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Wish You Were Here
Students create a post card and describe a trip they took or a place they visited.
What You Need
8" x 5" cards cut from oak tag
Different kinds of stickers (optional)
Colored markers and crayons
What to Do
Have children talk about some everyday kinds of trips that they have taken. To get them started, suggest places such as the mall, the supermarket, the dentist's office, a neighbor's house, or even their own backyards. Explain to children that sometimes surprising things can happen in ordinary places. One way to share these trips is to make a post card that shows and tells about the experience.
Give each child one 8" x 5" card to turn into a post card. You may wish to pass around examples of post cards in case some children are not familiar with the format.
On the left half of one side of the card, tell children to write about a place, such as one they talked about in their discussion. On the right half of the same side have them address the post card to a classmate. (You may wish to review address writing with children.) They can draw their own stamp or use a sticker. On the other side of the card, have children illustrate their "trip."
Children can hand deliver their post cards or slip them into their classmates' desks or cubbies. Later you may wish to collect all the post cards and store them in a special box so that other children can browse through them during their free time.
Children with e-mail accounts and access to the Internet may wish to create and send a post card electronically. To do so, guide them to one of the following free Internet postcard services.
Note that you should review all postcards in advance. These sites are not specifically for children.
Internet Resources
The Electronic Postcard
A free Internet service that allows you to choose a postcard with any of several different themes, from Insect Drawings to Van Gogh paintings, and write a message on it to a friend, using a simple form. Electric Postcard will notify the postcard recipient via e-mail to go to the Electric Postcard Pickup Window to view the personalized postcard and message. The Electric Postcard was designed and is maintained by Judith Donath at the MIT Media Lab.
http://persona.www.media.mit.edu/Postcards/
Tags :
reading
,
language
,
sociology
,
Electronic Postcard
Submitted by
Emre Filiz
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