Autobiography Maps: Our Life as an Island - Eva Varga

I originally discovered this creative autobiography project activity years ago. When I shared it with my kids, they were excited to give it a try. I am now looking forward to using it in my ELL classroom this fall.

I started with a short questionnaire that got the kids thinking about important things that have happened during their lives, items or activities that represent them currently, and goals that they have for the future.

We spent a few minutes talking about our interests and revisited the essays they had written previously.

Gautobiomap

  • Scale:   Scale is used to show that a certain distance on the map represents the actual distance on the earths surface.  On a map, scale is represented using words (for example, one inch = 400 miles) or using a graphic (a line graph).
  • Title:    What the map is about. The title is generally the biggest, darkest, most noticeable text on your map.
  • Legend or Key:   Used for defining and understanding the symbols found on the map. It is usually in one of the corners of the map and is often enclosed by a box. It explains the meaning of the different sizes, shapes, and colors used in the map.
  • Symbols:    The things on the map which stand for or represent real things on the earth’s surface. Symbols vary according to 2 categories: color and shape.  For example: a star ê is often used to represent the capital city or yellow to represent a desert.
  • Compass:   The compass shows which way is up on the map. Nearly all maps are printed so that north is towards the top of the page.  This is shown by a compass rose using N, S, E, and W.
  • Location:    Where the place or places shown on the map are exactly location the earth.  Lines of latitude and longitude are used on the map to show the location.  You should have at least one line of latitude and one line of longitude.
  • Border:    The outside edge of the map. This is a thick, 1 inch straight line around the outside of the map. The border can be left blank if the entire ocean is colored. It helps direct people’s attention to the map.

Lastly, I set out the art materials and they got to work. They opted not to include all the map elements but using a rubric, each included enough detail to achieve a desirable score.

I did not use letter grades in our homeschool but did occasionally incorporate rubrics to keep them accountable as well as to prepare them for more formal courses. In my ELL classroom, I will use a simplified version of the rubric. I’ll share that soon.

Autobiography Map s  is an activity I discovered on Ms. López in the Art Room . You can find the scoring guide and questionnaire I used here.

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  • Autobiography

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August 28, 2014 at 6:32 am

I love this idea!! I will present it to Celeste!

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susanhomeschooling

August 29, 2014 at 7:26 am

I love this! I’ve done a life path drawing before, where the road curves around, but I never thought of having my kids do it with the letter of their name!

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August 29, 2014 at 7:28 am

Life Path … ooooh, that sounds cool! The island map doesn’t have to be in the shape of a letter. I had shown my kids the samples and they both were drawn to that style. There were some drawn in more organic shapes, too.

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Michelle Caskey

August 29, 2014 at 7:58 am

This is a neat idea. These turned out great!

August 29, 2014 at 11:02 am

Thank you; it was certainly fun! 🙂

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Ticia Adventures in Mommydom

September 3, 2014 at 6:19 am

I agree with the others. I love this! There’s so much possibility here.

Pingback: Life Map (Auto)biography Lesson Plans | Biog Online

Comments are closed.

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Brief Description

Students create “life” maps” of their lives. They use their life maps as graphic organizers for writing their autobiographies.

  • create a life map to use as a graphic organizer for writing an autobiography.
  • understand and use pictures (symbols) to represent events and goals in their lives.

writing, autobiography, graphic organizer, timeline

  • a sheet of white drawing paper
  • colored pencils, markers, and other drawing supplies

In my class, I use this "life map" activity as a prewriting exercise. My students' life maps serve as graphic organizers that they use as they write their autobiographies. This activity could also be used successfully as a standalone activity.

Before the Lesson You might prepare a sample "life map" that illustrates your own life. A life map is a series of symbols that represent important things/events or goals in your life.

On my life map, I drew a set of bells to represent the day I got married. I drew an apple to represent day I became a teacher

In other words, a life map is a "symbol timeline" of your life. There are no words on a life map -- just pictures/symbols and arrows. Arrows connect the symbols in the sequence they happened in your life.

If you create a life map of your life you will be able to share it with students; it will serve as a model they can use as they create their own life maps.

