THE HEART AND CIRCULATION Liv Bargman THE
Transcription
THE HEART AND CIRCULATION Liv Bargman THE
ILLUSTRATING SCIENCE RESOURCE BOOK THE HEART AND CIRCULATION Liv Bargman THE HOUSE OF ILLUSTRATION ILLUSTRATED IDEAS FOR INCORPORATING CREATIVE PRACTICE INTO THE KS2 SCIENCE CURRICULUM THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: COMIC STRIPS 2 THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: The Heart and Circulatory System as a Story... IIn our project at Torriano Junior School, we learned about the circulation of blood around the body as a narrative sequence. Pupils were shown diagrams, film footage and experimented with materials such as charcoal, inks and cutout animation to learn the facts and to visualize the process of the blood as it circulates. They then worked in teams to create illustrations and animations to communicate the complex scientific processes as a story. This resource is intended to give you the tools to deliver a similar project with an outcome of your choice: comic strips, creative writing or animation. See our Project Galleries for a look at the animations the pupils at Torriano made. Hand drawn comics are included, along with a projectstarting story about scientists who shrink in order to investigate the processes of the body on a cellular level. This is designed to provide a creative and fun launch, and a narrative springboard for the pupils’ storytelling in whichever the chosen format. It is also designed to give the pupils a breadth of understanding, covering the curriculum base. In addition we have provided the “cast of characters” for the story and the story’s settings, along with the story as broken down into ten parts. How to Use 1. Download and print the relevant instructions or templates for either animations or comic strips 2. Show the class film footage, diagrams and other information about the heart and blood circulation, and get them drawing the heart, diagrams showing the flow of blood etc. See useful links for sources of visual information. 4. Go through the 10-part story with the whole class 5. Go through the “cast of characters” with the whole class 6. Use the Shrinking Scientists comics and story to launch the creative scientific enquiry 7. Divide the class into 10 groups and allocate one part of the story to each group 8. Brief each group to design the setting, characters and action to communicate their part of the story 9. Build in research, design and refining time for their visual work This was the project launcher and with it we included the Shrinking Scientists comic Issue 1. It got the pupils excited about the project and they got involved with the characters. THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: COMIC STRIPS 3 THE EXCITING STORY OF THE TWO SHRINKING SCIENTISTS: Investigating the Human Circulatory System Two scientists, Jeffry and Gordon were trying out shrinking devices in their laboratory to see if they could make humans shrink to the size of cells. They wanted to go inside the human body to find out what was going on when the blood travels around the circulation system. They decided to use their friend and fellow scientist, Fred,as the subject for their experiment. With their camera and radio transmitter, they entered the blood machine and parked it in the shrinking machine. A giant flash and electric rumble notified them that the shrinking machine had worked – they were now as tiny as cells! They took off but found it hard to control such a tiny machine. They flew closer to Fred with the intent to be popped into a needle and put into Fred’s vein. Fred suddenly cried, “Aarghh, I’m petrified of needles!” “What do we do now?” Gordon asked. Jeffry thought the best thing to do was to go up Fred’s rather large nose. “That is going to be absolutely horrific.” Gordon replied. “We have to do it I’m afraid. Just cover your eyes from the green unpleasantness we are about to experience.” They made their way up the giant nose and into Fred’s body. …. THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: COMIC STRIPS 4 INVESTIGATING THE HUMAN CIRCULATORY SYSTEM What is found in the bloodstream will be your cast of characters in your animation... This information is provided and given to the pupils to inform them of all the elements of the blood and circulatory system, their scientific characteristics and functions. They can have fun designing illustrated representations of these characters. The characters must do the job of portraying the characteristics and function of the biological elements. MAIN CHARACTERS: In storytelling, there are lead characters. They need a motive to be in a place. Our motive we created for the Torriano project is above and we created these scientists. Feel free to make up your own backstory to introduce to the children prior to the project beginning. We also created the pre-visit comic. Use this as your introducer or create your own comic. Jeffry – shrinking scientist Gordon – shrinking scientist Fred – experiment subject SUPPORTING CAST: 1. Red blood cells Disc shaped They are the vehicles for carrying oxygen 2. White blood cells Larger than red blood cells They are different colours Their job is to defend the body from germs and other invaders 3. Platelets The platelets help the blood clot 4. Plasma The liquid part of the blood. Blood plasma is a pale yellow liquid and contains dissolved food 5. Viruses and bacteria The invaders of the body fight our cells that can make us ill. THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: COMIC STRIPS 5 SETTINGS: Story Locations The Heart The heart is the machine which pumps all the characters around the body and is at the centre of our story and setting. It is like two pumps in one. The right side of the heart receives blood from the body and pumps it to the lungs. The left side of the heart does the exact opposite: it receives blood from the lungs and pumps it out to the body. HEART PARTS: The heart is made up of four different blood-filled areas, and each of