Activity Overview
Movie posters are a fun way for students to boil down the most important aspects of a novel. After reading a book students will create a movie poster that showcases the setting, characters, a chosen scene or overarching themes of the story. This example showcases the popular upper elementary novel The Wild Robot but teachers and students can use this activity for any story they wish! Students can include the title and author of the book, a catchy tagline, and a "critic's review" informing the audience why they should go to see the movie. Students can elaborate further and include more writing by describing the story as well.
To make this a class assignment, consider giving each student a different chapter or scene to focus on. When students complete their posters, they can be printed out and hung in the classroom. Students should be prepared to present on the choices they made during the creation process.
Teachers, don't forget, you can add as many templates as you wish to provide students with choice! For additional templates to add to this assignment, check out our movie poster templates!
Template and Class Instructions
(These instructions are completely customizable. After clicking "Copy Activity", update the instructions on the Edit Tab of the assignment.)
Due Date:
Objective: Create a movie poster for a book..
Student Instructions:
- Identify scenes, characters, items and /or animals appropriate to your book and arrange them artfully on the poster. You may choose to showcase a particular scene in the book or an overarching theme.
- Add the title and author of the book as well as a catchy slogan or tagline.
- Add a "critic's review": one to three sentences describing why the audience should see this movie and what is compelling about the story.
Lesson Plan Reference
Rubric
(You can also create your own on Quick Rubric.)
Proficient | Emerging | Beginning | |
---|---|---|---|
Text | Includes Title, Author, catchy slogan and a 1-3 sentence critic's review that accurately describes the story and why people should go to see the movie. | Missing one element of text. | Missing two or more elements of text. |
Illustrations | Illustrations depict a scene or theme of the story with clear visuals including an appropriate scene, character, items, etc. | Illustrations depict a scene or theme from the story but are unclear or incomplete. | Illustrations do not depict a scene or theme from the story. |
Activity Overview
Movie posters are a fun way for students to boil down the most important aspects of a novel. After reading a book students will create a movie poster that showcases the setting, characters, a chosen scene or overarching themes of the story. This example showcases the popular upper elementary novel The Wild Robot but teachers and students can use this activity for any story they wish! Students can include the title and author of the book, a catchy tagline, and a "critic's review" informing the audience why they should go to see the movie. Students can elaborate further and include more writing by describing the story as well.
To make this a class assignment, consider giving each student a different chapter or scene to focus on. When students complete their posters, they can be printed out and hung in the classroom. Students should be prepared to present on the choices they made during the creation process.
Teachers, don't forget, you can add as many templates as you wish to provide students with choice! For additional templates to add to this assignment, check out our movie poster templates!
Template and Class Instructions
(These instructions are completely customizable. After clicking "Copy Activity", update the instructions on the Edit Tab of the assignment.)
Due Date:
Objective: Create a movie poster for a book..
Student Instructions:
- Identify scenes, characters, items and /or animals appropriate to your book and arrange them artfully on the poster. You may choose to showcase a particular scene in the book or an overarching theme.
- Add the title and author of the book as well as a catchy slogan or tagline.
- Add a "critic's review": one to three sentences describing why the audience should see this movie and what is compelling about the story.
Lesson Plan Reference
Rubric
(You can also create your own on Quick Rubric.)
Proficient | Emerging | Beginning | |
---|---|---|---|
Text | Includes Title, Author, catchy slogan and a 1-3 sentence critic's review that accurately describes the story and why people should go to see the movie. | Missing one element of text. | Missing two or more elements of text. |
Illustrations | Illustrations depict a scene or theme of the story with clear visuals including an appropriate scene, character, items, etc. | Illustrations depict a scene or theme from the story but are unclear or incomplete. | Illustrations do not depict a scene or theme from the story. |
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