Teaching the Lesson As mentioned above, I use this lesson as a prewriting exercise to having students write their autobiographies. For that reason, I have already read aloud to students a couple autobiographies so they understand the concept of an autobiography. You might begin this lesson by reading aloud an autobiography, or a chapter from one.

Talk about some of the important events that the author shared in the autobiography about his or her life.

Discuss with students the kinds of important events that they might tell about if they were to write their autobiographies. Have students share those "most memorable" or "most important" events from their lives. Write the events on a sheet of chart paper as students call them out. Some of the events students might share include

  • their birth
  • a special trip
  • a favorite meaningful thing/object they received from someone special
  • the first time took a step/learned to walk
  • a time they hurt themselves
  • a very funny event
  • a time they cried
  • the first bike ride
  • a memorable/favorite book
  • joining Little League
  • a hospital stay
  • the first plane flight
  • a day they met someone famous
  • a death in the family
  • their first dog

Once you have a list (at least 15-20 ideas is good), review the list with the students and talk about a picture or symbol that might represent each of the events that has been shared. For example

  • their birth (a rattle or a pacifier)
  • their first step (a baby shoe)
  • a time they hurt themselves (a bandage)
  • their first bike ride (a bike)
  • joining Little League (a baseball and a mitt)
  • a hospital stay (a thermometer, the kind that takes your body temperature)
  • the first time they flew in a plane (a jet)

Next, have students come up with eight (the number might vary by grade level) "most important" events in their lives. They can draw from the list they and their classmates created, or they can use events that were not shared before. Then students need to decide on the eight symbols that represent their chosen events on their life maps. Encourage students to choose a variety of events/symbols. The events should span their lives and the symbols should represent a variety of accomplishments, interests, activities, and experiences. Students might draw their symbols, cut the symbols out of magazines, search online for an illustration that can be used as a symbol, take a photograph All that appears on the students' life map are

  • their names,
  • their symbols, and
  • arrows to connect those symbols in the order they happened.

When students have created their life maps, you might set aside time for them to share them with their classmates.

Students' life maps can serve as a graphic organizer they can use as they write their autobiographies. Each event/symbol will serve as a "chapter" in their autobiography. That symbol can also appear as an illustration for that chapter in their book. The chapters follow the sequence of events in their lives/life maps.

  • follow directions?
  • choose a variety of events and symbols to represent important moments in their lives?
  • take care in creating their life maps? Were illustrations neatly drawn?
  • do a good job writing their autobiographies?

Submitted By

Lindsay Bigham, Liberty Middle School in Liberty, South Carolina

 

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Introduction Activity - Autobiography Island Map

Introduction Activity - Autobiography Island Map

Subject: Geography

Age range: 14-16

Resource type: Worksheet/Activity

Hello Humanities

Last updated

3 February 2019

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autobiography map activity

Get to know your students with this great Geography activity! Students practice their skills in BOLTSS and introduce themselves through a beautiful piece of artwork that can be displayed in the classroom. I use this in my highschool classroom as an activity in the first week of school and students respond well.

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Ms. Lopez in the Art Room

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Autobiography Maps

I have taught this unit to 7th,  8th and 9th graders.  It is especially great at the beginning of the year as a way to get to know the students better.  They began by brainstorming important things that have happened during their lives, items or activities that represent them currently, and goals that they have for the future.

Following a rubric, they incorporated 10 of the brainstormed items into their map, representing them with different land features or locations on the map.  After their symbolic representations were added they also designed unique compasses and added keys to explain their different land features.

Watercolor paints, crayons, and colored pencils were used to make the maps look colorful and labels were added with permanent markers.  The final products were both personal and beautiful representations of each individual student.

Students used the following handout to brainstorm before designing their map.


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The above rubric was used by 8th grade students to assess themselves throughout the map making process.

The rubric below was used by 9th grade students to assess themselves both during and after the map making process.


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autobiography map activity

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Having My Say: A Multigenre Autobiography Project

Having <em>My </em>Say: A Multigenre Autobiography Project

  • Resources & Preparation
  • Instructional Plan
  • Related Resources

Students can be guided to make powerful connections between their life experiences and the world surrounding their individual narratives. In this lesson, Elizabeth and Sarah Delany's autobiography, Having Our Say , serves as a model for student texts. Students read and analyze passages from Having Our Say looking for specific examples of multigenre writing within the text. Students then choose to narrate a life event that has connections to or is informed by a larger event in their lives or in the world around them. They compose a multigenre paper that includes the autobiographical narrative essay as well as an informational nonfiction piece that provides context for and connections to the story from their life.

