Using Book Creator in the Elementary Classroom

by Karen Lirenman

Pages 2 and 3 of 44

Using Book Creator in the
Elementary Classroom
By Karen Lirenman
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Contents
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Book Creator in a Science or Socials Studies Classroom

11. Capturing inquiry learning
12. The scientific process
13. Research reports
14. All about me and my identity
15. Digital citizenship 101



Book Creator in an alternative environment (Gym, Music, Art, Field trips)

16. Teach me a sport
17. Everyone is an artist
18. Let's share music
19. Capture that field trip

A special thank you
About the author
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Prefer to read offline?
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Get it on Apple Books
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Introduction
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Do you teach in the K-5 environment? If so join me as we explore a variety of open ended ways to use Book Creator in YOUR learning environment.
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This book is filled with many open-ended easily differentiated lessons utilizing Book Creator. While you will find a variety of lessons from various content areas these lessons are less about the “content” (since we all have different “content”) and more about ways you can use Book Creator to enhance your teaching and your students' learning. 
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In the first section we will explore ways to use Book Creator in your literacy classroom.

In the second section we will explore ways to use Book Creator in your numeracy classroom.

In the third section we will explore ways to use Book Creator in your Science or Socials Studies classes.

And finally we will explore ways to use Book Creator in P.E., Music, and Art class. We will even explore using it for field trips!

With read today, use tomorrow lessons, I hope all K-5 educators will find this book useful to them.
1. We are all authors!
Created by
There are so many different styles of writing available to our students, why not give them a digital way to explore them all?
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Mya
(age 7)
Far too often our students are made to write with a pen or pencil on a piece of paper. In today’s world while there is a place for pen and paper, our students can and should harness the power of technology to share their writing with the world.

No matter what your students are learning about using digital tools to support written work is a helpful idea. At the most basic level Book Creator allows your students to be creative with their writing by being able to change fonts, text, and colours. 

They can add interactive links, images, videos, and even their recorded voice. If the act of writing words is a struggle for your students they can use the voice to text feature.

When their writing is complete they can even have the book read back to them. But the best yet is that they can easily share this writing online with anyone from their classmates to the WORLD!
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Max
Created by
(age 8)
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Jaya
Created by
(age 7)
So where do you begin? First off decide on the type of writing you want from your students, or better yet let them decide! Let your students explore the features of Book Creator so that they too can become digital authors. Isn’t it about time?
Here are a few different genres of writing to explore:
Expository
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Persuasive
Narrative
Descriptive
Instructional Manuals
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Complaint books
Novels
Research Books
Advertisements
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Diaries
Travel guides
Poetry

Speeches
Scripts
Recipe Books


Newspapers
Editorial reviews
Storytelling
Biographies

Songs lyrics
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Once you have the type of writing you are looking for, invite your students to do their writing with Book Creator. You'll be surprised by what they can create.
2. Let's become poets!
Poetry is one of those rare writing units that most students can easily connect with. 
Where else can punctuation and capitalization be less of a concern? Book Creator is the perfect place to capture this artistic expression of writing.
When writers are given the opportunity to explore poetry it seems many writing fears disappear. 

The best way to begin is by introducing poems that feature key poetic elements such as simile, metaphor, alliteration, or personification. With some examples floating around, encourage your students to write their own poems.
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Cat Cuts Cake
Created by Ameera (age 7)
Author Tip
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Ellipse;
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With some text down, it's time to explore fonts and colours, import images, and find ways to be creative! It's always fun to add voice to poems too as it brings them to life.
If you are limited by the time you have access to your technology, consider creating a shared book where each student adds their own page or pages to the same book, thus creating a class book that can be shared with friends and families online.
Laurence
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Created by
Jacob
Created by
Created by
(age 8)
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(age 7)
Jaya
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(age 7)
3. Inspired by others
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Have you ever read one of those great picture books that you know your students could be inspired by? Book Creator is the perfect tool to capture that inspiration.
There are so many great picture books that can inspire all types of learners. Books like This Plus That by Amy Krouse Rosenthal, The Peace Book by Todd Parr, or an old classic The Important Book by Margaret Wise Brown. 

The best place to start is with a book with a repeating frame. Share the book with your students, and then let them recreate their own versions.
Inspired by Todd Parr's Peace book
A photo of Todd Parr's book The Peace Book.
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Take a look at Ryan's example page
Created by Rian (age 8)
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