Labors of love
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Danette Goulet
COSTA MESA -- Wearing once-white men’s button-down shirts backward as
smocks and clutching big, thick, well-used paintbrushes, young artists
painted portraits of their mothers Monday.
“I’m going to make her have a purple shirt and a green skirt because
she really has a green skirt,” said Grace Clever, 5. “She wore it on St.
Patrick’s Day.”
It was one of four art stations set up in Paulette Montandon’s
kindergarten class at Adams Elementary School in Costa Mesa that
exercised students’ motor skills and incorporated writing skills.
Before students headed to the various projects, Montandon explained
and demonstrated how to do each project and explained why they were doing
it.
First, she demonstrated how to make a cow out of construction paper.
Besides the cutting and pasting, children learned about cows.
The next station helped children make clever little Mother’s Day
cards, which meant writing.
Kindergarten has really changed because, first of all, these kids all
knew how to spell the words they needed -- “my,” “love,” “for” and “you.”
They also knew how to write them.
The third station was a surprise for mothers, and the fourth was the
painting.
For the painting, Montandon explained that no one painting would look
the same because mothers all looked different. She asked students to
think of what their moms looked like, including eye color and hair color.
“My mother has a lot of brown and a little gray,” one student offered.
Then it was off to create masterpieces.
Of the four kindergarten students assigned to the painting center,
Grace was, by far, the most meticulous. She worked long after the others
had finished to make her painting perfect.
“Isao, I don’t think your mother has red eyes,” Montandon offered,
giving Isao Kisino’s painting a skeptical look. “What color eyes does she
have?”
Next week, students will paint their fathers. Regardless of any
imperfections, Montandon said, the parents always love the paintings
students draw of them.
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot education
writer Danette Goulet visits a campus within the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District and writes about her experience.
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