Featured Resources

Autobiographical Narrative Component Peer Review Guide : This handout includes a chart to guide students in a thoughtful peer review of a classmate's autobiographical essay, but it could be adapted for use with any peer review. Contextual Essay Planning Sheet : This handout provides a chart that guides students in thinking about the kinds of information an audience might need to know to understand their autobiographical essay.

From Theory to Practice

In Blending Genre, Altering Style: Writing Multigenre Papers , Tom Romano describes his ideal ELA classroom as one in which students "are both consumers and producers of all kinds of literature and media" (43).  As students are exposed to or are expected to have gained "mastery" of certain genres, teachers can challenge students by asking them to combine genres into cohesive multigenre pieces.  In her article discussing the use of multigenre writing assignments in her classroom, Nancy Mack states "I know that assignments must be innovative and interesting enough so that they appear unlike the old drudgery of hackneyed assignments. The format must be open and attractive to invite the possibility of doing something engaging rather than merely pursuing the trivial school game. Topics for writing should make use of the unique knowledge and skills that students already have, connecting school work in a respectful way to things that they value in their personal lives. The completed assignment should be personally significant and full of power and integrity for the author so that the writing itself demands to be heard by a real audience." (98) The writing assignments in this lesson do just that, as they challenge students to write in multiple genres with connections to stories from their lives. Further Reading

Common Core Standards

This resource has been aligned to the Common Core State Standards for states in which they have been adopted. If a state does not appear in the drop-down, CCSS alignments are forthcoming.

State Standards

This lesson has been aligned to standards in the following states. If a state does not appear in the drop-down, standard alignments are not currently available for that state.

NCTE/IRA National Standards for the English Language Arts

  • 1. Students read a wide range of print and nonprint texts to build an understanding of texts, of themselves, and of the cultures of the United States and the world; to acquire new information; to respond to the needs and demands of society and the workplace; and for personal fulfillment. Among these texts are fiction and nonfiction, classic and contemporary works.
  • 2. Students read a wide range of literature from many periods in many genres to build an understanding of the many dimensions (e.g., philosophical, ethical, aesthetic) of human experience.
  • 4. Students adjust their use of spoken, written, and visual language (e.g., conventions, style, vocabulary) to communicate effectively with a variety of audiences and for different purposes.
  • 5. Students employ a wide range of strategies as they write and use different writing process elements appropriately to communicate with different audiences for a variety of purposes.
  • 6. Students apply knowledge of language structure, language conventions (e.g., spelling and punctuation), media techniques, figurative language, and genre to create, critique, and discuss print and nonprint texts.
  • 11. Students participate as knowledgeable, reflective, creative, and critical members of a variety of literacy communities.
  • 12. Students use spoken, written, and visual language to accomplish their own purposes (e.g., for learning, enjoyment, persuasion, and the exchange of information).

Materials and Technology

  • Copies of Having Our Say: The Delany Sisters’ First 100 Years by Sarah L. Delany and A. Elizabeth Delany with Amy Hill Hearth (Dell)
  • Overhead or large post-its for recording student responses
  • Pens, paper for drafting in class or time in a computer lab for composition and revision
  • “Teaching Racially Sensitive Literature: A Teacher’s Guide” (optional)
  • Multigenre Autobiography Planning Sheet
  • Contextual Essay Planning Sheet
  • Autobiographical Narrative Component Peer Review Guide
  • Contextual Component Peer Review Guide
  • Multigenre Autobiography Project Rubric
  • Understanding the Two Genres Handout (optional)

