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MEC Yearlong Multicultural Unit Within the Multicultural unit one of the enduring ideas students learn is that art is “too big” to stay in one place. It is made by people around the world and changes as it is acquired and interpreted by people in different cultures. Another enduring idea within the unit is that wherever you find people you will find art. The art of Mexico exemplifies the

MEC Yearlong Multicultural Unit

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MEC Yearlong Multicultural Unit. Within the Multicultural unit one of the enduring ideas students learn is that art is “ too big ” to stay in one place. It is made by people around the world and changes as it is acquired and interpreted by people in different cultures. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: MEC Yearlong Multicultural Unit

MEC Yearlong Multicultural Unit

Within the Multicultural unit one of the enduring ideas students learn is that art is “too big” to stay in one place.

It is made by people around the world and changes as it is acquired and interpreted by people in different cultures.

Another enduring idea within the unit is that wherever you find people you will find art.

The art of Mexico exemplifies the universal sharing of art and that ethnic groups around the world have their own unique

traditions in art.

Page 2: MEC Yearlong Multicultural Unit

Multicultural Unit: Previous lessons in the Art of

MexicoWe begin our unit on Mexican art by studying pre-Columbian art: Zapotec pyramids, Olmec heads, and Aztec codices. We then compare the indigenous art with Mexican art following the invasion of the Conquistadors. Christian images and traditions such as the “Tree of Life,” milagros, and “El Dia de los Muertos” are interpreted by students in large murals, metal, and other art making processes. By studying how 20th century artists Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo overcame illness and adversity to produce great artworks that personify Mexican pride, students learn about the transformative power of art for individuals as well as cultures.

Page 3: MEC Yearlong Multicultural Unit

Previous LessonsMayan Pyramid: 3rd grade Elements of

Art : texture/symmetry in architecture

Day of the Dead: 4th grade Monoprint: Principle of Movement and milagro:

textue

Page 4: MEC Yearlong Multicultural Unit

Spotlight on Oaxaca:

EthnobotanicalUnit

Page 5: MEC Yearlong Multicultural Unit

Ethnobotanical Plants are useful to people as food, medicine, clothing,

shelter, and other purposesLessons included in this unit:Maize codex- Fourth grade students work in a group to construct a pocketed codex. Figures are inspired by Mesoamerican codices and are inserted into the pocket. Students draw images of maize and write facts and responses.

Agave: Third grade students learn about the products Agave provides for the people of Oaxaca, By cutting and folding paper they create a paper sculpture Agave, an introduction to radial symmetry. They write about products and facts in written in print or cursive in Spanish or English.

Chocolate: Fifth grade students learn that ancient Mesoamerican people used cacao beans as money. Applying designs and images inspired by ancient images on pottery and codices, they design their own chocolate money. As an extension activity, a collage wallet can be made from recycled chocolate wrappers.

Page 6: MEC Yearlong Multicultural Unit

MaizeGrowing in a “Three Sisters”

fieldCorn for sale on a Oaxacan

street

Page 7: MEC Yearlong Multicultural Unit

Agave

Page 8: MEC Yearlong Multicultural Unit

Cacao-Chocolate

Picture from w

ellnessuncovered.com