10 Ways to Use Adobe Express in School


I’m taking the week off to do a bunch of fun things with my kids. While I’m away the most popular posts of the year so far will reappear.

I’ve made a handful of videos about using Adobe Express in your classroom. Those videos include making videos with Adobe Express and making custom QR codes with it. Those are just a couple of the many ways to use Adobe Express in your classroom. Let’s take a look at some of the many ways that you and your students can use Adobe Express.

Graphic Design
Create graphics like posters, announcements, and Internet memes.

    • Students and teachers can create simple posters to print and post in their schools to announce club meetings, campaigns for class elections, or to post encouraging messages to students.
    • To help students understand and show that they understand what propaganda messages look like, I have had them create simple early 20th Century-style propaganda posters of their own. Adobe Spark has built-in image search that can help students find pictures to use for those posters. Students can also upload pictures they’ve found in the public domain.
    • Create a meme-style graphic to share on your classroom, library, or school website. The graphic could be intended to encourage students and parents to remind each other of an upcoming school event. You could also create a meme to encourage students to continue reading over the summer. 

    Videos
    Videos are created by adding text and images to slides. You can record yourself talking over each slide. A library of free music is available to layer under your narration or you can use that music in lieu of narration.

    • Create a short flipped-lesson. The recording tool makes it easy to precisely record your narration over the slides in your lesson. 
    • Have your students create video lessons. The slide aspect of the video tool lends itself to students creating short Ken Burns-style documentary videos. Have them use Spark’s search tool to find images to use in their videos or have them use a place Flickr’s The Commons to find historical images. I’ve had students make this style of video to tell the stories of people moving west across the United States in the 19th Century. 
    • This is the time of year for end-of-school assemblies and celebrations. Use the video creation tool to make a video of highlights of the school year. Rather than narrating the video you can use music from Adobe’s library. 
    Webpages
    Create simple web pages to showcase pictures, posters, videos, text, and links. 
    • Create an event invitation page. Create a page that outlines the highlights of an upcoming school event like a fundraiser or open house night. Include images of past events, images of prizes, or include a video about the event. Should you need people to register for your event, include a link to a Google Form. (Learn how to use Google Forms).
    • Create a digital portfolio. Students can organize their pages into sections to showcase videos they’ve made, documents they’ve written, and their reflections on what they’ve learned. 
    • Make a multimedia timeline. There are two ways to make timelines in Adobe Express. Ask your students to research a series of events, find media representative of those events, caption the events and media with dates, and then place them into the proper order.
    • Write an image-based story. Students can write a story about themselves by using pictures they’ve taken placed into a webpage. Another way to think about image-based stories is to have students search for images and use them as writing prompts. Ask them to choose five pictures and write a story that connects the images. 
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    Thank You Readers for 14 Amazing Years!