Overview
Second-grade students experience Arts instruction through the broad integration of arts throughout the school day, as well as through stand-alone visual and performing arts lessons that happen throughout the week. Stand-alone arts lessons are taught by you, the classroom teacher, and via instruction from itinerant visual and performing arts teachers. In second grade, students create through a variety of stimuli (music/sound, text, objects, images, and symbols). Students are incorporating and considering the ideas, contributions, space, and feedback of their classmates. Second-grade students answer open-ended questions and are adding more details to develop their own creations. They are able to talk about what they did and what thinking went into their creative process. They listen to one another and appreciate different approaches and artworks.
Priority Standards
What students will know, what students will do, and what thinking skills students will develop to apply and transfer artistic understandings that endure within the discipline, leverage deeper understandings, and/or support readiness for success at the next grade level.
In second grade focus on these critical areas:
Exploring the cycle of creating, presenting & performing, responding, and connecting to works of art
Expressing with increasing creativity, complexity, and depth through 2D and 3D visual art
Expressing through creative movement and creative expression
Creating music through instruments, voice, or with objects
Instruction: Signature Elements
Below are signature elements of SFUSD Arts instruction that students should experience regularly throughout second grade as they develop as artists (visual artists, dancers, actors, musicians, and creative thinkers).
Open-ended Inquiry Exploration
Students respond to/investigate an image, a rhythm, a dance, or media using an inquiry-based set of questions. Questions might lead students to perceive or determine what message and/or mood is being communicated. Suggested thinking routines:
Creating: How artists work and what materials they use
Using music, sound, text, objects, images, and symbols, students in second grade create and/or perform art that expresses personal meaning. Students begin to organize their creations through hierarchies or compositions; they tell stories with a beginning, middle and clear end. Students have an awareness of themselves and others in space, they explore suggestions and make choices and start to discuss and reflect on their choices during the creative process.
Presenting & Performing: How artists share artwork with others
Second-grade students are now describing connections between arts, society, and culture. When presenting or performing their own body of art/design, songs, performances, or dances, students share their ideas and process. Students are asked open-ended prompts, “When is creative work ready to share?” “How did this dancer work with their space and time to communicate their story?” Second-grade students talk about the meaning of their work, why they made it, and describe personal connections.
Responding: What we can learn about ourselves and our world by observing art
Students listen when others speak and watch others perform as they participate by being an audience member. Second-grade students perceive and describe the aesthetic characters of what they’re seeing/hearing (mood, tone, movement, artist’s message). Students take time to describe their lives and create works of art about events in home, school, or community life. Students start to note what effect different art forms have on their mood, thoughts, and energy levels.
Connecting: How art helps us understand the lives of people, of different times, places and cultures
Students come together to make one artwork or performance. Students are brainstorming to generate new details and multiple approaches. They are considering multiple ways to create, and appreciate different approaches and the variety of ideas coming from classmates. Groups of students are investigating and collaborating to generate new ideas - taking risks and experimenting with various materials and tools to explore personal interests.
Structured Talk & Reflection Throughout
At the beginning, middle, and end of the time, students respond to open-ended questions, use turn-and-talk, gallery walks, and closing circles to view, celebrate and ask questions about peers' work. They also have moments to pause and also reflect on their own process. Closing discussions: “Tell me about what you created” What did you notice when you say your classmates’ work? When your classmate made music, what made you go wow? What surprised you? What would you do differently next time?”
Materials
Below are items you should have to support your students' Arts instruction (make a copy). If you are missing anything from the list, please first contact your site administrator or site Arts Coordinator. Every school has an Arts Coordinator who can guide you and support you in accessing lessons or purchasing your classroom materials for the arts. If they are unable to resolve the issue promptly, please contact Emily Aldama or Ronnie Machado from the SFUSD Arts Team.
VISUAL ARTS
- Projector with speakers or large screen with Apple TV
- Materials for drawing in black and white: Pencils, Pens, Black felt-tip markers
- Materials for drawing in color: Colored Pencils, Crayons, Markers
- Paints: Watercolors, tempera paint, or paint crayons
- White drawing paper - 9x12, 12x18, or 18x24
- Color papers: Color copy paper, construction paper, and/or colored tissue paper
- Scissors
- Tape
- White glue, Glue Sticks
- Any type of clay (Model Magic, Airdry clay, or modeling) and plastic utensils, toothpicks, etc. for clay tools
- String or thread
- Cardboard
- Brown paper bags
- Objects to draw: shells, leaves, seed pods, rocks, blocks, toys, etc
- Drying rack or area to store art
PERFORMING ARTS:
- Projector / Whiteboard / Smartboard
- Speakers for Audio
- Chiffon Scarves
- Designated presentation space in the classroom and the school (display case, bulletin board, theater/stage, website, social media) to make learning visible
- A space clear of furniture/obstacles where students can move freely and safely
- Instrumental music tracks for movement
- Ribbon sticks
- Chart paper/index cards
- Markers, pencils
- Painters’ tape (optional)
- Known poems, nursery rhymes, songs
- Picture cards of instruments with the names of instruments written below the picture.
- Big book stand, music stand, board-anything to arrange cards in sequence from left to right.
- Rhythm cards, and manipulatives to represent note values (e.g., popsicle sticks, paper cutouts, etc.)
Planning Guide
There is no planning guide for second-grade Arts.
Reflection Questions
- How are students' developmental needs, communities, and experiences being reflected and honored, or how could they be?
- What opportunities do you see for developing equitable access & demand, inquiry, collaboration, and assessment for learning?
- What are the implications for your own practice? What strengths can you build upon? What will you do first?
Want More?
Standards
Frameworks to Support Arts Instruction
Contact the Arts Team
This page was last updated on May 18, 2023