these areas is called a chamber. The atria are the chambers that fill with the blood returning to the heart from the body and lungs. The heart has a left atrium and a right atrium. Left Atrium fills up with blood from the lungs Right Atrium fills up with blood from the body Left Ventricle is to squirt out the blood to the body and lungs Right Ventricle is to squirt out the blood to the body and lungs The Lungs are where the blood fills up with oxygen THE VESSELS: Veins Carry blood back towards the heart. Arteries Blood vessels that carry blood away from the heart Capillaries Tiny blood vessels that carry blood to the individual cellsand join the arteries to the veins from breathing TURNING SETTINGS INTO A VISUAL: The story takes place in the circulatory system of the human body. This can be visualised–(illustrated or animated) in a plethora of ways to make it exciting for pupils. In the project at Torriano School, the pupils decided the setting for the story should be FRED CITY; Fred’s circulatory system in which the two intrepid shrinking scientists find themselves. But you can choose any place! Here are a few suggestions. SUGGESTIONS FOR THEMES OF PLOT AND PLACE... Give your pupils a choice of themes to work to. Then character ideas for the cast will come really easily, as will props and backgrounds. Space A medieval castle A futuristic city An underwater world A war zone A maze A forest Remember: Be as imaginative as you like- you don’t need the heart to look like a heart! You are getting the idea across about the bloodflow being fast, the heart is constantly pumping and the blood carries essential nutrients and oxygen to the whole body. The idea of the blood being fast will come across with the movement of the animation. THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: COMIC STRIPS 6 CIRCULATION: A Story In 10 Parts To create our animation, the class was divided into ten teams. Each team was allocated a part in this ten-part story and given the task of creating the visuals for their part in the story of circulation. Each team worked out their narrative using a storyboard (see comics and storyboards templates), and then designed their setting, and the characters needed for their part of the story. To turn the settings into fun exciting visuals – the heart, the lungs and the veins and vessels into exciting paces to draw, you need to introduce creative writing ideas. For the project at Torriano we explored characterisation by looking at the characteristics of the cast. We took the journey of the blood and divided it into ten sections (see below). Half of the story is illustrated/animated in blue and half in red to differentiate between oxygenated and nonoxygenated blood. If you look in a science text book, the language is descriptive, so we included creative and imaginative language, thinking about the characters created earlier and where they would live! Questions to ask... What do veins and vessels look like? What else could you turn them into? What is the heart? It is a pump, a machine. Use the physical properties of the parts of the circulatory system, the characters in the blood too. ACT 1 Act 1/ Scene One Act 1/ Scene Seven Vena Cava to Iliac Vein (blue) We enter the vana cava Artery to Capillaries (red) Act 1/ Scene Two Capillaries to Jugular Vein (red) Vena Cava to Right Atrium (blue) Act 1/ Scene Three Right Atrium to Right Ventricle (blue) Act 1/ Scene Four Right Ventricle to Lungs (blue) Act 1/ Scene Five Lungs to Left Atrium (red) Act 1/ Scene Six Atrium to Artery (red) Act 1/ Scene Eight Act 1/ Scene Nine Jugular Vein to Capillaries (red) Act 1/ Scene Ten Capillaries to Right Atrium (red) THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: ANIMATION 7 CREATING A STOP-FRAME ANIMATION: The Design & Illustration Process This resource takes you through the design and illustration processes used when creating the animations at Torriano School. We introduced the project by showing the pupils some images of cells to get them to think microscopically and to begin designing key characters in the story. We then worked through storyboards, background and prop design. Once all the visual elements to tell the story are complete, the animation process can begin. We showed the pupils images from Wellcome Images collection. We asked them to use inks to recreate the patterns they saw in the images. (For image resources see other useful resources notes). How To Make Blobby Ink Splats: Cellular Characters... In response to the images of microscopic cell walls and cells, the pupils used inks and pipettes to mark-make blobby cell shapes. MATERIALS: You Will Need... Watercolour inks Watercolour or heavy cartridge paper Pipettes Water pots Soft brushes Process 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Give each pupil a piece of watercolour paper. Use a brush to paint circles of water onto the paper. Suck up some ink into the pipette and drop into the water circle. Use a different colour and drop into the circle too. Interesting patterns and colour will appear and look like the cells. Wait to dry and cut them up to add as separate elements in the animation. You can also use these to turn into cell characters that you can cut out and use as moveable elements that appear on your stop frame animation. THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: ANIMATION 8 Designing The Characters To Animate... To make a good story, you need good characters. We discussed what character would appear in our stories (see cast of characters). We explored character design and characters that would journey around the body. We looked at things that are found in the blood, such as red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, plasma and bacteria. The characters were drawn in a large format first with good quality pencils and oil pastels. As we need to work to a small scale for the animation we drew the characters again from these initial designs on coloured paper. These were cut out and stored in labelled