Mr. Diaz planned a visit to Zeum to complement his fourth-grade life science curriculum. He decided his class would produce four movies representing “not-so-scary animals” in their natural habitat. They began at school by creating their storyboards. Each group of students chose a different scary animal: a tarantula, a rattlesnake, a bat, and a rat. Then the students researched where the creatures lived and what made them interesting. The students showed how they would focus their storyboards on an intriguing aspect of the animal.
When they arrived at Zeum for their field trip, the students knew exactly what they needed to make their clay characters. Each team member had a pre-assigned role, which made the clay character building process go much faster. The students then had more time to focus on animating their creature in front of the camera. Using their storyboards as a guide, each team shot more than 300 pictures to make a 50-second movie.
At the end of the field trip, the class enjoyed the four movies that they had made in less than two hours. The students took their characters home, and Mr. Diaz took a CD of the films back to school. In the classroom, Mr. Diaz reviewed with the class all that they had learned through the clay animation process. The activity enabled Mr. Diaz to share methods of observation and description with his class: how they should study and visually describe an animal. It also engaged the students in discussion and negotiation, as each member of the film crews determined what was most striking about their particular animal.
Mr. Diaz burned CD copies of the movies for all the students to take home, and during the spring open house he set up a computer to screen the movies for the parents.
If you would like more examples of field trip success stories or more ideas on how to relate your classroom curriculum to your Zeum field trip activity, please email fieldrips@zeum.org.