Unit Lesson: Flower and Bee Watercolor Painting in The Style of Georgia O'Keeffe
Unit Lesson: Flower and Bee Watercolor Painting in The Style of Georgia O'Keeffe
Unit Lesson: Flower and Bee Watercolor Painting in The Style of Georgia O'Keeffe
It all began on the shores of Beaver Island, at the CMU Biological Station. As an Oakland
University graduate student, I was very excited to be a part of the Educational Studies
class: 643 Beekeeping Integrated Curriculum. I was in a little cabin within walking
distance to the station , dining hall and lounge.I loved the view from the lounge.
A few more necessary pieces to the suit, my helmet and veil. My little brush was always
a handy tool when gently brushing the honey bees out of the way.
In the classroom, we focused on the biology of the bee and what activity to look
for when inspecting the hive. Could we find eggs? If yes, the queen is doing well.
Finally, I was at the hiveand holding a frame! It was filled with combed honey, pollen
and many busy worker bees.
In another area of the island, my hive partner and I were preparing to inspect a hive.
Here, I am smoking the hive to move the bees, so that we can loosen a frame and
lift it up to inspect the level of bee activity on the frame.
We have been cleaning the top of the frames by scraping the wax of the tops of the frames.
We removed the white super, which was very heavy and then we began to work on the
lower super. My partner has two hives of her own , so I was following her lead as we
worked. But as she hooked the frame on the outside , we looked at each other and said,
Time to close up.
All entrances of the hives faced the sun. The bees use the sun as a compass when
foraging for nectar and pollen.
On the ferry, headed home after a wonderful two weeks of beekeeping. Now, I
am all excited to share the wonders of honey bees with my students.
Nobody sees a flower, it is so small. We havent timeand to see takes time like to have a friend takes time.
-Georgia OKeeffe
The flower will be the focal point as the subject of our
paintings, but I would also like the students to grasp how
important the role is of honey bees, in the process
of pollination.
40
20
90-100%
80-89%
70-79%
60-69%
50-59%
40-49%
30-39%
20-29%
10-19%
0-9%
Results based on the students in attendance on the day of the unit pre-test.
Honey.comThe National
Honey Board offers a free
teachers guide download.
This resource was used as a
starting point for my unit:
pre-test questions
introduced the unit by
showing the film
A Bees Life
anatomy of a flower
worksheet
anatomy of a honey bee
worksheet
Pollination
Worksheet #8: Flower Power
Flowers are beautiful and often fragrant to us, but for the plant, flowers serve a
critical function. Flowers are how plants produce seeds to reproduce. In many
cases, the flower contains both male and female parts. In order to reproduce,
pollen, the male contribution, must somehow be transferred to the female part of
the flower called the stigma.
Using the
"Glossary of
Flower Parts,"
label the
following parts of
a fiower:
Anther
Filament
Ovary
Petals
Pollen grains
Sepal
Stigma
Style
Build a Flower: After discussing and identifying the parts of the flower, the students were
assessed on the their knowledge of the parts of the flower, by building a human flower
cooperatively as a group.
Once the students have successfully identified the parts of the flower, they may
research various types of flowers from the magazines and books in the classroom,
in order to begin a contour line drawing of a flower.
Once the students have successfully identified the parts of the honey bee, they
may draw the honey bee on their composition. The honey bee should be drawn
in the process of pollination.
Student example of various watercolor painting techniques. After completing this sampler,
the students were to use at least three of the techniques in their finished painting.
30
20
10
90-100%
80-89%
70-79%
60-69%
50-59%
40-49%
30-39%
20-29%
10-19%
0-9%
Results based on the students in attendance on the day of the unit pre-test.
40
Pre-test
20
Post-test
0
Pre-test
Results based on the students in attendance on the day of the unit tests (N~250).
Yes
10%
Watch others
40%
No
26%
Maybe
24%
Watch others
17%
Maybe
36%
Yes
16%
No
31%
Resources:
Boettcher, Alyssa. The Honey Files: A Bees Life. (2001). Retrieved August 2, 2010 from
www.honey.com/downloads/HoneyFilesWeb.pdf
Georgia OKeeffe Museum. (n. d.). Georgia OKeeffe. Retrieved August 2, 2010, from
www.okeeffemuseum.org/
Photos by : Mary Larsen and Gary Miller