Resource Name: Google Docs Story Builder
URL: http://docsstorybuilder.appspot.com/
Uses: Construct Meaning, Write Together, Read and Respond
Teacher Time Investment: IIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
Student Learning Curve: IIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIII
Description: Most of us have used Google Docs in a collaborative setting, and we've seen how multiple users edit and add on to each others' comments. But Story Builder allows students to create a narrative around those changes by animating the discourse between fictional writers on a Google Doc. The best way to understand this site is to visit and see some of the sample stories there.
Here's one of Google's own examples:
Sample Applications for the Classroom:
- Two of a book's characters can describe a shared event, told from their unique perspectives. For example, two fairy tale or fable characters can each explain their side of a story, contradicting and correcting each other as they go.
- Given a quote from a novel, two or three of the novel's main characters can begin discussing it, and possibly modifying it, to express their individual world views.
- In the book Flipped by Wendelin Van Draanen, we hear dual first person narratives of the book's events. Google Docs Story Builder would be the perfect tool for telling both protagonists' point of view in a novel such as this. You might even consider having students work in pairs, with each taking on the role of one of the book's characters.
- After reading a biography, students can create a simple interaction that helps us understand what this person was all about. I created a very simple example for Mary Walker, the 19th century advocate for women's rights.
- Teachers (and students!) can effectively use this site to create "how-tos" for language use and writing. Master teacher Jennifer Roberts, for example, created this Story Builder to help her students understand how to properly punctuate dialogue:
Notes and Caveats:
- I haven't pushed this app to its limits, and cannot attest to the maximum time or number of characters permitted. I'd recommend keeping it simple to start.
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