Friday, 25 April 2014

Integration Art Days!

 Ever since the Grade 2's have began the weekly integration day at Senior OSC, Tuesdays have been pretty quiet at Junior. Couple that with the fact that this past Tuesday was beautiful (well, not cold and not rainy) and you've got a very quiet art table. With only a handful of kids signed up, we decided on two simple spring crafts. We tried our hand at tissue paper flowers. Not much to it, but very cute. We used tissue paper and streamers and kind of just folded, crunched, and layered our 'petals' until they looked like a flower. We moved onto butterfly paintings which is just how it sounds! My initial idea was to suggest that they only paint one half of the butterfly and then fold it onto the other half to demonstrate the symmetry of a butterfly's wings. HOWEVER, I don't think that made sense to most, so they just painted the whole butterfly, which was totally fine too.

Though it was a quiet day at Junior OSC, there was no shortage of fun nor creativity!

- Sara



Butterflies!







Wednesday, 23 April 2014

"Would you like some cookie with your icing?"

My over used, not-so-funny joke during our cookie decorating activity this week in celebration of Easter.

I know that baking and decorating sweets will always make for a messy but enjoyable art table at Junior OSC and as Easter was nearing, why not! Sorry parents, I know, as if they weren't already going to be spoiled and 'tummy-aching' from chocolate this long weekend. Instead of baking cookies, I went ahead and baked some really quick flower shaped sugar cookies on my own to create a blank canvas for our little Picassos. Some white frosting mixed with neon food dye, sprinkles and a handful of skittles were all we needed to occupy them for a whole half hour. Unsurprisingly, some kids preferred a 3:1 icing to cookie ratio - AKA a whole lotta icing, while others were more conservative, carefully icing each petal a different colour. 

- Sara
Decorating each petal

Cookie artists at work
Sprinkles!
Slopping on icing
How we imagined the cookies would look
How they actually look
Keeping track of which cookies belong to whom.






Wednesday, 16 April 2014

Bring out the Looms

Rainbow looms are one of the most popular recent trends in OSC. There are endless combinations of patterns and colours, and with every new creation the kids only seem to like them more. Recently we dug out looms that were relics from my own childhood, and yarn looms began. A surprising number of kids instantly took interest in these instantly, and very soon all twelve were occupied. This activity has attracted boys and girls from all age groups, some very unexpectedly. Some of our greatest enthusiasts include Logan, Emily and Keira. 

-Gemma
Using some teamwork


Different sizes

Tangled yard, a loomer's worst nightmare

Our art cart ever since the children discovered looming

Tuesday, 8 April 2014

City of Blocks

The Keva blocks have been a hit since first introduced to both Sr. and then Jr. OSC, and almost every kid has devoted a good chunk of time to building various structures at some point. This interest has only grown for many children, and has resulted in the invention of a variety of games. Some of these games include designing marble tracks to race marbles, or building towers that can withstand a strategically thrown object. We were all impressed one day when a group of kids took it upon themselves to organize and build an entire Keva city.

OSC Tower
The core crew of this endeavour included Logan, Peton, Andrew, Sean, Adriana, Toby, Noa and Leo. The city they built included buildings contributed by many children, such as city hall, OSC tower, main road, and many unique houses and scenery. They collaborated on this project from 3pm until about 5:30, which is a long time considering everything else happening around them, and all of them were extremely proud of their City of Blocks. 

-Gemma
An aerial view