PréscolairePrimaireSecondaire
|
||||||||||||
4ans
|
5ans
|
1re
|
2e
|
3e
|
4e
|
5e
|
6e
|
1re
|
2e
|
3e
|
4e
|
5e
|
Determine the different perspectives as you read the book. When might it be useful to see the bigger picture?
Read the book backwards and talk with a friend about how the story changes.
Brainstorm words or phrases to represent each page and then sequence the events into a poem.
Discuss how this book’s format could be likened to a pyramid or to Russian nesting dolls.
As a group, describe and discuss the book from the different perspectives as they change from one page to the next.
Read the book backwards and discuss how the story changes.
With a partner, write a storyboard for this book.
This clever wordless story is a mind-bending visual journey filled with twists, turns and surprises. The concept is simple: as the book progresses, each picture becomes the zoomed-out detail in a larger, subsequent scene. The opening image, for instance, a textured, red-on-blue cave painting of a man holding a bow, is reduced to a mere detail on the face of the wristwatch of an archeologist taking a rubbing of a wall in an Egyptian tomb, which then becomes something else again as the reader turns the page and the perspective continues zooming outward until the end. The book's full-page pictures-within-pictures, all brightly and intricately detailed, take readers across continents and time periods, each place with a surprising connection to the place before. From an Egyptian pyramid to an exotic jungle to a sandy beach, to the final image of a dark subway tunnel and the dimming tail lights of a receding train, Re-Zoom will invite readers to re-examine. Grownups will recognize the witty inclusion of famous figures including Alfred Hitchcock, Pablo Picasso, Albert Einstein and Charles Lindbergh.
Envoyer le lien de ce titre par courriel.
Si vous préférez simplement copier-coller le lien pour votre propre usage, cliquez avec le bouton droit sur ce lien, et choisissez « Copier le raccourci» ou «copier l'adresse du lien ».
* Vous pouvez acheminer ce lien à plusieurs destinataires en séparant les adresses courriel par des virgules.
Tweeter |