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"Properties
of Water with a Splash of Color" Lesson Plan
Keywords: dissolve,
absorb, transparent, dense, polar, cohesive forces adhesion, watercolor,
wash, medium, values
Prepared by: Janet Bartlett, St. Philip School, Crafton,
PA
Lesson Plan Grade Level: fourth through sixth grade
Total Time Required for Lesson: 40 minutes as one continuous
time block
Setting: art room classroom
Subjects Covered: science, art
Topics: properties of water, watercolor, wash, transparency,
color-mixing
Goals for the Lesson
- The students will
become aware of the properties of water
- The students will
concentrate on polar, cohesive forces, and adhesion of water.
- The students will
experiment with the cohesive quality of water using various water
color techniques.
- The students will
mix designated color combinations together and observe what colors
are created due to the cohesive quality of water.
- The students will
create a water color wash using various color combinations.
Materials Needed
- Incredible Water
with the Water Lion booklet, pages 7-8
- Appendix
I Worksheet
- strip of water color
paints
- brush
- water in small containers
(two per student)
- one sheet of water
color paper
- paper towel
State Standards Addressed:
E & E Standards Watersheds and Wetlands (4.1.4 B); National
Visual Arts Standards: Media, Techniques, and Processes (5-8.1 A&B)
Teaching Model: The
4MAT System
Instructional Phase
Read over section 3 page
7-8 in Incredible water With the Water Lion. (10 minutes)
Have enough copies of Appendix I worksheets
Have students experiment with the qualities of water and paint mixing
using the various techniques described on worksheet.(15 minutes)
Create a water color wash using a combination of colors suggested
in directives.(10 minutes)
Cleanup (5 Minutes)
Doing the Activity
- Read pages 7-8 in
Incredible Water With the Water Lion together (take turns
reading). Water can dissolve many substances. Water can absorb
a lot of heat before changing temperature. Water is transparent.
Water is most dense at 39 degrees F and less dense at temperatures
above and below 39 degrees F. Water molecules have a charge and
are polar. These attractive properties between molecules are called
cohesive forces. Water is also attracted to other substances which
is called adhesion. Attraction between water molecules enables
us to create beautiful effects in using water color paint and
allow the natural mixing of paint.
- Explore the cohesive
forces of water by working together on the distributed worksheet.
- In the first area
as directed, please wet your brush slightly, rub on a color of
your choice on the paint strip, dab the brush once on the paper
towel and apply to the "Dry on Dry" area on the worksheet.
- Next use more water,
rub on the paint, do not dab the paint on the towel and paint
directly in the "Wet on Dry" area of your worksheet.
- Clean your brush totally
in your dirty water container. Dip your brush in the clean water
container and paint clear water right onto the worksheet. Wet
the brush again, rub it in the paint, dab it on the towel and
apply paint to the wet splotch on the paper. " Dry on Wet."
- Clean your brush in
the dirty water, Dip it in the clean water. Paint the worksheet
with water only, wet the brush and rub it in the water color.
Apply it directly to the wet splotch, "Wet on Wet",
on the worksheet without dabbing it on the towel.
- Discuss the effects
created by using the different techniques of using water and the
application of paint. Especially note the effect created by using
wet paint on wet paper. What property of water made this happen?
How are the values (intensity on color) effected by the water.
- Using the color combination
explained below and the technique of using "wet on wet"
create the mixing of colors. Allow the paint to mix itself. The
cohesive forces of water will allow this to happen.
Assessment
Using what you know about
the qualities of water and the effect of different color combinations,
create a water color wash (Wet on Wet) over the entire sheet of
water color paper. We will be using your water color wash papers
for another lesson to be discussed at a later date.
Conclusion
"I hope you enjoyed
creating your lovely wash of colors and the natural mixing of colors.
This technique of using water colors is all possible due to the
unique properties of water. Using what we know about water can enhance
our artwork and make it pleasing to the eye. Using the cohesive
forces of water can bring a subtle and not harsh quality to our
work."
References
Sharpe, William E., and
Sanford S. Smith. Incredible Water With the Water Lion, 4-H Water
Project Unit 2. University Park, Pa.: Center for Water Stewardship,
The Pennsylvania State University.
Hubbard, Guy (1967).
Art in Action. Coronado Publishers Inc.
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