Friday, September 30, 2022

9 Halloween Art Sub Lessons

9 Halloween Art Lesson Plans Easy Enough for a Sub

Here are some fun lessons for October. I’ll add some that can be adapted for those kids who cannot use Halloween imagery for religious or personal reasons.

First, here’s one I just created. Kids love drawing “doodle monsters.” They are easy shapes to draw and there are so many options for adding fun details. 
Crayon drawing of Halloween doodle monsters


In this art lesson, I gave examples of doodle monster drawings that are either Halloween focused, with mummies, ghosts, witches, and the likes plus an example of one with none of that. It has footballs, fall trees, hot cocoa, and warm clothes. Kids will appreciate that options are given for either direction.

You can find that lesson in my TpT shop:  Doodle Monsters at Halloween.

At the Mrs Art Teacher Lady blog. you can find a directed drawing. "Halloween Bats and Frankenstein Monsters" is a lesson that both upper and lower elementary kids will have fun drawing. It uses simple materials, so would be great for a substitute teacher.

Crayon drawing of a Frankenstein monster




The TpT shop, "Cool Classroom Stuff" has an activity that would be super easy for your sub to teach. This one is focused on Mexican Sugar Skulls. Your kids will be engaged and happy to work on this one.



Here's another one at "Cool Classroom Stuff." This is a fall themed one and would be good for fourth grade through middle school. 

This radial symmetry lesson has templates and sample templates to help kids out.



Amy, at Makes and Takes, gives step-by-step instructions and many visuals for this lesson. She used black paper and oil pastel, but this could easily be done with crayons on lighter paper.
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patterned pumpkin drawing



At Panicked Teacher, Susie gives you step by step instructions on how to make this patterned pumpkin.  I believe she is a classroom teacher who has to supplement art instruction in her class for most of the school year.
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art sub plan with pumpkin and patterns
This lesson, at ArtfulNest, was written for middle school.  You could write it up as a fifth-grade lesson or a sixth-grade one.  You could also bring it down to the upper primary grades with a change of media.  Leave your subs some good visuals.  They could teach this!           

 haunted house, drawing, sub lesson

This Halloween art lesson is fun for students and easy to teach. The prep for this is minimal. Students will need paper; one black crayon per student; and assorted other crayon colors. I call it a “print and go” lesson as that is all you need to do.

It includes full instructions and visuals. You could even post it as an art learning center in the classroom.

“Creating Silly Monsters” is a fun lesson about monsters that you could use in an art center; as a regular art lesson; or for an art sub. It is super easy to teach and kids will love it. Check it out at TPT Shop: Centers and Early Finishers  It would be timely around Halloween but could be taught any time.

monster drawing lesson for halloween, art subs, or art centers










This lesson was posted on a blog called, “Clown and Poodle.” It appears that it no longer exists. However, I had written a blog post inspired by the original, and that still exists. You can see that complete lesson in my blog post here: Purple People Eater


Sunday, September 4, 2022

15 Name Art Lessons for Back to School

Name Art Projects as Art Sub Lessons

During back to school season, teachers love teaching art lessons using students' names. I have found 15 art name lessons, mostly of which are fully formed and can be taught by a sub. Here are some ideas for name art projects to inspire you.

Why do teachers like to teach name art lessons?

Art teachers often have hundreds of students a semester. Learning their names is not an easy task. The more often you connect the student with their name, the more helpful. So, seeing a child with their name art can't hurt that, right?

And sometimes one of the first art lessons of the year is to create a folder for their artwork. A name activity works well for that. 

Many of the name art lessons I have seen are "no fail." That's always a plus for the new school year!

Cool name art lessons 

These lessons are simple enough that a substitute teacher could teach them. These all have instructions included and use simple materials.

Name art monster drawing


Symmetrical Alien Names @ Charity Mika

This blog post shows instructions and sample art work.

MATERIALS
• Copy paper, 11″ x 17″ works well
• Black Sharpie Marker
• Crayons/Markers/Oil Pastels/Chalk



Name art lesson using simple materials

Art with Kids: Rollercoaster Names @ Jones Design Company

Has instructions and plenty of samples.

MATERIALS
• paper
• Black Sharpie Marker
• Crayons/Markers/Oil Pastels/Chalk



Kaleidoscope marker drawing using a student's name

Radial Design Art Lesson for Middle School Kids @ Leah Newton Art

This blog post has full instructions and examples of finished work.

Materials
  • Pencils
  • 5’’ Cardboard Squares for students to trace
  • One 4.5’’ tracing paper square for each student
  • One 9’’ white copy paper square for each student.
  • Markers and colored pencils.



kaleidoscope marker drawing


Tried and True: Kaleidoscope Name Designs@ Paint On All the Tables

This blog post has step by step instructions with photos.

Materials
  • Pencils
  • One 9’’ white copy paper square for each student.
  • Markers and colored pencils.

student marker monster drawing based on their name

Name Monster Tutorial @ Saskatoon Community Youth Arts Programming, Inc.

This blog post has instructions and step by step photos.

Materials
Pencils
  • Paper
  • Scissors
  • Markers and colored pencils.

Name alien art lesson

Fun Name Art @ Happy Family Art

This blog post has step by step instructions and photos.

Materials

12" x 18" paper markers

Paper

marker drawing of a radial symmetry name design

What's in a Name @ Creativity is Contagious

This post includes directions and step by step photos.

Materials
paper
pencil
Sharpie

This post has instructions, photos, and a video.

Materials
Paper - long strips
Pencils
Markers

This blog post has photos and a description of how to do it.

If you would like a fully formed version that is ready to hand to a sub, you can find one here, at my TpT shop:  Name People Art Sub Lesson @ TpT Shop: Art Sub Lessons

It uses the most simple supplies, is fully scripted, and can be taught by anyone.

Materials
Long strips of paper
pencils
crayons or markers

This includes instructions and photos.

Materials
Markers
Colored Pencils
Pencils
Erasers
White Paper




Name Art Crafts @ Fun365

This would work well for preschool and kindergarten. There are step by step instructions with photos. There is some prep you would need to do ahead of time.  

Materials
Paper
Washi Tape (or painters tape)
Bingo-type dabbers




Graffiti Art @ Dick Blick

This post includes a downloadable .pdf.

Materials
Paper
Colored pencils
Glue

This post is an idea for a lesson that includes a literary component. It will include some prep ahead of time.

Materials
Paper - colored
glue sticks

This link leads you to a post I wrote about a lesson by Betsy Morningstar. 




Radial Name Design

Originally, this went to a lesson at Art4Cast, but the post no longer exists. I wrote a blog post on my blog about the idea.

Materials
Paper cut into large squares
Pencils
Crayon or markers
This is a fully formed art sub lesson that anyone can teach. It uses the most simple materials. 

Materials
Paper
Pencils
Sharpies, crayons, or markers

You can find this at my TpT Shop: Art Sub Lessons


Checklist for Creating a Sub Folder

By the way, if you need help creating an art sub folder, check out the blog post where I spell that out for you.  22 Things to Include in an Art Sub Folder