Santa comes in all Shapes and Sizes: Yr 3 Make Bouncing Santas!

By Jan Miller

This resource is part of a collection of resources by Jan Miller called Teaching Art to Year Three.

A fun end of term project that would also be perfect to do at home – making model Santas with character!  Jan Miller share a process to make 3D model Santas using simple materials and processes.  This activity can be used with children aged 7 to 14 (any KS, 2, 3 children).

Santa Comes In All Shapes and Sizes: Yr 3 Make Bouncing Santas by Jan Miller

‘Can you make something Christmassy with the class?’ I was asked. Christmas cards with a moving Father Christmas, made with split pins, was my first thought. Then I remembered all the treasured little keep-sakes I had kept from my own children, that come down from the loft each year. The toilet roll wise man has a special pace on my window sill each year. Then I remembered my only surviving Christmas decoration that I made when I was that age.  It is a Father Christmas made from crepe paper with a cotton wool beard, and apart from some sellotape repairs…you would not guess he is 38 years old!

‘Let’s carry them like Mary carried Jesus’ was a lovely quote, as the children carried their models with the same care as a real baby.  I hope some of the children’s models survive, as keepsakes, to show their children!

Context

This project took 1 hour and was a perfect End of Term Christmas activity. I demonstrated how to make the basic model, but then the rest was their own design and I was just needed for the extra fingers to hold things while they cut their sellotape. They will certainly add some creative sparkle to any classroom and the children will be desperate to take them home. This is a lovely activity for parents to do with their children at the kitchen table, and can be easily adapted with whatever materials available. Model-making with a few basic materials hasn’t changed over the decades and neither has children’s enjoyment of these activities.

Aims

  • Use sketchbooks to gather information – drawing your Santa first
  • Use decorative materials to add interest
  • Explore the possibilities of found or recycled materials
  • Model 3-dimensionally, considering all sides
  • Develop pragmatic skills, handle and shape tactile materials
  • Celebrate an individual response, focussing on their intentions
  • Working spontaneously, with pace, incorporating mistakes as review and edit to improve
  • Learn and use specific skills to make a paper spring and a cone
  • Use Mathematics to estimate and measure if needed
  • Develop a project in which all abilities can feel a sense of achievement
  • Support each other as they teach peers when they have worked out how to make a feature
  • Cross curricular link with Literacy with stories being told about their particular Santa adventures

Santa Comes In All Shapes and Sizes: Yr 3 Make Bouncing Santas by Jan Miller

Who are the sessions aimed at?

Year 3 children, aged 7, completed their own Santas in this project. With a little more support, younger ones in KS1 could easily make. Equally, other KS2 would love to make.

Which areas of exploration are covered?

  • Designing, if time. Drawing from memory and observation
  • Develop Design & Technology knowledge of construction skills and mechanisms to create moving arms
  • Exploring new materials for making art – exploring types of paper and card
  • Learning through play and experimentation
  • Working spontaneously

How much time is needed?

This was all completed in an hour, but can be split into two half-hour slots. If you were working with a smaller group of children the activities may take less time or can be extended. Pupils developed an understanding of process and materials and feel a sense of ownership over their model. The teacher could complete more of the preparation – allocating materials in tubs on tables or making the newspaper balls if pupils are younger. Sketchbooks were available and some sketched Santa and made notes, planning what materials were to be used. The lesson could involve the children drawing their labelled plan of intentions initially but I preferred spontaneous making for this task.

Extension ideas

  • Some made presents by wrapping a square of card and using wool or pipe cleaner for the bow
  • Some put elastic for Santa to bounce
  • Some took photos of their model, and printed out to make a card
  • Some used a soap powder box to make a ‘sleigh’ by turning the box ‘inside out’ and decorating
  • Could make a pom-pom hat with card rings
  • Some added string around the neck and a small bell
  • The basic shapes can be decorated for a snowman, elf etc.

TIP

Supervised dots of cool melt glue gun are perfect to secure something instantly.

Santa Comes In All Shapes and Sizes: Yr 3 Make Bouncing Santas by Jan Miller

Where might the sessions be used?

  • Classrooms (as part of art lessons or workshop)
  • After school art club or AG&T group
  • Community groups (i.e. Scouts and Guides)
  • Gallery, Museum or Art Organisation workshop
  • SEND, with support.
  • EAL- demonstrated stages so ‘English as an Additional Language’ students can access and follow. Key words could be displayed and used for features of the body, clothes, colours or materials.