Preparation

  • Determine how much of the book you will ask students to read. You may wish to use this text in its entirety as an example of the genre of autobiography. Alternately, a few of the sections can serve as supplementary resources to existing units. For example, the section “I Am Free! ” could supplement a unit on slavery, “Jim Crow Days” could enrich a unit on Civil Rights and segregation, and “Harlem-Town” would integrate into a study of the Harlem Renaissance. A third option is to treat one of the sections as a stand-alone autobiographical piece.
  • Preview the section(s) you plan to teach and read Teaching Racially Sensitive Literature: A Teacher’s Guide .  Having Our Say does contain frank conversations about race, including representations of blatant racism through language and action. Determine the type and level of preparation your students might need.
  • Make copies of all necessary handouts.
  • Think about an event from your life you would be comfortable using in the modeling the drafting process. (See Instruction and Activities Session 3.)
  • Plan for computer lab/internet access for any sessions during which you will use ReadWriteThink interactives or students will be word processing.
  • If you are unfamiliar with the story of the  Delany sisters, the Having Our Say Website includes brief information about the sisters and how their story came to be written, as well as a study guide for the book.
  • Test the Venn Diagram and Timeline interactives on your computers to familiarize yourself with the tools and ensure that you have the Flash plug-in installed. You can download the plug-in from the technical support page.

Student Objectives

Students will

  • identify features that are unique to and common between informational and autobiographical nonfiction.
  • choose an event from their life to narrate in essay form, adopting genre-appropriate voice, style, and methods of development.
  • determine the specific historical, cultural, or familial background information that readers of the above essay would need.
  • craft an informational nonfiction essay around that information, adopting genre-appropriate voice, style, and methods of development.
  • successfully integrate informational and autobiographical nonfiction.

Session One

  • Prepare students for the reading by discussing its unique structural features.  Have them leaf through the book and take note of its structure while you guide them through the different sections (major sections indicated by roman numerals and titles, unlabeled introductory chapters, alternating chapters labeled with the narrating sister’s name, etc. ).
  • Point out that the third author, a writer for The New York Times , is the objective voice in the chapters at the beginning of the sections.
  • Offer students the label of “multigenre text” and ask if they have read or are familiar with any multigenre texts (Avi’s Nothing But the Truth , Walter Dean Myers’ Monster ).  Ask them what genres seem to be represented in this work.  See the ReadWriteThink lesson Reading and Analyzing Multigenre Texts for more information on this specialized reading and writing, including a booklist with more examples.
  • Have students produce a list of ways that informational nonfiction (perhaps students can conceive of it as “newspaper” writing) and autobiographical nonfiction are similar and different.  You may wish to use the Venn Diagram tool to facilitate this discussion.
  • Extend this discussion into a conversation about what makes each of these genres especially effective.  Write students’ observations on an overhead or large sheet of Post-It paper for later use/reference.  You can then use these preparatory materials as a rubric for the final student product or use the Multigenre Autobiograpy Project Rubric included in this lesson.

Session Two

  • Have students read the desired section(s) of the book. 
  • direct presentation of ideas: “A generation after the end of slavery, freedom for black Americans was still elusive” (90)
  • a focus on facts and events:  “1896…the Supreme Court ruling in the Plessy v. Ferguson case” (90)
  • development with third-person examples and explanation:  “The case stemmed from an incident in which a Louisiana citizen named Homer Plessy lost his appeal to the Supreme Court, which sanctioned the establishment of ‘separate but equal’ facilities for blacks and whites” (90 – 91)
  • formal, standard English throughout and objective perspective throughout.

The style here stands in marked contrast to the conversational style of the sisters’ chapters, where the narrative is driven by dialogue, descriptions, stories, and opinions.

  • Use an overhead of the Multigenre Autobiography Planning Sheet to have students summarize the Delanys’ story in the center circle.  Then review the section opener to list context the third author provides and put the contextual information in the outer circle.  Point out that, diverse as the styles of the two sections may be, they work together to show how the sisters’ lives were part of a larger, more dynamic picture than their individual life experiences alone.
  • Preview the multigenre autobiography assignment, noting to students that they will write about an event from their life as well as the larger context surrounding it.  Encourage students to make connections between their autobiography and the information they include in the contextual essay like the ones from Having Our Say .

