April 12, 2012

Assembling the Mosaic

From EPL, April 4 account:

"Last week Miss E helped the children decide which books of the story each would narrate for the performance. The Cyclops story will be acted out, but each child will tell a subsequent scene in their own words. E. wanted to talk about Hyperion's cattle because he is a "meatatarian" and therefore has sympathy for the hungry sailors who couldn't resist fresh steak.

Then, everyone tromped downstairs to run through their lines for the cyclops scene. C. narrated, while V. portrayed the fearsome cyclops. N. had clearly been well-rehersed and played a sailor with aplomb. They also decided they would like to have a museum to showcase their visual work at the final performance, though everyone wanted to be reassured that they would get all their art back.

After the run through, which Elizabeth noted took 10 minutes, everyone worked on a mosaic, gluing small glass and ceramic tiles to hardwood boards. We looked at some ancient mosaics too, and marveled at their detail. Some of the children's mosaics morphed into three dimensions, while some were abandoned to drawing or to gluing tiles on smaller picture frames. But all were coming along well by the end of class, and were to be worked on the next week if unfinished, and grouted the next week if completed.

Children left with various versions of the text. They would reread the portion of the story they'd be responsible for presenting, and were asked to practice a few times over the coming week."