Materials and Equipment Preparation

  • Scissors
  • Glue gun or double sided sticky pads, masking tape, sellotape
  • Cotton wool, cotton wool pads or wool or cut pieces from a mop or shredded paper
  • Red/white paper- photocopy paper or crepe paper
  • Thin red card
  • Black paper
  • Newspaper
  • Small piece of gold paper or tin foil
  • Pipe cleaners- optional
  • Googly eyes or black pen
  • Elastic

Santa Comes In All Shapes and Sizes: Yr 3 Make Bouncing Santas by Jan Miller


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santa comes in all shapes and sizes

A fun end of term school project that would also be perfect to do at home – making model Santas with character! Jan Miller share a process to make 3D model Santas using simple materials and processes. A fun end of term school project that would also be perfect to do at home – making model Santas with character! Jan Miller share a process to make 3D model Santas using simple materials and processes.

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The teenage #BeACreativeProducer team were invited to present their project at the APPG for Art, Craft and Design Education at the Houses of Parliament, London, on November 13th.

The #BeACreativeProducer team visit the Houses of Parliament

A full transcript of their presentation, including video clips of their animation, are provided below. 

The team did incredibly well, holding the room with confidence, eloquence and creativity in abundance as they shared their experiences of the project, and spoke in support of arts education. They also answered a number of questions, holding the floor for 40 minutes. Well done team!

The #BeACreativeProducer team visit the Houses of Parliament

Find out more about the project here.

Introduction by Paula Briggs, Co-Director, AccessArt

“Hello, My Name is Paula from AccessArt, and I’m here with Sheila, my colleague, and the teenage #BeACreativeProducer team. I’m not going to talk for long before I pass you over to the team.

First of all a big thank you to the APPG for inviting us, we really appreciate the opportunity and we hope you enjoy our presentation.

I want to talk briefly about Creativity, and to look at the ways our project is enabling creativity in teenagers.

I don’t think a week goes by when Sheila and I don’t have a conversation about the nature of creativity, and the fragility of the creative process. The teenage years in particular, can be a time when a young person’s creativity feel’s especially vulnerable. I want this to be an upbeat presentation, as I’m sure it will be, and these teenagers definitely deserve that, but I do want to touch on 2 things that can undermine teenager’s creativity.

The first is the message we are giving to teenagers today, that there is a subject hierarchy, and that creativity is way down at the bottom. Let us all acknowledge, that by pushing creative subjects down in that subject hierarchy, we are in effect telling teenagers that their creativity does not matter. Not all teenagers, not all schools, many schools are managing to preserve their creative offering, but in general, this is the message teenagers are hearing.

The second thing which can undermine teenager’s creativity is social media, or to put it into a wider context, the ability of the phone to keep the teenagers’ attention.

Before I go any further I want to clarify, Sheila and I are great advocates of digital – we know that through embracing all things digital we have been able to impact upon visual arts education. BUT, we all acknowledge that social media has two sides: educational, inspiring, connecting, but it can also be distracting, and prevent a connection with the physical world. Even teenagers themselves acknowledge that whilst it can inspire them, it can also drain them.

The problem is that social media can prevent teenagers from paying attention to their creativity. It is the thing they go to when they are bored, when they have finished something, or even when they haven’t finished something, as a distraction.

So whilst on the face of it the #BeACreativeProducer project is an animation project, a project in which a group of creative teenagers come together to share their skills, to create animations which celebrate and advocate teenage creativity, the project is also about how we can address the things which put pressure on a teenagers creative potential.

The #BeACreativeProducer team visit the Houses of Parliament

Number One, we need to look teenagers in the eye and tell them we value their creativity. We need to SHOW them we value their creativity. We need to enable teenagers to look each other in the eye and support each other’s creativity, and we need to make certain that teenagers can therefore look themselves in the eye, maybe next time they take a selfie or look in the mirror, and tell themselves that their creativity is an important part of who they are.

Number Two, we need to help teenagers pay attention to their creativity. Creativity is a fragile beast, but it is also resilient. We can push it down personally (we have an idea which we dismiss), we can push it down socially (we can neglect to invest time and money) and ultimately we will push it down economically (if we have not invested in the creativity of a generation, how can we expect to reap economic rewards), BUT the creative urge will always be there, lying waiting, it is an intrinsic part of our humanity.

The good news is, if we can pay attention to even the smallest of creative urges or sparks, they will grow. We only need to tune in, and we will feed our creativity. It is the tuning in, or the showing up, that’s vital. So, whilst art lessons are filled with techniques and art history and contextual studies, I would also suggest we need to think more about how we can enable teenagers to understand what it is like being IN the creative process, with its ugliness and beauty, inspiration and frustration, moments of desperation and moments of eureka. It isn’t about the end result, though that is often great, it is about the create journey, and whilst we all go on our own journey, there are commonalities which we should be talking about more, so that we can reassure and demonstrate to teenagers that what they feel whilst they are being creative, is ok, and so enable them to continue on their journey.

