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Lesson Plan Name |
Grades |
Reviving the Renaissance |
7 to 12 |
(5.0 stars, 2 ratings) Using the world wide web, students will research the Renaissance Era and present a multimedia project to classmates which will focus on one aspect of that time period: food, clothing, pastime, gender roles, law enforcement, etc. This is done prior to reading any of Shakespeare's literature. |
Rockin Robotics |
K to 5 |
(5.0 stars, 2 ratings) Students will design, engineer, and create a artbot with Cubelets. This problem based exercise will include the student choosing Lego blocks and Cubelets to design a drawing robot that dances to the beat of a favorite song. |
Romanticism Through the Eyes of Art, Poetry, and Technology |
10 to 12 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) Teaching the qualities of Romanticism, comparing pieces of the period, and creating responses that show comprehension, while using an Elmo. |
Scanning Pictures |
2 to 5 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) Students will scan a picture from home and edit it! |
Scavenger Hunt |
6 to 8 |
(5.0 stars, 2 ratings) Use digital cameras to find items and collect the information to create a collage. Use in any subject. |
School News Channel |
P-K to 4 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) I am asking for a live streaming camera in order to host a morning news channel for our school. This news segment will provide morning announcements and will be ran by the student population. The news cast will be streamed to every classroom in the morning. |
School Spirit |
9 to 12 |
(5.0 stars, 2 ratings) In this lesson I teach students how to use design tools to create a school t-shirt. Then I teach them how to market their designs to the student body and the business marketing mix. |
School-wide Anti-bullying Campaign |
5 to 8 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) Creating anti-bullying messages that influence my peers. Creating a climate for anti-bullying. |
Science and Art Museum |
6 to 8 |
Middle School students create works of art inspired by document experiments in science. Digital cameras record SCIENCE AS ART, in action! |
Science Claymation - Which Came First, the Chicken or the Egg? |
3 to 6 |
(5.0 stars, 2 ratings) Students in 3rd - 6th could use the Tool Factory Movie Maker, Stop Motion Pro Software to make Claymation videos about science topics such as life cycles, natural cycles, phyics, and space phenomena. These lesson plans are integrated cross-curricula and incorporate multiple 21st Century skills. |
Science Fair Preparation |
5 to 9 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) In this lesson plan,, students use Brain Pop resources to learn about planning science based projects when they create a science fair exhibit. Students will select a topic, explore the criteria for planning, and design a compelling and realistic experiment based on their research and topic choice. |
Science of the snowflake |
1 to 1 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) I use this lesson to reinforce knowledge of the Caldecott awards and also to teach the children how to navigate their way around the Macbook touchpad as First Grade is their first formal introduction into the use of laptops. |
Science Safety Bots |
2 to 5 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) Students will create a bot using Cubelets and Legos to demonstrate a Science Lab classroom safety rule. They will then create an action card so others can recreate the bot while assigned to Cubelets station as a free choice activity on Robotic Day (scheduled robotics days at end of each science unit). |
ScreenPlay Writing |
9 to 12 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) This a two-week unit that includes screenplay writing and video editing |
See How They Grow |
1 to 5 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) Student growth can be documented through digital scrapbooking of his school year. |
Self Identity |
9 to 12 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) Students research into their experience, culture and life to create a self portrait learning facial proportions. Viewing a variety of artists with different interpretations of involving expression in their portraits. |
Self Portrait |
10 to 12 |
The students will create a self portrait within a masterpiece. The objectives are many. Students will learn new tools within the program, learn how to create a self portrait, and learn, in detail, about a masterpiece of art and the artist.
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Self-Portrait |
6 to 7 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) For students in middle school, the self-portrait is timely, as it is during these years, between the ages of 11-14, that young people are immersed in “the self”-exploring identity, finding his or her place in the world, building perception of self in relation to others. In the lesson plan, students delve into these artistic qualities as they first explore famous artists’ portraits, which grounds them in a range of styles and art history, all of which students reflect on as they design their self-portraits, which they will create using Photoshop using both the standard desktop computer and the WACOM tablet to compare/contrast the impact of the different technologies on the design process and final product.
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Self-Portraits: Photography and Memoirs |
6 to 8 |
(5.0 stars, 2 ratings) Students will read a collection of memoirs, short-stories and personal reflections about being a preteen or teenager and will write their own creative non-fiction piece about being 13 years old. This will be paired with a photography unit in which students will learn the guidelines for better photography and create self-portraits to accompany their creative writing. |
Selfie vs Self-portrait |
9 to 12 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) This activity combines contemporary technology with archaic photographic processes the end result a one of a kind tangible self-portrait from a 200 year old process using modern technology. It challenges the students to further understand the difference between our cultural image capture and the power of a image when it's seen as an entity, not a digital thumbnail. |
Selfie vs Self-portrait - Creating a 19th Century Photograph using Modern Technology |
9 to 12 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) The iPhone revolutionized how we communicate. It also changed how we see ourselves and how we see others. The ‘selfie’ phenomenon is not slowing down and as more people use their phones to take pictures of themselves we start to loose sight of what a strong self-portrait can communicate. |
Shapes in Art, Shapes in Body |
P-K to 1 |
(3.5 stars, 2 ratings) Students learn how to distinguish shapes through dance and music. |
Sharing Your Voice |
9 to 12 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) The purpose is to provide students an opportunity to raise awareness and explore topics such as inequity, social issues, and personal struggles. They will be exploring and sharing their work through the art form of photography and digitally altering photos. Sharing about topics such as these can help with using social media to raise awareness about social issues, personal struggles and inequity. |
Shark Tank: Industrial Revolution |
5 to 6 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) Students will read "Immigrant Kids" and create a business idea that they will each present in front of a group of "sharks" (teachers and parents). Students will present ideas using imovie and then make a commercial promoting their inventions. |
Short Film Project: Architecture In My Community |
11 to 12 |
(5.0 stars, 1 ratings) Students will create short videos featuring the unique architecture in Sacramento, CA. They will work in teams to write, film, and publish short films that will persuade people to visit buildings here in our own community. |