Start off by using a good brush. One that has a wider handle with smooth bristles. Cheap, stiff brushes are not nearly as good for spreading paint.
Demonstrate how to use big, sweeping arm movements for broad paint strokes (petting a cat is a good analogy) and then small movements for small strokes. Let the children experiment with both.
For little kids, try not to use small watercolor pan paints that come in the trays. Watercolor sets with larger color wells are best at this age.
Tempera cakes provide brilliant color in a convenient package. |
- 1 cup of water
- 1 cup of flour (for gluten free version use Cup4Cup)
- 1 cup of salt
- food coloring
Give Pre-K students lots of opportunity to free-paint. Keep instruction and direction to a minimum. Always react to paintings in neutral and enthusiastic manner :-).
With a few cheap and simple materials, students can begin to express themselves in color!
What tips and tricks do you have for working with Pre-K and kindergartners?
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