The Spark Creativity Teacher Podcast | ELA
Education:How To
This week I want to talk about how one-pagers can be a powerful gateway to creative options in your classroom.
Let’s start with the one-pager basics. A one-pager allows students to express their takeaways from, well, just about anything, on a single paper through a combination of words and images. A one-pager can includes quotations, analysis, key terms, imagery, special fonts, symbolic colors, and more. You probably already know that my #1 tip for one-pagers is to give students a template that connects the elements that you want with a location on a template, so kids don’t feel overwhelmed as they begin to experiment.
You can try your first one-pager with a novel, a Ted talk, a poem, a short story, a play, a song, a podcast... You get the idea!
One of the great things about one-pagers is that they open the door to this form of dual expression, where kids are communicating their ideas through both words and visuals. Take a second to talk to them about how prevalent this is in the world. Ask them to consider political campaigns, social media, Youtube, online news. Get them started thinking about how often they see only words or only pictures, and how often it’s actually a combination that expresses ideas most effectively and memorably.
As students realize that their simple first step of a one-pager is actually guiding them into a new genre of expression, one that parallels many forms of real world communication, they may open up to more type of creative projects in class. You may find them more excited about research carousels, infographics, book trailers, and more real-world projects that bring visuals onto the scene to complement their writing. You may find that fewer students scoff that art is a waste of their time.
If you haven’t tried a one-pager yet, this week I want to highly recommend that you dive in! I’ll link my free templates for any novel in the show notes. And if you have, give a little thought to how you can use them as a gateway in students’ minds. It’s a powerful shift in how we see the world, and one that can benefit your creative classroom.
Free One-Pager Templates Here
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055: Hyperdocs, Authentic Audience, and Screencastify with Kristy Louden
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053: How to Plan a Unit in 30 Minutes
052: The Easy Guide to Blackout Poetry
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050: The Power of Imperfect Action
049: Get Creative with Google Classroom, with Matt Miller
048: Reading Program Accountability that doesn't Ruin Everything
047: The Power of the Writing Makerspace, with Angela Stockman
046: Sketchnotes are Awesome, with Mike Rohde
045: Classroom Memes and Interactive Notebooks
044: 25 Creative Assessments for Any Novel (Whoa)
043: Tips for New Teachers, with Kristy Avis
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