MIDDLE SCHOOL
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Holly Bess Kincaid
My mother’s favorite unabridged dictionary is part of my personal history. I had grown up with this gargantuan volume, leafing through to find definitions for unfamiliar terms. When it cracked at the spine, I took the loose pages to school instead of wasting them. What started as a sentimental moment turned into a literacy-rich art project for my middle-school students, many of whom speak multiple languages.
An Adventure through Words
When students started to scroll through the dictionary pages, they were spellbound. They enjoyed discovering new words, contrasting the different meanings, and choosing a single word to visually illustrate. This simple act of selecting a word and attaching its imagery facilitated reading, writing, speaking, and creative expression simultaneously. It became a highlighted display during our Art Read Think Day, a literacy-and-arts event, as we welcomed community members to read aloud to students. These illustrated dictionary pages were a lovely visual accompaniment for the celebration and provided compelling opportunities for advocacy.
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This project can be replicated without a dictionary by using any worn-out book, discarded reference text, or print vocabulary list as the foundation for language-based art-making.
Learning Objectives
Students will:
Materials
Procedures
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The Advocacy of Visibility
Art Read Think Day combines literacy with creativity. Community members like our mayor, principals, librarian, teachers, school board members, and radio hosts are invited to read aloud from art-oriented books. The event can also be a wonderful way to highlight Youth Art Month. Middle-school students thrive on dramatic readings, personal narratives, and shared enthusiasm in the arts.
Visitors marvel at the ways students made meaning visible. Such displays spark discussions about literacy, multilingual learning, and the role art plays in supporting student voice.
What started as a sentimental moment turned into a literacy-rich art project for my middle-school students.
Extensions
Students can write a short reflection on why they picked their word.
Classes could make a vocabulary wall based on a theme, such as emotion or nature.
At the Art Read Think Day event, ask your visitors to choose their favorite illustrated word and explain why they like it.
Design bookmarks or postcards incorporating student illustrations.
Conclusion
Illustrated dictionary pages provide a creative approach to developing literacy while providing an opportunity for literacy-based lessons and activities. In conjunction with Art Read Think Day, the project provides a powerful opportunity for advocacy, presenting to community members how art helps middle-school students communicate in ways that transcend language.
NATIONAL STANDARD
Responding: Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work.
Holly Bess Kincaid is an art teacher at Park Middle School in Beckley, West Virginia. She has actively served as a leader in the Virginia Art Education Association and is the 2025 WVAEA Art Educator of the Year. hollybess@gmail.com