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Fall Directed Drawings for Preschool, Pre-k, & Kindergarten
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Leaves are beginning to change, schools are starting back in session, and the temperature is cooling down! So, I have put together these fall directed drawings for preschool, pre-k, and kindergarten students. Directed drawings are great for working on fine motor skills, following directions, and art skills while they draw a whole picture from start to finish.
Grab the Fall Directed Drawing Unit for all the printables!
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Benefits of Directed Drawings In the Early Childhood Classroom
- strengthen students’ fine motor strength, including hand-eye coordination, muscle strength, pencil grasp, and practice shapes and drawing various types of lines
- teach young children how to draw by noticing shapes in objects and how to combine shapes to make new things.
- easy way to infuse art activities into the classroom.
- Art is very calming and relaxing for most students
- fun way to practice following directions
- Drawing is communicating! You will see growth and more details in your little learners’ illustrations.
- gorgeous bulletin boards and student art to decorate the classroom
- BUILD confidence and creativity even in your youngest students
- developing social skills and language development as you learn about your children’s interest
How to Implement Book Buddies Directed Drawings with Little Learners
When I first introduce directed drawings to my students, I take each step slowly and model, model, model! The first few directed drawing activities need to be a teacher-directed lesson to help all students be successful. You can even do them in small groups if that works better for your preschool children. Decide what is best for your children’s needs and roll with it.
- You draw a step, model, and verbally explain how to draw each shape and the size (ex: “This shape looks like a small U shape, I’m going to make this small….down, curve, up”.) Then, students draw that step.
- Continue to model a step, and then students draw a step until the drawing is complete.
- Model creating the background options. Then, students create the background using various art media.
- Have young children sign their own names on the front of their drawings. If they can’t independently, use name cards to support them.
In the fall directed drawings unit, you will find full page and half page directed drawing direction posters that have simple step-by-step diagrams for little artists. These drawing projects make great independent work or a center activity once the process has been introduced and students know what to do. They are also a great way to teach following directions while working in fine motor journals.
Fall Directed Drawings
Crayon Directed Drawing!
- Drawing Utensil Used: black marker or Sharpie
- Media Used to Fill In: crayons
- Background Pictured: tempera paint
- Other Details: Cut out the picture and glue it to a fun background made with art supplies
Apple Directed Drawing!
- Drawing Utensil Used: paint sticks
- Media Used to Fill In: crayons
- Background Pictured: crayons
- Other Details: add a background color
Pumpkin Directed Drawing!
- Drawing Utensil Used: oil pastels
- Media Used to Fill In: watercolors
- Background Pictured: watercolors
- Other Details: add a background color and a border
Tip: I have 2 sets of oil pastels in my classroom. I break them into 2 or 3 pieces each so that there is more than one of each color. Plus, little pieces are better for building fine motor muscles.
Fire Truck Directed Drawing!
- Drawing Utensil Used: black marker or Sharpie
- Media Used to Fill In: tempera paint
- Background Pictured: tempera paint
- Other Details: add a background picture (sky and road)
Acorn Directed Drawing!
- Drawing Utensil Used: markers
- Media Used to Fill In: crayons
- Background Pictured: tempera paint
- Other Details: cut out the picture and glue it to a colorful background
Spider Directed Drawing!
- Drawing Utensil Used: black marker or Sharpie
- Media Used to Fill In: watercolors
- Background Pictured: watercolors
- Other Details: add a background color with various supplies
Helpful Tips: If your elementary students are struggling to make a certain shape, have them practice on dry-erase boards until they are happy with that shape. This is something I do with my perfectionist students who need more reassurance with their spring drawing ideas.
Turkey Directed Drawing!
- Drawing Utensil Used: oil pastels
- Media Used to Fill In: watercolors
- Background Pictured: blank paper
- Other Details: cut out the picture and glue it onto another piece of paper
Frankenstein Directed Drawing!
- Drawing Utensil Used: oil pastels
- Media Used to Fill In: watercolors
- Background Pictured: watercolors
- Other Details: add a background color
These fall directed drawings turned out so cute, and my students loved creating these art projects for their friends and family. The fall directed drawings are not just for preschool and kindergarten students. They would also work for first grade students. Directed drawings are perfect for early finisher activities, art center activities, indoor recess, or a morning activity.
Something to remember is that fall directed drawings do not replace open-ended art. Make time for open-ended art, too, so students have the opportunity to create, express themselves, and use their imagination that is process-focused, not product-focused.
Grab the fall directed drawings unit here from the Pocket of Preschool TpT store.
For more information about how to use and the benefits of directed drawings in your pre-k program, check out this post!
Get more ideas for how to start directed drawing art lessons in your room with this video.
Like these fall directed drawings? Pin this image!
hey, i’m jackie!
I’m Jackie, your go-to girl for early childhood inspiration and research-based curriculum.