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Pixel Pages
Grade
Level K - 4
Essential
Question What is a pixel?
Objective
Students will learn the many uses of pixels in their daily lives.
Materials
Zoom by Istvan Banyal, comic strip(s), magnifying glass(es),
chalkboard, (colored) chalk, graph paper, crayons, and pencils
Approach
Read Zoom by Istvan Banyal to your students. Present your
students with the following: Pixels are the small dots or rectangles
that make up an electronic or print image. They are like the individual
tiles in a mosaic. Pixels are all around us. Look real close and
you can see the pixels that make up the pictures in comic strips.
(Provide students with a comic strip and a magnifying glass. Instruct
them to take turns looking at the pixels.) Photographs and images
on televisions, computer screens, and video games are made up of
pixels, too. If you zoom in on an image on a computer screen, you
will eventually be able to see the small, rectangular pixels that
make up the image. Even satellite images are
made up of pixels.
Discuss
how pixels are used to produce images including satellite
images. Pixels on satellite images represent a known area. That
is how scientists can measure distances on such pictures
they just count the pixels!
Demonstrate
the following steps:
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Draw a grid on the chalkboard; make it several columns wide and
several rows long.
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Shade in five cells in one row (you may wish to use several colors
of chalk).
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Shade in five cells in another row.
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Draw an arrow pointing at one of the shaded cells and label it
"PIXEL."
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Continue with several more rows of shaded pixels.
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Count the pixels in your drawing.
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Write a sentence under your drawing that describes how many pixels
you drew (e.g. "I see 15 pixels.").
Instruct
the students to create their own sketches of pixels. They should
use graph paper as their grids. They can shade in the cells using
crayons of different colors. When they are finished, the students
can line up at the front of the classroom to display their drawings.
Older students can read their sentences to the class.
Reflection
Ask the students to use small dots or rectangles to draw and
color a picture of something that could be seen as an electronic
or newspaper print image. For younger students, it may be helpful
for them to create their drawings on graph paper; they can fill
in the blocks completely or just put dots in them. Encourage students
to think small but draw big. For example, instead of drawing a flower
garden, they should concentrate on drawing one large flower. On
the back of their drawing, older students may write short explanations
of what they drew.
Content
for this activity provided by Dr. Carol Hochman.
Photo
© 2000-2001 www.arttoday.com
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