Session Three

  • Have students brainstorm a significant event or experience from their lives that they would like to share.  Some students will choose to start with a significant world, community, or family event first ( e.g. , the September 11 attack, the closing of a plant or factory in their town, the birth of a sibling) and then determine the personal narrative they will write in relation to that event.  Others will have an experience they want to narrate and will determine the focus of the contextual information later.  Either approach can work, but ensure that students choose a personal experience that will need to be contextualized.
  • Refer to the list of qualities of narrative/autobiographical nonfiction the class produced in Session 1 (or use the Understanding the Two Genres handout ). 
  • Remind students that they will need to work toward these objectives as they produce a rough draft of their personal essay.
  • Distribute the Multigenre Autobiography Planning Sheet .
  • Model for students the functionality of the Multigenre Autobiography Planning Sheet . Using an event from your own life, start jotting down the events, feelings, and reactions you would need to include in an autobiographical essay recounting the event.
  • As the connections become apparent, or after you’ve modeled the inner circle, write down in the outer circle elements of context you would need to include.
  • Answer any student questions about the process and give them time to start planning the autobiographical component in the inner circle.

Session Four

  • At the beginning of this session, ask students to recall specific instances from the book to exemplify the qualities of autobiographical narrative writing (focus on events and reactions; indirect presentation of main ideas; opinions and reactions are central to the piece; etc .) from the Understanding the Two Genres handout or the list of qualities the class developed to help them focus their efforts.
  • Give students time to work on composition of a draft of the personal essay.  Use the Timeline tool to help students plan the structure of their essay. 
  • Ask students to complete a draft of the essay by the next session.  They should be ready for a peer review activity.

Session Five

  • Put students in pairs to read each others’ drafts and provide feedback to their partners’ essays.  Use the Autobiographical Component Peer Review Guide or a similar resource reflecting the qualities on which you wish students to focus.
  • After giving students time to share their comments with each other, tell students that their attention will now be shifting to concerns of audience as they prepare for the second essay in the project. They need to consider the questions  “Who will be reading this piece?” and “What kind(s) of information do those readers need to gain a full understanding of the experience?”
  • Refer back to sections such as “Harlem Town” or “Jim Crow” to give students a model for this way of thinking.  Remind them that the essay at the beginning of each section provides historical, familial, or cultural context for the individual stories that the sisters narrate in the chapters that follow. 
  • Ask for a few volunteers to tell what event they are narrating.  As a class, discuss the kind of context they will need ( e.g. , If a student is writing about moving from a large city to his/her new home in a smaller town, he/she could describe their city/neighborhood as a reporter would; If a student is narrating the divorce of his/her parents, he/she could provide a brief objective chronology of his/her family life up to that point).
  • Direct peer response pairs to focus on the type and amount of contextualizing their essays will require.  Does the reader need background on the author’s family?  On a historical event?  About a cultural term or concept?  These mini-conferences will produce a plan for the second piece in this assignment.
  • Have students record their needs on the outer circle of the Multigenre Autobiography Planning Sheet .
  • For homework, have them further think about/refine their plan for the contextual essay using the Contextual Essay Planning Sheet . There they should make firm decisions about the amount and type of background information they will need to give their readers. 
  • Ask students to begin the process of researching any information to which they do not have immediate access (family history, historical events).  This research need not be formal, but students should gather information they will need.

Session Six

  • Check students’ plans for the contexual essay and review the guidelines for effective informational writing (see the Understanding the Two Genres handout). 
  • Answer any questions students have about the contextual essay and allow time for the composition of the context opener. 
  • Ask students to have the context opener drafted for the next session.  They should be ready for a second peer review activity.

Session Seven

  • Students meet in the same response pairs and use the Contextual Component Peer Review Guide or a similar resource to provide each other feedback on their partners’ work. 
  • Have pairs go back to the autobiographical essays as well as their plans from Session 5 to make sure the contextual essay sufficiently prepares the reader for the autobiographical essay.
  • If time allows, give students time to begin preparations for revision.

Session Eight

  • Allow students time to revise and polish their project based on feedback and self-evaluation.
  • As a class, choose a unifying school, community, national, or world event.  Write a collaborative contextual essay and have students contribute individual autobiographical essays.
  • Families can choose a unifying event and write a contextual essay together.  Individual family members can contribute individual autobiographical essays.
  • Expand the multigenre requirement to include photographs, poetry, a play, or another genre of your choice.
  • Deepen or expand your study of the literary piece or of autobiographical writing by exploring these related ReadWriteThink Lessons: Breaking Barriers, Building Bridges: Critical Discussion of Social Issues , Paying Attention to Technology: Writing Technology Autobiographies , and The Year I Was Born: An Autobiographical Research Project .

