May
2018
What Can You Do With a Squiggle?
More than you think! I drew a squiggle in the Book Creator app, added an “About the Illustrator” page and airdropped the book template to each student iPad. When finished with their creations, the children airdropped their books back to me so that I could combine them into class books.
The directions were simple: Look at your squiggle. What could it become? You can rotate it and copy it if you want. Make something recognizable from your squiggle.
The students provided so many interesting and creative interpretations of their squiggle! I love this one from Jack, a 4th grader, who used what he had learned in art to create an illustration based on an artist named Mary Casssett from the 1800s who painted mothers and children. (To hear his narration, listen to Mrs. Wright’s class book.)
Click on the links to view the class books.
Tips:
- For the 4th graders, I told them they could resize and rotate their squiggle. A few children made the squiggle so tiny that it is barely recognizable! I made the mistake of not telling students to make sure the original squiggle could be seen. In several of the 4th grade illustrations, it’s very hard to tell what and/or where the squiggle was.
- As a result, I changed the directions for the 3rd graders. They could rotate the design but they couldn’t resize. I also told students to make sure the squiggle could be identified.
- Some of the designs were created from making copies of the squiggle. Those turned out really well!
- I asked that the squiggle be seen in the picture. Some did that but others covered it up with another color.
- It’s helpful to lock the squiggle once it’s decided where it will be on the page.
I used to do this all the time when I was little (on paper, of course!). It’s fun to watch the students create digitally!
Carrie
May 22, 2018 at 11:10 am (6 years ago)I love this activity! Which program (Google Docs, Drawing etc) did you put the squiggle on so the students couldn’t erase it but could draw around it?
Karen Arrington
May 22, 2018 at 2:27 pm (6 years ago)I just drew the squiggle in the Book Creator app using the pen tool. Then I locked it (do a long press and the option to lock pops up). I tell the kids that when they draw it’s like layers. The bottom layer is the squiggle and the next layer is their drawing.
Carie
May 22, 2018 at 6:17 pm (6 years ago)I have Chromebooks, how did you airdrop the book template to each student? And how did the students airdrop their books back to you to combine them into class books?
Karen Arrington
May 22, 2018 at 9:21 pm (6 years ago)I made the books on iPads but Book Creator just recently had some fantastic updates using the Chrome browser. Here are some links that might help.
Book Creator on a Chromebook
Book Creator (scroll down for Book Creator for Chrome)
Book Creator QR Code Sign-in (great for younger students)
Real Time Collaboration Comes to Book Creator (this is what you would need – Make your squiggle then copy and paste to the number of pages to match number of students you have. You need to have a paid plan to do this though.)
Hope this helps!
Casi
June 9, 2018 at 5:59 pm (6 years ago)I love the student creations! How did you make the student pictures? Was this an app or did you change the picture design using your ipad?
Karen Arrington
June 9, 2018 at 8:46 pm (6 years ago)I drew the squiggle straight into Book Creator. SO easy with this app! This is the first time I’d ever done this with Book Creator and was very pleased with how it turned out. You can lock the picture so that the image doesn’t move around as the student creates their illustration. That really helps!