Case Study in Brief

This activity engages students to explore the diversity of soil in their local areas and to get close to it through aesthetic practices of attentional observation, texturing and visual-poetic composition. 

Dispatch From the Field

We introduce this activity as part of a STEAM education unit that focuses on making with materials as a way to reflect on the learning process. The goal is to show how materials can give voice to the voiceless and make visible the issues and questions that often stay hidden. Soil becomes a key example. It plays a vital role in the global ecosystem, yet it rarely appears in traditional school curricula. 

Practical Details – Facilitator’s Notes

We add a soil separation observation by placing different types of soil in water and watching how the particles settle. This allows students to see layers of particulate matter, clay and organic material. We also use lenses and a microscope to study the samples more closely. 

Students work in groups around large tables in a university classroom. Each group receives old paintbrushes and sheets of A3 heavy paper that have aged naturally by sitting in sunlight over the summer. The slightly yellowed paper adds an aesthetic quality to the final paintings. We display the artworks on a white wall just outside the classroom, which turns into a beautiful and unexpected exhibition space. 

We run the activity with two groups: students in the Postgraduate Diploma of Primary Teacher Education and a group of first-year secondary students. 

Each student brings a soil sample from their own backyard. They come from different parts of Scotland, adding variety to the materials. Other resources include aged paper, old brushes, a microscope (optional), printed soil charts, water, PVA glue, a selection of soil poems from From Field to Palette: Dialogues on Soil and Art in the Anthropocene by A. Toland and J. Stratton Noller (2018), and a short video titled I Am Soil, available online at https://youtu.be/Dor4XvjA8Wo. 

This activity engages everyone, regardless of age. It introduces soil as a living material that responds to touch and reveals its qualities through different forms of observation, from microscopes to painting. 

Painting with soil proves calming and immersive. Many students choose to paint with their fingers, which creates a focused, curious and open atmosphere. The act of painting brings out the aesthetic power of soil and encourages students to express themselves, ask questions and learn more about global soil issues. The shared exhibition becomes a space for reflection and dialogue.