Student Assessment / Reflections

  • Use the Multigenre Autobiography Project Rubric to evaluate the revised student work.
  • Students should also be asked to reflect on what they learned by putting their story into a larger context.  Although they may not have the dynamic connections that are present in the Delany sisters’ story, encourage them to see how putting their stories in a new perspective can help them understand themselves more critically.  This reflection could come as a preface or introduction to the completed multigenre piece.
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Students come together with family and friends to take part in a read-in of books by African American authors and report their results.

Students generate descriptive timelines and can include images in the description.

This interactive tool allows students to create Venn diagrams that contain two or three overlapping circles, enabling them to organize their information logically.

To understand the historical background that influenced Maya Angelou's poems, students research events to produce trading cards using the ReadWriteThink Trading Card Student Interactive. Through the sharing of these trading cards, students understand the historical background as they analyze Angelou's poetry.

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How to Create a Life Map

Erin Martise

Creating a Life Map

Even though you might enjoy talking about yourself, you may be clueless as to what important life events you should include in an autobiography. A life map is a graphic organizer that uses pictures to represent major life events. You can use this map to inspire you before you write an autobiographical assignment, or you can simply create one to spark conversation with your friends. There are many examples and templates for life maps online, but here are some tips on their creation. Other words for life maps are mind mapping or life roadmaps.

1. Brainstorm

Write down and brainstorm about your important life events. Scholastic’s life map checklist has several major life event questions you can answer. If you’re in a group of people, such as a classroom situation, interview other students with the life map checklist. This can be an interactive process as you talk to others and see what the possibilities are.

These key moments and events can be seen as milestones, significant life changes, life goals, low points you may have already experienced, and key events in your lifetime that you can expect. Think of these life maps as a visual timeline of your life, so any ideas can be used as long as you have a starting point. Goal setting steps can also be used in this step as you think of what you would like to achieve for the first time and how to get there as a beginner.

2. Choose Photos

Determine what pictures you’ll use to represent your life’s major events. Once you have determined which questions you’re going to answer from the life map checklist, sketch small pictures on a scratch sheet of paper that represent each event. For example, if the day you were born is a significant event, you might draw a picture of a swaddled newborn or a pregnant woman. If the day you started kindergarten was important, draw a picture of a schoolhouse or a chalkboard.

3. Make a Draft

Make a first draft. On a blank sheet of paper, draw the major life events you’re going to include in your life map in chronological order. Draw arrows between the events so that viewers can easily tell in what order the events happened. While this creative process does require some project planning, it will act as your own life map and map of your life experiences to share your life story to others.

4. Gather Materials

Gather a large poster board, and using markers or colored pencils, complete your life map. Draw the pictures that represent your life in chronological order, just as you did in your first draft. Gather a large poster board, and using markers or colored pencils, complete your life map. Draw the pictures that represent your life in chronological order, just as you did in your first draft.

5. Display the Product

Display and share your life map. Tell your friends or fellow students why you chose the particular life events you did. Explain what your life map tells about you.

Another way to create a life map is to scour magazines for images that you think represent your life or anything that evokes feelings. Cut out those magazine images and paste them on a poster or bulletin board. With your group of friends, ask one another questions about each others' life maps. Do you see any patterns in your life map? What do you need to do to reach your life map’s goals? What feelings does your life map evoke? How does your placement of the images on the life map show what is important to you?

Students working on a life map could also include pictures from magazines instead of drawing. They should find pictures that represent major life events.

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I'm Not Your Grandpa, I'm Your Teacher.

Friday, March 18, 2016

Making autobiography maps.

autobiography map activity

3 comments:

autobiography map activity

They did a great job and what a grand idea. You've been missed around here! :)

autobiography map activity

Thanks! I've missed blogging, hopefully I can get back in gear. :)

autobiography map activity

Those are beautiful! What a fun way to review mapping skills. And welcome back:)

autobiography map activity

A-Z Autobiography: Free Activity and Instructions

  • By Shelley Gray
  • August 30, 2018

One Comment

A-Z Autobiographies are a simple, fun activity for any time throughout the year. To complete the autobiography, students write something about themselves for each letter of the alphabet. The result is a point form autobiography!

autobiography map activity

To make this activity more challenging, encourage students to use descriptive words and detail in their writing. Show some examples before beginning to illustrate this. For example, which sounds better:

“Camping is my favorite.”

