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THREE BILLY GOATS GRUFF General Description This lesson is a good starting point for younger students to gain imaginative experience with Kid Pix, using it as a starting point for visual depictions of a scene in a story. Closure • What was easy to create in Kid Pix and what was difficult? • What other stories can the young students draw a scene from? Other folk tales or fairy tales? • Collect the printouts of the students’ artwork and post on bulletin board or as a class book. Grade Levels Pre-K–Grade 1 Curricular Areas Art, Language Arts Measurement/Follow-up Completeness of task and accuracy or imaginativeness of illustrations. Objectives • Students practice listening skills. • Students practice reading skills. • Students draw/illustrate an image from the story. Extensions • Other tales that the students bring from home or find at the library can be illustrated in Kid Pix. Time/Class Size • One or two class periods • Large class introduction, individual activity Preparation Locate a copy of the tale Three Billy Goats Gruff (for example, by Paul Galdone or Stephen Carpenter) to read aloud, preferably with good illustrations, or prepare one that can be used as an overhead or in large format for classroom viewing. Procedure 1. Read Three Billy Goats Gruff aloud to class. Discuss the tale. 2. What are the most vivid images from the tale? Can the students create these in fingerpaints, spongepaints, collage, paper-tearing? 3. Create the scene with the third Billy Goat on the troll’s bridge in Kid Pix. There is plenty of room for variation and starting over this way if you create a template first. 4. What happens in the scene? If students are able, use Small Kids Mode and have them stamp a name or description for the scene. Otherwise, a good opportunity for verbal sharing. • More advanced students can add writing to describe each scene they illustrate, or can illustrate many scenes from one tale. 76 Kid Pix® Deluxe 4™ For Schools Teacher’s Guide