Foto do autor

Joan Irvine

Autor(a) de How to Make Pop-Ups

14 Works 366 Membros 6 Reviews

Obras de Joan Irvine

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Data de nascimento
1951
Sexo
female

Membros

Resenhas

This how to book provides step by step instructions on how to create pop-up art activities for various holidays. It includes many holidays from around the world and gives a brief description of each. I would not read this book aloud to a class, but would use it as a resource for planning lessons and teaching some of the art activities. I plan to use several of the ideas during our "diversity" unit when we study holidays around the world.
 
Marcado
kris0812 | Nov 22, 2012 |
“How to Make Super Pop-Ups” by Joan Irvine is a “How to Craft” book for children. This book may provide hours of entertainment on rainy days as well as teach other valuable skills. One of things that I enjoyed about this book is that, with a minimal amount of material expense, the reader can learn to follow simple written directions to create clever pop-up books. I felt the book was designed for children in 4th grade and up, since the book reads something like a recipe book. The reader has to follow simple directions to create the products that are displayed in the book. With some guidance from an adult, children can practice their manual dexterity with folding, cutting, and manipulating paper. The illustrations are very helpful and aide the reader in following the specific directions. However, I would have added a section of scaled pop-up patterns since some readers are not artists, in this way the end product will more likely look similar to the model that is displayed in the book. There is no fun in spending money, time, and effort on a project that yields a poorly designed end product. I would defiantly recommend this book to any children who enjoy origami, since readers are creating art projects by manipulating paper.
Ages 4th grade and Up
… (mais)
 
Marcado
ElenaEstrada | outras 3 resenhas | Nov 27, 2011 |
Library Thing Part E How To Craft
Irvine, Joan, and Linda Hendry. How to Make Super Pop-ups. New York: Morrow Junior, 1992. Print.

This title has an attractive front cover. It displays 5 pop ups in pastel colors set inside a red border. The five creations step out slightly from their panel on to the red border. This gives them some movement and a 3D effect. The title is in red against a 2 and ½” white background at the top of the cover; it catches the eye after scanning a whole three shelves of crafts books. The size is pleasing to hold and wide enough to lay out on a table and allow a group of four to follow directions and create four pop ups. There is a clear and easy to use table of contents. It is divided into four sections or four parts, with each part and heading in bold print. Thus making it easier for children to peruse the contents and find the item under the appropriate part. Each part is a different learned technique for pop-ups, with five to eight products under each technique that the reader can master. Under the introduction section there are paragraphs that discuss: Materials, Symbols and Definitions, Tips for Folding and Scoring, Tips for Cutting, and Tips for Measuring; all with friendly to read text and sentences spaced adequately. Most of the directions are on two panels side by side with each step set in its own borderless frame. The steps are numbered and an illustration for that step is drawn with care and detail right below the directions. Symbols such as: pencil, fold line, cut line, color pencil, glue, ruler are placed right on the folded drawn paper (illustration)so as to reinforce where that action is to take place and to reflect what the written directions are indicating at that step. There are thirty projects presented in this title such as animals, boats, robots, skeletons and even giant pop-ups for stage or displays. The intended audience would be elementary to middle school and the curriculum connection would be language arts, social studies, science, and math hands on projects that would enhance a report or reflect a short story read or summarize social studies and science concepts in a book with a symbolic pop-up. I like this book and would readily order several copies for the school library. Teachers and students would want equal access to Joan Irvines’s Super pop-ups.… (mais)
 
Marcado
nzfj | outras 3 resenhas | Aug 17, 2010 |
Part E Nonfiction-Crafts/How to

Irvine, J. (1992). How to make super pop-ups. New York: Morrow Junior Books.

Learn how to make pop-up cards with this book. From basic pop-ups to sliding strips and turning circles, each type of card is described in step-by-step directions. Each step of the directions is accompanied by a sketch of what the process should look like. The symbols and definitions at the beginning of the book, as well as the various tips for cutting, folding, scoring, and measuring, make it easy to follow and understand the steps to making a great pop-up card. Turn home-made cards into exciting works of art. Ages 7-12.… (mais)
 
Marcado
MsLangdon | outras 3 resenhas | Aug 14, 2010 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
14
Membros
366
Popularidade
#65,730
Avaliação
4.0
Resenhas
6
ISBNs
27

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