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The drawing tools in Frames are a powerful, yet easy way to illustrate your own animations. If you are familiar with stop-motion and classical animation, you know that working frame by frame can be time– and labor–intensive. Many teachers are reluctant to use animation in the classroom due to time constraints, yet we realize that students store knowledge in linguistic and visual form. According to Marzano’s research, having students create visuals to supplement text can better help them internalize and later recall information.
Building animations is especially useful in helping students grasp concepts that are difficult to explain using text alone. In science, for example, students can demonstrate the process of chemical bonding, showing what the process looks like at the atomic level. In math, learners can demonstrate how algebraic equations relate to lines and points on a coordinate plane. Illustrating characters from a novel helps students visualize descriptive written information, and recording narration to accompany animations for these characters helps students realize the importance of voice and perspective. So how do you get started creating animation without allocating hours and hours of classroom time? There are certainly many techniques and procedures you might use for animation, but you can use the illustration features in Frames to get started immediately. The hardest step is to simply begin, so jump in and work to refine your procedures and build your skills during the process. ![]() If you are comfortable giving your students complete control of the animation process, and are willing to accept the fact that they will inevitably know more about Frames than you do, follow the steps that Amy Clark from Midlothian, Texas, developed for using Frames with her first graders:
1. Draw something.
2. Click the frame in the Storyboard pane. 3. Click the Duplicate button. 4. Change something. These simple, non-threatening steps encourage a culture of fearless exploration and risk taking in Amy’s classroom, and the steps are certainly easy enough to try out in yours!
The Frames drawing tools are vector-based. Vector-based drawing tools require us to look at images as a collection of shapes, which encourages students to see patterns that don’t necessarily emerge using ordinary paint programs. Because characters in Frames are built from shapes that are easy to change, making frame-by-frame modifications takes less time. Ms. Clark shares, “vector-based tools do not seem to hinder the students in my primary classroom. When we start new art projects, about half of my students choose to use Pixie to paint [raster-based] and the other half chooses to use Twist [vector-based].” Using any computer tool, especially vector-based tools, requires some initial instruction. When Ms. Clark’s students first started animating, she did much of the computer work for them. In a first class project, students studied the development of America by reading biographies. As they read, they wrote down three things they learned and used Frames to illustrate each one. Then, they chose a favorite image, duplicated it, and made small changes to the copy. Ms. Clark helped her students record narration, and then the students duplicated their two frames to make longer animations that matched their narration, ultimately combining their work into a class movie on the history of America. |
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