw your favorite food. Create your own restaurant. Draw the restaurant, your executive chef, and a 12-item menu. Draw the ingredients or process of your favorite recipe. Draw salt and pepper shakers. Draw fresh fruit or vegetables, or something fresh from the oven.

  2. Basic Art Sketchbook Assignments

    Drawing&Painting: Sketchbook Assignment 6, Due Friday 10/28. Page 1: Make 15-20 gesture drawings on one page, but only take one minute per drawing. Sketch 2: Set up a still life of 3 or more objects and draw them using shading and value. Try to draw them to scale and with the proportions correct.

  3. Sketchbook Ideas

    Current HS Sketchbook Assignment Handout: SB ASSIGNS-ADV HS ART Q3 2018-19. SB ASSIGNS-ADV HS ART Q2 2018-19a. SB ASSIGNS-ADV HS ART Q1 2018-19. Sketchbook Ideas to Boost your Creativity FREE PDF -Sign up for my Create Art with ME Newsletter! NEEDED Sketchbook Supplies:

  4. Step by Step Sketchbook Drawing Prompts

    Step by Step Sketchbook Drawing Prompts. Practicing basic drawing techniques can help artists of all ages build confidence and sharpen their technical skills. I love having my students keep a sketchbook. It's a great opportunity for students to practice foundational skills, brainstorm artwork ideas, and write and reflect about their own ...

  5. Sketchbook Ideas for Any Classroom: The Ultimate Teacher Guide

    4 Essential Sketchbook Tips. Creating Student Buy-In. Building Relationships through Sketchbooks. Idea 1: Combined Weekly Journals and Sketchbooks. Idea 2: Use Thinking or Drawing Prompts. Idea 3: Sketchbook Challenges. Idea 4: STEAM Journaling. Idea 5: Sketchbooks for Assessment. Idea 6: Providing Choice.

  6. 10 Sketchbook Prompts Your Students Will Love!

    10 Sketchbook Prompts Your Students Will Love! by [email protected] Posted on March 27, 2023March 27, 2023. Wooo! You decided to (or at least thinking about) start bringing in student sketchbooks in your art class! In my previous blog post, I talked about the many benefits I have found from having students work in sketchbooks every ...

  7. 50 SEL Sketchbook Prompts to Help Start Your Day

    Sharing their art through these sketchbook activities also invites an adult to connect with them. CASEL, the organization for Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning, ... Andrea Wlodarczyk, a former middle school art educator, is a former AOEU Writer. She is a deep believer that the art room can be a brave space for students ...

  8. 100 Sketchbook Prompts eBook

    When it comes to sketchbook prompts and ideas, you can't ever really have too many. As art teachers, we are always looking for ways to inspire our students' creativity. ... How to Get Middle School Students Excited About Drawing 50 Visual Journal Prompts to Promote Drawing and Creative Thinking Skills. What are your best drawing prompts for ...

  9. Ideas for Sketchbooks

    Draw raw chicken parts; cooked parts; after eaten parts. Draw a piece of cake and make it look delicious. Draw 2 eggs in the shell, fried, over easy. Draw one popcorn kernel, draw a bag of popcorn. Draw a raw steak, steak bones. Draw moving water, still water. Draw a wet object, make it look wet.

  10. Results for middle school art sketch book prompts

    This daily sketchbook prompt pack is perfect for middle and high school art classes. It includes everything you need to teach a daily sketchbook prompt as a class warm-up or opener or as a bell ringer activity. All you need is 5 minutes. This daily sketchbook pack includes 45 prompts explained on PowerPoint (or PDF) slides to display at the ...

  11. Sketchbook Art Lessons for Middle School Art

    Description. Start-up sketchbooks in your middle school art classroom with amazing sketchbook assignments and sketchbook prompts! Sketchbooks should be a source of creativity and joy for students. Provide your students with engaging sketchbook assignments that they can connect to, and through it, discover their interests and passions in life.

  12. Sketchbook Prompts/Assignments

    Cooper Middle School Art: 6th Grade 7th Grade 8th Grade Art Contests Sketchbook Prompts/Assignments Sketchbook Prompts 5 Minutes a day Sketchbook Assignment. Choose from the prompts below and spend at least 5 uninterrupted minutes a day sketching in your sketchbook or any paper you can find. Focus on the same prompt for each of those 5 minute.

  13. Sketchbook for Middle School Art by Ms Artastic

    Description. Start-up sketchbooks in your middle school art classroom with amazing sketchbook assignments and sketchbook prompts! Sketchbooks should be a source of creativity and joy for students. Provide your students with engaging sketchbook assignments that they can connect to, and through it, discover their interests and passions in life.

  14. DOC Middle School Art Sketchbook Assignments

    Write sketchbook number, idea number, and date in the top corner on the back of the page sketchbook page. Ex. Sketchbook: # 2. Idea: 34. Date:12/24/12. Sketchbook List. Choose one from the list and complete a finished drawing each week. Remember to . fill the entire page, use full color or shading (media of your choice), and show. attention to ...

  15. The Sketchbook Project: The Beginning

    At our K-8 school our students get a 5×7 sketchbook in 4th grade, and they use that same book for two years. Then in 6th grade they get an 8×10 sketchbook that they use for 6th, 7th, and 8th. The books mostly live in the art room, but sometimes teachers take them on field trips for journaling and outdoor sketching.

  16. DOC Middle School Art Sketchbook Assignments

    Write sketchbook assignment number, idea number and date at the top corner on the back of the sketchbook page. Example: Sketchbook #1. Idea: 32. Date: 9/15/2015. Sketchbook List. Choose one from the list and complete a finished drawing each week. Remember to . fill the entire page, use full color or shading (media of your choice), and show

  17. Ideas for Art Sketchbooks

    Sketchbook Ideas. Sketchbook Ideas for High School - Middle School Compiled from TeacherArtExchange mailing list. Sketchbooks Assignments from Christine Sumner Lyman Sketchbook Assignments - Amanda Linn Advanced Placement Assignments

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    Ideally, sketchbooks should be a part of your students' artmaking process. Whether you have your kids taking notes, trying out new media, exploring techniques, or anything else-all of that can be done in their sketchbooks. You simply need to figure out exactly which of those ideas you want to incorporate. "If you want sketchbooks to work ...

  20. Weekly Sketchbook Drawing Assignments for Middle School Art or ...

    27. Products. $80.00 $119.00 Save $39.00. View Bundle. Intro to Art Start of the Year Project Bundle-Sketchbook Covers High School Art. This bundle includes the two full unit projects that I use at the start of the school year to introduce basic design and drawing techniques using mixed medias.

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