“Camping is an activity that I love to do with my family.”

Also, encourage students experiment with sentence structure. Here are two ways to say, “I like baseball.” Which sounds better? Why?

“Baseball is fun.”

“Baseball is a sport that I love to play.”

Lastly, students can work with manipulating their sentences to fit the letters that are left. For example, suppose that a student wants to say, “I live in Manitoba,” but the “I” is already taken. How about rearranging that sentence to say, “Manitoba is where I live,” to use for the letter M?

Download this activity for free from Teachers Pay Teachers HERE or directly from my website HERE . Enjoy!

autobiography map activity

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IMAGES

  1. Autobiography Map Activity by Hennessey's Homeroom

    autobiography map activity

  2. Autobiography Map Activity

    autobiography map activity

  3. Timelines- Autobiography Life Map by Sixth and Eighth ELA Resources

    autobiography map activity

  4. 9 Autobiography maps ideas

    autobiography map activity

  5. All About Me Autobiography Island Map Social Studies Geography Activity

    autobiography map activity

  6. Introduction Activity

    autobiography map activity

COMMENTS

  1. Autobiography Island Map Activity Handout (NEW VERSION)

    Period: ______. Autobiography Island Map Activity Handout. Directions: Complete Parts One and Two to help you plan and create the perfect island that represents you! Parts One and Two will go into the gradebook as two separate graded assignments! Remember: Take your time and double check your work!

  2. Autobiography Maps: Our Life as an Island

    Autobiography Maps is an activity I discovered on Ms. López in the Art Room. You can find the scoring guide and questionnaire I used here. Share this: Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)

  3. Autobiography Map

    1. Tap :add: and your name. 2. Page 1: Brainstorm symbols you want on your map. 3. Page 2: Create a rough draft (not colored) version of your map. 4. Page 3: Read through ALL expectations on the rubric. 5. Double check your rough draft for these things! 6. Create a final copy of your map on a piece of paper. 7. Upload a CLEAR picture into page 4 of the template. 8. Tap :check: to submit your work.

  4. Autobiography Island Map Activity Handout (NEW VERSION)

    The version of the browser you are using is no longer supported. Please upgrade to a supported browser. Dismiss

  5. Autobiography Map Activity by Hennessey's Homeroom

    The autobiography map activity is fun and engaging way for students to demonstrate their knowledge of map by creating a map that represent them. Students create vibrant maps that represent their likes, hobbies, and interest. This packet includes student instructions and guidelines, students survey to get them thinking about their likes ...

  6. Drawing a Life Map

    Students. create a life map to use as a graphic organizer for writing an autobiography. understand and use pictures (symbols) to represent events and goals in their lives. Keywords. writing, autobiography, graphic organizer, timeline. Materials Needed. a sheet of white drawing paper. colored pencils, markers, and other drawing supplies.

  7. Autobiography Island Map Activity Handout

    Autobiography Island Map Activity Handout. Directions: Complete Parts One and Two. These activities will go towards your participation grade. Remember: To take your time and double check your work! Good luck! Part One: Outlining things about yourself! Read and answer the questions below. This will help you generate ideas of items you should ...

  8. Results for autobiography activity

    The autobiography map activity is fun and engaging way for students to demonstrate their knowledge of map by creating a map that represent them. Students create vibrant maps that represent their likes, hobbies, and interest. This packet includes student instructions and guidelines, students survey to get them thinking about their likes, brainst ...

  9. Autobiography Map Activity with Rubric by Angelika Shelley

    "Getting to Know You" and Geography, all wrapped into one! Great for back to school, as a Geography activity any time of year, or as a 'just in case' substitute assignment, this Autobiography Map Activity results in unique displays for your hallway or bulletin board.It allows creative and visual thi...

