No matter what age students you teach, whenever you are creating art, you can find a mathematical connection.
Art Math connections:
- Categorizing warm / cool colors
- Finding symmetries, rotations, or geometric shapes
- Measuring angles video
- Looking at proportions
- Measuring curves or straight lines
- Investigating the golden ratio in art video
- Discussing saturation of hues
- Using grids for perspective or for accurate drawings
- Using grids to change scale. video
- Classifying media, styles, art movements, or anything else
The alternative, when you are teaching math yet looking for art projects, may seem more difficult.
Math Art Connections:
- Make geometric patterns from digit sums of multiples of eight and one – much easier than it sounds.
- Gentle math/art activities that give teachers a chance to watch students’ thinking in action.
- Paint half of a picture on half a page of paper, then fold to create a symmetrical image.
- Share a decorative graph then invite students to make their own to highlight the concepts, part of the concepts, or an extension of the concepts.
- Illustrate a story that could go with an equation of the type being studied.
- Have young students illustrate what they do at various hours of the day; invite them to include an analog clock showing the time.
- Counting money? Check out this Money Math Collage Activity.
- Use geometric shapes to create a collage or potato prints.
- Assign a color to each digit, then look for patterns in multiples or factors of various numbers.
- Recycle paper into beautiful origami models.
- Measuring angles? Make realistic drawings of an open door, a hallway, houses along a street…
- Processing Percents? Make a beautiful color wheel sun with full saturation of colors at the center, then adding 10% more white to each color as the rays shine outward.
- Music IS Math!
- Square numbers and their roots star in this creative art project
- Dealing with Data? Explore then create colorful displays of information.
- Wherever there is multiplication there are patterns.
Art projects that display the idea being taught in math class boost the lesson’s effectiveness and offer students a chance to reflect on math concepts. Plus doing something colorful and creative is always interesting.
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