Date post: | 15-Jan-2016 |
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How to do a One Pager
What It Does
Connects the verbal with the visual
It connects literature’s thoughts to your thoughts
It appeals to verbal, visual, and kinesthetic learners
Create a Central Image
Draw to create an image that captures the central meaning for what you’ve read.
The image must be the central feature of your One Pager.
Brainstorm Brainstorm around
the central image (four descriptive words).
Lov
e
Fear
Loss of
Innocence
Runni
ng
Away
Citations“Two most important
citations from the text” (author’s last name page).
“The second citation only
needs the page number” (page).
Personal Connection
Make a personal connection about what you read (personal comment)
Must include the title of the book on
the one-pager.
Must include the author’s name.
Guidelines
Must be Colorful
No lined paper
Use color pens, color pencils, markers, or crayons.
NO PENCILNo black ink
ImpactWhen a one pager is completed, anyone who looks at it will gain an instant interpretation of how you understood the story.
What to Include on What to Include on your One-Pageryour One-Pager
1 or 2 Images Title and author Pictures and colors 4 descriptive words 2 important quotes from
the story 2 questions with answers 1 Connection (your
thoughts about the story) Make it colorful and neat Fill the entire page