11/11/2023 0 Comments Teaching beautiful oops![]() ![]() To help find the right starting point, have the child point to the perfect place on the paper. It was certainly a Halloween for the books! The art teachers have upheld their honour, validated their artistic abilities, and once again reigned in the realm of school staff stylings. Placing the eye of an elephant or the center of a flower can be hard. In all lessons in the lead up to Book-O-Ween we themed up and facilitated Beautiful Oops lessons where kids turned Oops papers into works of art. The art themed book choice, was no accident. Lastly, we added some look-a-like sticky notes to the back with the lines from the pages we presented. Learn about lines, shapes, detail, and oil pastel techniques. ![]() Once in full gear, we pull a dust bin handle across our collar bone and under our shirt to help hold the tunic out so the images and words could be seem which also made us look like a sheet of paper. Beautiful Oops Lesson Summary Read the book Beautiful Oops and discuss ways to respond to mistakes in art. We then paired the DIY costumes with matching yellow tights, purple wigs and purple lipstick. Then we simply assembled al the parts onto head bands.įor the finishing touches on the tunic, we added details, other images from the book and of course some un-accidental oopses such as splatters, smudges, stains, and smears. Once dry, I peeled it off (very satisfying) and cut it into the spill shape I needed.įor the ‘Beautiful’ head piece we used an old palette and paint brushes which matched the colours of the scheme. Start teaching growth mindset early to your preschool and kindergarten children. This book has so many wonderful inspirational ideas of how to turn mistakes into something beautiful To purchase this book: https. So, I first poured purple latex based paint on a sheet of plexi glass. Ms Kathy reads aloud Beautiful Oops, written by Barny Saltzberg. For the ‘Oops’ head piece, I wanted it to look like paint was spilling out of a bucket like the image in the book. ![]() Once they were dry, we flipped them over and painted ‘Oops’ on one side and ‘Beautiful on the other’. We made sure the shapes were identical so the comparison could be made. We started by painting large purple spill-like shapes onto thick cotton fabric, which we would wear like a tunic. We actually used a combination of a few pages to focus our visuals and colour scheme to purple, yellow and lime green. I would be the ‘Oops’ and my co-teacher would be the ‘Beautiful’. Take other colors and have them color inside the squiggles. Put on some fun music and have the person move their arms around on the paper as if they are dancing to the music. The book encourages kids to use their imagination to turn a spill or a tear in their paper into art. Take a large piece of paper and give someone two crayons. I decided to use the book Beautiful Oops by Barney Salzberg as my inspiration and quickly began plotting and planning with my co-teacher on how to embody the book. ![]()
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