Oh REAAALLY? I DON'T think so.

Bwhahaha , must be nice…

Okay now about … he he he

I’m with you on this one Kambuckta. I went past it the other day and it very obviously stood out from all of the others. Patently wasn’t done by 7 year olds - in fact it looked more like it was done by somebody from Connex or from Brack’s office.

Well I was at Flinders St the other day, noticed the artwork but didnt bother to look at it. What I did see however was a teacher leading a class from one of the schools involved up to see their own art. They came off the platform, looked at the stuff for a few minutes and went back on the platform. What a worthwhile trip that would have been.

OK, ::theatrical sigh:: you yank whinger :wink:

The piccies are now little piccies. Which means, GusNSpot, that any new folks wandering through this thread and reading your first post will think yer on drugs.

As it should be.

The Big versions of the
Bad and Comparison piccies are over here now.

For those who can take the heat…

::::: sigh ::: all better now… Thanks ::::: :smiley:

Um, could the picture possibly been mislabeled? Seems kind of odd that a second grade picture be put next to a fifth grade picture.
Maybe it got in the wrong stack?

PhiloVance, ask Zach if I can keep that picture of SpongeBob?
I adore the little guy, and Zach did a great job!

I also wanted to add that my kindergartener draws at a second grade level so who knows what she will be like when actually in second grade. Three out of five of my children are artistic at a young age, and I didn’t find my love for painting until high school.
I encourage them constantly, and my moms girlfriend even made my second oldest an eisel that can be adjusted for her as she gets older.
Oh, and I too can never keep paper in my printers. I have even bought them their own notebooks with and without lines and they just seem to adore the printer paper!
Why is this? I have to find out what is so special about this paper.

Kricket:

Sure you can keep it. I think the reason for the use of the computer paper is that it’s grown-up paper; they feel more important if they can use it. Zack’s little sister, Sadie, who is 5 always asks me, Zack just grabs. :rolleyes:

Anyway, I don’t mind. :slight_smile:

I’m leaning toward this conclusion.

BTW: perspective isn’t really that hard to pull off if one knows how to use reference points.

Nah, there are only sixteen in all, and there appears to be no organizing principle whatsoever to the arrangement. A first grade, then a sixth grade, then round the corner and a third grade and another first…and so on and so forth.