We’d like to start with a quick video to introduce the team and the project. The fifth member, Immy, is at a ballet exam – we wish her good luck!”

Alex
The Project started in June. We noticed amongst our classmates that some people were pursuing their interests and hobbies, whilst others were dropping them as they weren’t seen as cool. Instead they were spending more time on their phone. The project started as a message to help teenager become aware of how much time they are spending consuming digital, and to remind them that they can be producers, as well as consumers.

Amelia
But the project quickly developed into much more than that, and the animations we are making now are about helping teenagers think about how important their creativity is, both to them and to the world, and how they can become more creative.

Alex
We’re definitely NOT saying that digital is a bad thing – the project wouldn’t exist without digital, but we are trying to remind teenagers to consume it mindfully, and to balance it with the physical world.

Lluis
We have been meeting most weeks since June, after school and at the weekend. We must have put in hundreds of hours of work. The project will finish in February 2019.

Rowan
So what are our sessions like? Varied, is probably the best way of describing them! We usually start off around the table (eating pancakes) whilst Paula brings is up to date on things that have happened during the week (like being invited to the houses of parliament). We look back at clips made the week before, think what we might need to do to change them.

Amelia
Then we usually split up into pairs to work on new animations. So, two of us might be animating letters on a whiteboard, whilst another two might be editing photos in photoshop or in iMovie. Or we might be making physical models for an animation, and filming each other or recording voice overs. Every now and then we get together to compose music collaboratively, or compose it individually at home.

All the clips are then sent back to Paula’s laptop for us then to edit together to make the scenes… Like Scene 2 which we would like to share with you now.

Rowan
We’re so proud of what we’ve achieved so far. As well as being invited here, to share the project with you, we have also led a workshop at the Arts Picture House Cambridge, and have been invited to write a blog post for their website, and screen part of the animation before a main feature in 2019. Cambridge Junction will host a launch party for the finished animation in 2019. If you’d like to come to the launch then pls let us know.

Lluis
Every session we do is documented and Paula then creates a post on the AccessArt website so that others can be inspired and have a go.

We have also run a successful crowdfunder appeal to pay for workshops for schools on the launch day, AND for prizes for an animation competition we have launched.

Alex
“The World Needs Your Creativity! Animation competition is for ages 11 to 15. We had the idea, to get other teenagers involved, by inviting them to create a 30 second animation. The winning entry will receive £100 worth of vouchers and also have their animation included in our main animation on the opening night. You can find out more about the competition on the AccessArt website.

Amelia
The final animation will be around 20 minutes long, split into 5 scenes which can be watched alone, like scene 2 you just watched. We will also have an animated quiz section to help teenagers think about their attitude to consuming and creating digital content.

Rowan
The end result will be shared via social media and the AccessArt and #BeACreativeProducer websites, and we hope that schools, arts organisations and community groups across the country will share it with teenagers to help inspire their creativity.

The #BeACreativeProducer team visit the Houses of Parliament

The #BeACreativeProducer team visit the Houses of Parliament

The #BeACreativeProducer team visit the Houses of Parliament

Alex
So, What Have we Learnt from the Project?
The Project has helped us build a variety of skills….

Amelia
It’s helped me build confidence in public speaking and helped me grow as a person. We are able to work as a team and empower each other in a relaxed and positive environment, which is an opportunity we don’t often get at school.

Alex
The project has given great encouragement to everyone’s creativity. For me in particular, it has helped feed my skill and interest in composing music, both for the project and for my own pleasure. I think my attitude to my own creativity has developed hugely throughout the project.

Rowan 
I think that one of the most important things to me about the project is the way we are all able to contribute our ideas into what we do next, in a way we can’t at school. Every session we are given the opportunity to input our own thoughts and opinions, and then have the freedom to put our ideas into action.

Lluis
Working on the project has given me a reason and a focus for my woodworking. I’ve enjoyed sharing what I’ve made and seeing them valued in the project.

Amelia
We would also like to see if we can develop the #BeACreativeProducer website (if we have the energy!) into a place which encourages teenagers to make and share their own animations, either alone or as a team, about things which they care about.

Rowan
So how can you help? Pls share the project and the competition, and we hope we have inspired you to look teenagers in the eye whenever you can and tell them that the world needs (and values) their creativity!!!

If anyone has any questions, we would love to answer them.

Thank you.

The Team invited the audience to write messages in support of art education on mini-banners. The banners were then animated back in Cambridge, and a sound track made…

https://vimeo.com/301462578

 

 

 

The #BeACreativeProducer team visit the Houses of Parliament

 

Very many thanks to the Board of the APPG for Art, Design and Craft Education for inviting the team to present.


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