With books, your students can travel the world―exploring faraway places and
meeting people from different cultures. With bookmapping, they can use
technology to virtually expand their understanding of the locations they visit
and connect literature with geography, social studies, and more. Bookmapping
allows students to plot the locations of a story on an interactive map, adding
multimedia and hyperlinks about the setting, characters, and plot. They can add
a photograph of a historical figure or an audio clip of regional music. And maps
offer much more, helping students see places in the book up close―the vastness
of the ocean their hero must cross, or the density of a city that hosts colorful
and varied characters.
In Bookmapping: Lit Trips and Beyond, Cavanaugh and Burg show
you how this dynamic, interactive activity is a cross-curricular tool that helps
students not only develop a better understanding of places, cultures, and the
books they are reading, but also make connections among the subjects they learn
in school. The authors explain how to create bookmaps, how to use existing ones,
how to use them for creative writing, and much more. In addition, they provide
instructions for mapping programs including Google Earth, share a few sample
lesson plans, and discuss classroom management so you can start bookmapping
whether you have one computer in your classroom or a computer for every
student.
Features: A comprehensive overview and instructions for bookmapping projects;
a list of commonly used texts with existing Google Maps bookmaps and resources
for finding other online maps; a discussion of how bookmapping can bring more
focus to global awareness, critical thinking, and cross-curricular studies