Telling My Story: Make a Bio-Cube
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Activity Description
The Bio-Cube tool asks children to describe a person using key pieces of information. Constructing an “All About Me” cube gives children a chance to share interesting details and thoughts about themselves, including their biggest obstacles and important quotations. Get into the spirit by making a Bio-Cube about yourself before sharing the activity. Children can also use the cubes as the basis for a short writing task.
Why This Is Helpful
Successful students can do more than just understand what they’ve read; they can also boil it down to the essential information. The Bio-Cube tool helps children condense what they want to say about themselves. The cube activity also offers a chance for self-discovery, allowing children to see how complex they are.
This activity was modified from the ReadWriteThink lesson plan “Getting to Know You: Developing Short Biographies to Build Community.”
What You Need
- Computer with Internet access and printer
- Online Bio-Cube tool and planning sheet
- Scissors and tape or glue stick
- Autobiographies to share as examples
Here's What to Do
Before beginning this activity, visit the online Bio-Cube tool. Check out and print the planning sheet to preview the types of information that the tool will request. There are six categories—one for each side of the cube. Create a Bio-Cube for yourself, and use it to write an autobiographical paragraph so you can share in the fun later.
You might also want to get some autobiographies that you can look at together. A few suggested books include:
- Thoughts, Pictures, and Words by Karla Kuskin (R.C. Owen, 1995)
- Find Where the Wind Goes: Moments From My Life by Mae Jemison (Scholastic, 2003)
- I Am Rosa Parks by Rosa Parks with Jim Haskins (Puffin, 1999)
- Tallchief: America's Prima Ballerina by Maria Tallchief with Rosemary Wells (Viking, 1999)
- Reaching for the Moon by Buzz Aldrin (HarperCollins, 2005)
The American Library Association has some suggested books at Telling Their Own Stories. You can also find suggestions at Parent Guide to Book Genres: Biography, Autobiography, & Memoir. Or you can ask the children’s librarian at your local library to help you find books.
1. | Start by talking about autobiographies and how they explore one person’s experience. Remind the child that a biography is a book an author writes about another person. In an autobiography, the author is writing about his or her own life story. If you have a few examples of autobiographies, look at them together; you can also talk about similar books that either you or the child has read. Talk about what kinds of details authors usually share in an autobiography. |
2. | Introduce the Bio-Cube tool by sharing the printout of the planning sheet. Explain that the tool can help the child get ready to write an autobiography. Also share that the Bio-Cube is an actual cube the child will construct. (You might show the one you made without going into detail about what you wrote.) |
3. |
Help the child fill out the planning sheet, with these tips in mind:
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4. | Once the planning sheet is complete, guide the child to enter responses in the online Bio-Cube tool. The child does not have to enter exactly what was written; encourage him or her to revise by either adding more detail or shortening sentences as necessary. |
5. | Help the child print the Bio-Cube and then demonstrate how to cut and fold the paper into a cube shape. |
6. | Time to trade cubes! Share your cubes and take turns reading them aloud. If you are working with a group of children, let them trade cubes first. Ask questions about the different categories on the cube and what things you would like to know more about. |
7. | Have the child use the cube to write a paragraph about him- or herself. Remind the child that when writing he or she is following the same steps an author would when writing an autobiography. Encourage the child to use additional details to plump up the paragraph by asking questions or pointing out the things you would like to know more about. |
8. | Take turns reading your paragraphs aloud. Talk about what you learned about each other. |
More Ideas to Try
- Put a new twist on this activity by having the child use the Bio-Cube as a planner for an illustrated autobiography. Encourage the child to complete the Bio-Cube in visual ways. An athletic child can draw a picture of herself kicking a soccer ball into the goal. A humorous child can draw himself telling jokes that have his friends rolling on the floor in laughter.
- Trade cubes with the child and use the information to write one paragraph about each other. If you are working with more than one child, let the children trade cubes first. Then, let them use your cube to write about you.
Visit the Bio-Cube page for more information about this tool.
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