It’s Xtranormal to Blabberize & GoAnimate! Part 1
Marketing is not a dirty word. Sometimes we do great things in our school, classroom, or media center but we forget that people just might not know about it. The community loves to hear what schools are doing and it’s great that we can reach out with a cool message to the community and to our kids in an appealing way. Animation does that!
Promoting your school or library media center has never been easier. Using quick, free, and easy animation studios technology educators and teacher librarians can create engaging videos to market their classrooms, media center, databases, research resources, special programs, and their love of learning to students, teachers, and the community. Combining easy animation with a wiki, website, or a blog your message will captivate your audience and reach beyond the brick and mortar walls of your school.
Focusing on three easy to use products this series of posts will give you a quick introduction and hopefully inspire you to try your hand at easy animation. The slant of this posting is to create animations for kids but not with kids. Some of the content on these sites are user created and therefore can be a bit questionable, inappropriate, and just a little immature.
Back in the day (1996) I used Theatrix Interactive’s Hollywood High to create animations and it was a whole lot of awesome! The company went bust a few years ago and it’s now out of print but it was fun and easy to use. Fast forward about 10 or so years and I stumble across Go!Animate.com and WOW! It was like a souped-up, super-charged online and FREE version! I was in animation heaven!
Using just drag, drop, click, and type technology the learning curve for this product is sweet and comforting. The best part is that you can bring in your own graphics and pics in to use as backdrops, heads, and hand props!
The design dashboard is super friendly and you can easily see all parts to your video. If you’ve ever worked with iMovie this is going to look very familiar! I quickly created a short 28 second video promoting my library media center for my blog, wiki and website…after that, I was hooked!
Do you have your own avatar? You can also make a comic version or avatar of yourself to use in your animations with Character Creator and the first one is FREE. If you’ve ever made a Nintendo Mii character it’s a lot like that. Hint: you can’t edit your character later so make your choices carefully! (which explains why i have tacky gold shoes and a bad lipstick color!) Here’s a helpful blog posting, the official blog, and some video tutorials to help! I got so jazzed about this site I made an Animation Studios & Sites Introduction wikipage for this and the other products mentioned in this posting…using LOTS of screenshots!
Another very cool thing about Go!Animate is the easy ability to embed and share the vids on your social networks and websites AND when you go back to edit the videos later (this is great for me because I’m constantly tweaking & changing things later or if I find a typo!) is that your embedded video is your latest cut… no need to re-embed it! That. Is. Sweet.
For elementary techie teachers & media specialists there’s a more kid friendly version of GoAnimate called Domo Animate where there are preset backgrounds and the characters are super cute.
A few things I’ve learned about GoAnimate:
• Upload the largest resolution background pics for best performance. Go!Animate works with Flickr to import photos for use as backdrops but it seems to only take the large size and not the original. What can I say? I’m a resolution snob.
• Extend the scene length for better reading…the default is 2 seconds, you can override it to 4 seconds…but I find that with two speech bubbles per scene having it be 5-7 seconds is more comfortable.
• Add special effects sparingly: They’re cool but they sort of overwhelm a scene.
Some of the options at Go!Animate cost points: “You can use your GoPoints to acquire special premium characters and props on the platform.” You can get points by sharing your videos or referring friends.
Join Go!Animate then Cut & Paste the following “Pssst! Gwyneth told me about the FREE 10 character credit offer on ISTE Connects! Thank you! – Your member name” email that to support@goanimate.com and in a few days you’ll be credited! Sweet!
Part II of this series on teaching and communicating with animation, which will focus on the photo to animation tool Blabberize, will run on Friday, January 1 so stay tuned!











5 Comments
GoAnimate
Tuesday, 29th December 2009 at 9:50 pm
Hi Gwyneth! Great post! Thank you so much for spreading the word of our site. We really do love to see GoAnimate being used for educational purposes! We are continuing the work on our School Platform for grades K-12 and hope to have it finished soon. If anyone has any questions, you can email me directly at michelle@goanimate.com
~Michelle Wiley
GoAnimate Community Manager
Gwyneth Jones
Wednesday, 30th December 2009 at 9:42 am
Thanks Michelle! And thank you to Go!Animate for supporting educators and working with us to create a creative product that enhances our programs and schools! Cheers!
~Gwyneth
Donna Baumbach
Wednesday, 30th December 2009 at 11:38 am
Great article! Can’t wait for parts 2 and 3.
I’m hoping some of my students in the production techniques for slms’s next semester will explore animation tools…I’ll defintely send them here! That should entice them.
I was going to read this morning. Now I’m going to go play with animation tools. ;-)
–djb
Overt and Covert Lessons from Avatar: Skills, Knowledge, and Attitudes Relevant for Today’s Learners « User Generated Education
Monday, 4th January 2010 at 3:24 pm
[...] cameras, graphics software and online tools (see “How To Animation Series on ISTE Connects” http://www.isteconnects.org/2009/12/29/it%E2%80%99s-xtranormal-to-blabberize-goanimate-part-1/ for example), and 3D virtual worlds for Machinima ( see [...]
Chad Furman
Wednesday, 17th February 2010 at 5:40 pm
It is so exciting to have found a program such as goanimate, xtranormal, and blabberize that support educators in transforming our classrooms into a place where students can get excited about their learning. This program can help educators take a step toward changing student attitudes toward learning and allow them to take an active approach in exploring their own learning using tools to that they enjoy using online. The possibilities are endless where students can go with this program.
Leave a Comment