This collection includes resources that support the animation process, including stop-motion animation, and how to incorporate animation in the classroom.
Ever wonder how painstakingly precise the art of claymation is? Artist and …
Ever wonder how painstakingly precise the art of claymation is? Artist and animator Seth Mittag gives us a closer look. We travel to New York to see the Chagall: Love, War, and Exile exhibit at The Jewish Museum. We get in touch with our inner child with the improv comedy group Go Comedy! and we head to one of the oldest operating cinemas in the United States and learn a thing or two about the days of reel-to-reel projection.
This YouTube video will help you with the stop motion animation process. …
This YouTube video will help you with the stop motion animation process. "Stop motion is actually a really easy thing that everyone could integrate into their videos. Here, I start out with a broad overview of where you could start..."
Have you every wondered where animation began? Did you know they started …
Have you every wondered where animation began? Did you know they started as children's toys in the Victorian era? In this video Utah Film Center tells you about the origins of animation and demonstrates how to make two Victorian animation toys--the thaumatrope and the flipbook. For more information or to bring Utah Film Center to your K-12 classroom, please visit www.utahfilmcenter.org/education . Film by Fill It In Productions http://www.fillitinproductions.com/ .
In this video, Adam shows how to make miniature trees out of …
In this video, Adam shows how to make miniature trees out of things you have in your yard or can get for cheap. These can be perfect for your forced perspective movies!
In this activity, learners make a stroboscope--a spinning disk with slits around …
In this activity, learners make a stroboscope--a spinning disk with slits around the edge that you look through. Brief but frequent glimpses of images seen through the slits lead to a surprising result, which teaches learners about vision and the human nervous system. The activity includes three short online videos: Introduction, Step-by-Step Instructions, and What's Going On. Also available: a concept map and a "Going Further" document that suggests variations on this activity.
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