Directed Drawing BUNDLE for Preschool, Pre-K, Kindergarten
- Zip
What educators are saying
Products in this Bundle (9)
showing 1-5 of 9 products
Bonus
Also included in
- Are you ready for an amazing school year? I’ve got all the printables you need to have a successful school year. Every Pocket of Preschool bundles and individual resources on TpT is included in this HUGE Curriculum pack: Assessments, Student Portfolios, Character Education and Social Skills, Math anPrice $850.00Original Price $1609.50Save $759.50
Description
Directed drawings are a fun way to teach students how to draw and build fine motor strength! Each Directed Drawing Unit will include eight different directed drawings. These directed drawings are very simple, making them perfect for little learners in preschool, pre-k, kindergarten, and first grade. Included are ideas to make directed drawings with various art media and background options.
EACH DIRECTED DRAWING INCLUDES:
•Full-page directed drawing poster
•Half-page directed drawing posters
•Draw and Write! Students can draw and then write about it below!
BONUS FILE INCLUDES:
- Covers & labels for each set
- Student Portfolio Directed Drawing Cover
What's Included:
- Fall Directed Drawings
Crayon, Apple, Fire Truck, Pumpkin, Acorn, Spider, Frankenstein, Turkey
Mittens, Snowman, Penguin, Polar Bear, Gingerbread, Christmas Tree, Reindeer, Menorah, Valentine
-Book Buddies Directed Drawings
Caterpillar, Cool Cat, Color Monster, Pigeon, Coconut Tree, Llama, Pouty Fish, Mouse & Cookie
Rainbow, Leprechaun, Bunny, Kite, Flowers, Butterfly, Frog, & Earth
-Transportation Directed Drawings
Hot Air Balloon, Recycling Truck, Helicopter, Spaceship, Sailboat, Excavator, Train, & Bus
American Flag, Ice Cream, Watermelon, Baseball, Turtle, Bee, Shark, Crab
Tiger, Giraffe, Raccoon, Owl, Sheep, Pig, Jellyfish, Pufferfish
Donut, Dinosaur, Puppy, Dental Health, Birthday Cake, Castle, Pizza, Sleepy Bear
Why should you use directed drawings in your classroom?
•Strengthens fine motor muscles.
•Easy way to infuse art into the classroom.
•Calming activity! Art is very calming and relaxing for most students.
•Fun way to practice following directions.
•Teaches students how to draw by noticing shapes in objects!
•Drawing is communicating! You will see growth and more details in their illustrations.
•Gorgeous bulletin boards and student art to decorate the classroom.
•Builds confidence and creativity.
These are perfect for Fine Motor Journals!
Helpful Tips and Tricks:
PREP: Print the directed drawing direction posters and prep the materials (paper, art media).
TEACHER-DIRECTED LESSON: The first few directed drawing activities need to be teacher-led to help all students be successful.
•You draw a step, model, and verbally explain how to draw each shape and the size (ex: “This shape looks like a small U shape, I’m going to make this small….down, curve, up”.) Then, students draw that step.
•Continue to model a step, then students draw a step until the drawing is complete.
•Model creating the background. Then, students create the background.
•Encourage students that their painting is going to be unique, it’s ok to mess up, and it’s ok if it’s not perfect.
SIGN THEIR NAME: Have students sign their names on the front of their drawings. Have name cards at the table for students to use as a model.
CENTER ACTIVITY: Once students have done multiple directed drawings in the classroom, they may be ready to do it independently. Now, you can use directed drawings in center activities, early finisher activities, morning activity, indoor recess, or in the art center. Put out the various supplies and let students choose what they want to use to create their directed drawing.
PRACTICE WITH DRY-ERASE BOARDS: You can have students practice on a dry-erase board. Practice the whole picture or practice shapes.
THE PERFECTIONIST STUDENTS! You will always have some students that want their drawing to be perfect. BEFORE you begin each directed drawing, have a conversation about how each one of us is amazing and unique, so your drawings will all be amazing and unique, just like them! You can also model making mistakes and model reacting to that mistake.
DIRECTED DRAWINGS DO NOT REPLACE OPEN-ENDED ART: Make time for open-ended art too, so students have the opportunity to create, express themselves, and use their imagination that is process focused, not product focused.
Check out these fun fine motor literacy resources:
- Brick Block Letter Mats
- Play Dough Letter Mats
- Make It Letter Mats (with mini erasers or other small manipulatives)
- Pattern Block Letter Mats
- Connecting Cube Letter Mats
- Road Letter Mats
- Geoboard Letter Mats
- Dot It Letter Mats (with pom poms, cereal, bingo daubers, or candy)
- Hammer It or Paint It Letter Mats (use golf tees or Q-Tips to paint)
- Big Block Letter Mats (for Duplo size brick blocks)
Click the green star to follow me to receive 50% off all new products for the first 24 hours a new product is posted! Visit my store Pocket of Preschool.
Let’s Connect!
Sign up for my newsletter, and you will receive a HUGE family theme writing center filled with word cards, writing paper, write the room, a teacher page with tons of ideas on how to use it in the classroom, and real photos of it in action in a classroom for FREE!
Terms of Use
Pocket of Preschool™️. By purchasing and/or downloading this electronic file, you agree to the following terms. For personal use/single classroom use only. No part of this document may be distributed, posted on the internet, copied, edited, or resold. ALL contents of this document are under copyright protection, including all content, text, fonts, and graphics. Thank you for respecting my hard word as well as the hard work of the artists whose work helped create this product.
Pocket of Preschool ®