Lesson Plan #1: Make a series of ‘Selfies’
Objectives: Students of this age group, especially in this technology driven generation, tend to be comfortable with using their smartphones on the go. To foster interest-based learning, the following assignment encourages them to use their phones in a way that they would in their free time. It’s convenient and they can even work on their projects on the go and outside of the art classroom.
Building off a classic assignment of the self portrait, the goal of this lesson is to incorporate new tools of digital drawing through the app Brushes to encourage self expression and free form mark making.
Target Audience: 5th grade
Tools: iPhone/smartphone, Brushes app
Instructions:
- Take a series of 5 selfies: tell a story using your face as the canvas. Think about how to express an emotion with a photograph
- Once you have selected your 5 images, think about the order of them.
- Introduce the medium of Brushes, how it is similar to Photoshop on the go.
- Encourage students to use both brushes and pens to “add to the piece”
- Next, invite students to subtract from the piece with the eraser, thinking about positive and negative space.
- Compile your 5 images into a slideshow or any creative platform, and present to the rest of the class
- Facilitate a class critique, ask the students: how does this reflect your perception of your self identity? What were the challenges? A mini art critique that engages the class in giving one another feedback.
Takeaways:
This project encourages students to create a story, a personal narrative using their own face as the canvas, and utilize technology to enhance their message. Students will be able to use the guidelines to adjust to their own interests and messages that they are interested in telling. Furthermore, they will learn a new tool that they can use on the go, hopefully encouraging them to use this Brushes app in their own personal lives. Coupled with the rise of social media in pre-adolescents, they can use this medium for their own profiles and presence online.
Lesson Plan #2: Paint the Noise
Objectives: Linking sound with sight, this free form painting assignment on Photoshop encourages middle schoolers to paint within set guidelines. While this may seem limiting, it actually forces the students, when introduced to a new material, to really experience the program and familiarize themselves with the fundamental tools of shapes, lines, color, and filters.
Target Audience: 7th grade
Tools: Speakers, a sound of choice: dog barking, police sirens, rain fallling, national anthem, etc, Photoshop
Instructions:
- Show students examples of iPad drawings by David Hockney, and also examples of sound wave paintings.
- Introduce the students to fundamental basics of Photoshop, play a Lynda tutorial or assign as homework before the class.
- Play the noise of choice, and ask them to paint using Photoshop a visual interpretation of it.
- First, only ask them to use shape tools, next, ask them to use the fill tool and add only three colors, third, ask them to use filters.
- Print out all the images and hang them on a white wall, to mimic a gallery or museum space. Foster a class critique on one another’s pieces. Invite specific students to speak about one another student’s piece by drawing a name from a hat.
Takeaways:
This project creates a sensory experience, inviting students to link up their sense of sound with their sense of sight. Introducing them to Photoshop is a very exciting opportunity, and can be overwhelming, hence limiting the tools they are allowed to use initially can be a fruitful practice. By having a gallery-esque set up at the end of the lesson, students will feel like they can be artists, and also have a glossy, colorful printout to hang up, hence taking ownership and pride in their work.

















