Psychologists believe that the drawing of the school says a lot about the child's attitude to the learning process: what scares him, what he likes, whether there are any difficulties. It is helpful for both parents and teachers to ask the child to draw where the child is learning.
It is necessary
pencils, fantasy
Instructions
Step 1
If you were given the task to draw a school in the lesson, then you can approach this process either literally or with a share of creativity. A literal approach means drawing exactly the school building. Here you do not need any special imagination, you just need to reproduce the appearance of your school on paper. Of course, it is unlikely that you will be able to depict the entire building on a small sheet, but you can draw only part of it. For example, the main entrance and part of the schoolyard. Make this piece as close to the original as possible. Count the number of steps on the school porch, the location of the windows, the shape of the door, all the posters and stands at the main entrance. Do not forget about the inscription, which will tell you what exactly is shown in your drawing.
Step 2
Creativity can be viewed from two sides. Firstly, you can draw not the school itself, but the school process. For example, draw a school class with desks, students sitting behind them, a teacher at the blackboard. Imagine the lesson in dynamics: let one of the students pull his hand, someone leafs through the textbook, someone, standing, answers the lesson. This will make the drawing more expressive.
Step 3
Secondly, by creatively approaching the task to draw a school, you can depict an unusual school. For example, you can call the drawing "School of the Future" Connect your imagination and draw the school that you can imagine: in space, on the moon, on board an airplane. Or a school, in each class of which there are several thousand students: they all study remotely, sending completed assignments via electronic channels, and special robotic teachers check them. Remember that psychologists use the drawing of children in a school to determine their true attitudes toward learning. Use bright colors, avoid an abundance of gray and black, and your drawing will certainly get an A.