Semester-Long Classroom Collage Project: Student Exploration Through Mixed Media Collage

Grade Level 

9th–12th Grade Visual Arts

Duration 

Semester-long project (daily studio practice + dedicated project blocks)

Mississippi Arts Learning Standards (Visual Arts – HS I) 

Creating 

VA:Cr1.1.Ia – Use multiple approaches to begin creative endeavors. 

VA:Cr1.2.Ia – Shape an artistic investigation of present-day life using materials and ideas. 

VA:Cr2.1.Ia – Experiment with various materials and processes to develop meaning. 

VA:Cr2.3.Ia – Apply relevant criteria to examine, reflect, and revise artwork.

Responding 

VA:Re7.1.Ia – Analyze how personal experiences influence the perception of artwork. 

VA:Re8.1.Ia – Interpret meaning using personal viewpoints and contextual information.

Connecting 

VA:Cn10.1.Ia – Document and reflect on the process of developing ideas in artmaking. 

VA:Cn11.1.Ia – Relate artistic ideas to personal experiences and cultural context.

Depth of Knowledge (DOK Levels) 

DOK 1 – Recall 

Identify collage materials 

Follow cutting, gluing, and assembling steps 

Define collage, composition, texture, abstraction 

DOK 2 – Skills & Concepts 

Compare materials 

Organize pieces on 4×4 cards 

Explain choices in journals 

DOK 3 – Strategic Thinking 

Analyze how materials reflect emotions or memories 

Discuss the impact of placement and design decisions 

Reflect on artistic influences 

DOK 4 – Extended Thinking 

Produce a 25-card collage series 

Maintain journaling and reflective writing 

Contribute individual cards to a class installation 

Complete a final culminating artwork presentation 

Objectives / Specific Objectives 

Students will create class collages on cardstock cut into 4×4 pieces. They will use the cards to discover intuitive creative preferences through comparing, contrasting, journaling, and reflecting on emotions, inspirations, and connections.

Students will explore what motivates or blocks their creativity and engage in a practice that strengthens their desire for artmaking.

Essential Questions 

1. Why did I choose the materials? 

2. What personal meaning do these materials have? 

3. Do personal values or sentimental connections make artmaking easier? 

4. What do I think or feel when working with different materials? 

5. Does placement affect meaning and creativity? 

6. Do collage patterns form naturally or must ideas be organized intentionally?

Vocabulary 

Collage, Mixed Media, Composition, Texture, Pattern, Abstract, Contrast, Materiality, Visual Unity, Installation

Materials (30+ Examples Including Beans & Candy) 

Magazine clippings, Newspaper pieces, Construction paper, Tissue paper, Scrapbook paper, Wrapping paper, Foil paper, Old book pages, Printed patterns, Post-it notes, Fabric scraps, Yarn, Ribbon, Cotton balls, Feathers, Leaves, Twigs, Buttons, Beads, Sequins, Stickers, Washi tape, Candy wrappers, Bottle caps, Cardboard, Beans, Candy (non-edible use), Rice, Pasta, Markers, Crayons, Colored pencils, Acrylic paint, Watercolor, Oil pastels

Production Schedule & Semester Timeline 

Students must complete 250 collage cards in an 18-week semester = approx. 14 cards per week. 

Daily expectation: 2–3 cards per class. 

Friday: reflection, journaling, weekly review.

Procedures 

A. Introduction / Motivation 

Students are introduced to artist Ceyhun Oguz and observe a collage demonstration.

B. Teacher Demonstration 

Cutting 4×4 cards, choosing materials, layering, design choices, journaling.

C. Student Work Process 

Students create multiple cards weekly, explore materials, journal reflections, and add selected pieces to the collaborative installation.

D. Class Discussion Questions 

(As provided in previous section.)

E. Collaborative Component 

Students add cards to a classroom installation representing unity and individuality.

Culminating Options for Final Artwork 

Option 1: Combine all 250 pieces into one large artwork. 

Option 2: Mount each collage individually as a portfolio display. 

Option 3: Select one strong collage and recreate it as a larger artwork.

Final Critique & Reflection 

Students present their final choice, explain decisions, share journal insights, compare growth, and provide peer feedback.

Purpose of the Project 

Students learn personal expression, decision-making, reflection, and how small creative experiments build a large body of work.

Assessment 

Completion of 250 cards, creativity, craftsmanship, meaningful use of materials, journaling, collaborative installation, final artwork option, critique participation.