  10. Introduction Activity

    Introduction Activity - Autobiography Island Map. Subject: Geography. Age range: 14-16. Resource type: Worksheet/Activity. File previews. pdf, 189.44 KB. Get to know your students with this great Geography activity! Students practice their skills in BOLTSS and introduce themselves through a beautiful piece of artwork that can be displayed in ...

  11. Life Map/Autobiography

    About This Lesson. This Life Map/Autobiography activity is a beginning of the year exercise which helps students introduce themselves in middle school and to their teachers. Aligned with Common Core Standard: W.6.3. Lesson Plan for Middle School.

  12. Autobiography Maps

    Autobiography Maps. I have taught this unit to 7th, 8th and 9th graders. It is especially great at the beginning of the year as a way to get to know the students better. They began by brainstorming important things that have happened during their lives, items or activities that represent them currently, and goals that they have for the future.

  13. It's My Life: Multimodal Autobiography Project

    Overview. In this unit, students write autobiographies, illustrate them, and set them to music. Music is a powerful tool to evoke emotion, and students will carefully select songs to accompany the stories from their lives. Students brainstorm lists of important events in their lives, along with images and music that represent those events.

  14. Autobiography Island Map Activity! by The Accidental English Teacher

    Students create "Autobiography Islands" using their map skills to tell about themselves. Use these as ISN covers or just a fun activity! This product includes the instruction page, a brainstorming list, the blank template (sized for a composition book), a reflection writing activity, and a few examples of student work.

  15. Having My Say: A Multigenre Autobiography Project

    Students can be guided to make powerful connections between their life experiences and the world surrounding their individual narratives. In this lesson, Elizabeth and Sarah Delany's autobiography, Having Our Say, serves as a model for student texts.Students read and analyze passages from Having Our Say looking for specific examples of multigenre writing within the text.

  16. How to Create a Life Map

    If the day you started kindergarten was important, draw a picture of a schoolhouse or a chalkboard. 3. Make a Draft. Make a first draft. On a blank sheet of paper, draw the major life events you're going to include in your life map in chronological order. Draw arrows between the events so that viewers can easily tell in what order the events ...

  17. Autobiogrphy Island Map Activity Presentation

    Autobiography Map Activity: Congratulations, you are the cartographer! What is a cartographer? A person that draws and creates maps ; On the poster paper provided, you will create a map of your own island; It should illustrate all of things about you (life story, interests, family history, hobbies, etc.)

  18. I'm Not Your Grandpa, I'm Your Teacher.: Making Autobiography Maps

    After that, they got to work on their final project. The required elements for each of the maps were: 1) Map Title 2) Compass Rose 3) Map Legend 4) at least 3 Man-made objects 5) at least 3 Natural Landforms. I thought most of them turned out great. I liked the way this project kind of evened the playing field.

  19. Autobiography Map Activity

    The autobiography map activity is fun and engaging way for students to demonstrate their knowledge of map by creating a map that represent them. Students create vibrant maps that represent their likes, hobbies, and interest. This packet includes student instructions and guidelines, students survey to get them thinking about their likes ...

  20. A-Z Autobiography: Free Activity and Instructions

    A-Z Autobiographies are a simple, fun activity for any time throughout the year. To complete the autobiography, students write something about themselves for each letter of the alphabet. The result is a point form autobiography! To make this activity more challenging, encourage students to use descriptive words and detail in their writing.

  21. Autobiography Planning Sheet Year 6 (Teacher-Made)

    An autobiography is a piece of non-fiction writing that is a self-written account of a person's life. It is often written by people who are well recognised or well-renowned in an attempt to inform the reader of their thoughts and experiences, but they can be written by anyone. The key features to spot in an autobiography are that they are ...

  22. How To Write Autobiography: A Step-by-Step Guide to Crafting ...

    Your autobiography isn't just a collection of events; it's a narrative that draws readers into your world. Imagine you're the captain of a ship, and your readers are the crew.

  23. Autobiography Activities Teaching Resources

    The autobiography map activity is fun and engaging way for students to demonstrate their knowledge of map by creating a map that represent them. Students create vibrant maps that represent their likes, hobbies, and interest. This packet includes student instructions and guidelines, students survey to get them thinking about their likes, brainst ...