envelopes. Some parts of the story will have elements that need to be animated and not just part of the background. For example in one scene in the story describes the red blood cells flowing through the veins and coming across valves. These elements will need to be separate to the background as they need to move. Using coloured paper draw these as done with the characters. The story may also need “props” such as valves, signposts, speech bubbles and even weapons! Design and cut out all the elements needed as for the characters above. Storyboarding See the storyboard templates and how to use guides included in this resource for more on storyboards. In designing the animation, storyboards are an important step. They will enable the pupils to plan the route and sequence of the action in their story, while also supporting narrative and design skills. Each pupil was asked to plot out a visual storyboard in accordance to the storyline given using their characters. They needed to map out their story first in order for the animation to make sense and for it to flow well. Remind them that they are telling a story as well as explaining scientific ideas and planning an animation. They drew their own boxes – 6 frames – each frame illustrated a descriptive line from each part of the story they were given. The best storyboard was decided from each of the groups. This was done by means of a vote from the pupils. The group then worked from this storyboard with each of their characters included in the final group storyboard. Background This is important as it remains present throughout the animation, and portrays the setting for the story’s action. Each storyboard contained 6 different background due to the 6 frames in each. A Torriano School, each pupil from the group drew their background using charcoal. This is an ideal medium as texture can be subtle, it can be rubbed away or added to as part of the animation to create increased change and movement. The background can, however, be created in a variety of ways – from a blank piece of paper or photograph, a drawing, painting or collage. THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: ANIMATION 9 Using Charcoal To Create The Backgrounds: Materials: You will need: A3 cartridge or sugar paper Charcoal of various thicknesses Putty rubbers Process 1. Use the flat side of the charcoal to cover your A3 paper in a light covering of charcoal. Use your fingers to smudge the charcoal around the page. 2. Draw out the outline of the background. For this project they were tunnels and tubes (veins and vessels). 3. Use a putty rubber to make parts of the charcoal lighter. Use charcoal to add detail. When animating keep the charcoal handy as you can add detail and rub it away during each frame. In the animation use it as a tool to create movement . 4. Rub away bits and draw in between frames. Draw behind the characters while they run across the frame to show they are flowing through liquid. See the tester animation for Illustrating Science in the project galleries online. This was created by Liv Bargman to show the pupils how one part of the animation could look. THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: ANIMATION 10 How To Make A Stop Frame Animation Stop motion animation is a technique to make a physically manipulated object appear to move on its own. The object is moved by small amounts between individually photographed frames, creating the illusion of movement when the series of frames are played as a continuous sequence. This resource is intended to explain the process to enable you to make animations with your class like the ones we made at Torriano School. See the Project Galleries to play the children’s completed animations. Equipment: You Will Need... Laptop(s) Software to capture the animation, a webcam or video camera (DV, DVD, HDV, SDI, HDMI depending on the software you choose), and a tripod. A tripod to mount a video camera on. See below for useful links and resources. A webcam or digital video (DV) camera to film animation A power adaptor for your video camera so your camera does not turn off while you animate Lights - so your animations do not have lots of unwanted moving shadows (desk lamps work fine for small sets) A USB microphone (or other recording device) to A webcam is an ideal way to get started with stop motion animation at low cost. There is no need to worry about setting camera settings. Just plug and play! Some new webcams now shoot in HD and even have manual focus rings on the front, perfect for animation. For a high quality image with the ability to control zoom, focus and exposure, DV cameras are great. You might be lucky enough to have an old analogue or video camera crammed full of useful manual features. However to be of use for animation, most DV cameras need to be connected by a fire-wire lead. These are most commonly found on cameras using mini DV tape as a recording method. They do not come as standard on cameras or computers so you will need to check this. record a soundtrack. THE SET UP Set up the camera by pointing it downwards onto the table with the first background underneath. eBe sure to make it so that there are no shadows. Have the charcoal to hand so you can add marks to the animation in between frames. The animated elements or puppets, will be animated lying down with a camera mounted directly above, so position your camera on a bookshelf or tall tripod. The best way to arrange your shooting space is by securely fastening the background art to your surface (a table, counter or the floor). Then place the puppet on the background. Make sure the camera view captures the whole area where the action will take place, adjusting the background or camera height as necessary. ANIMATION ELEMENTS A piece of white card The cutout elemtents The background Charcoal and putty rubber THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: ANIMATION Stop Frame Animation: The Process 1. See the illustration for the Animation Station setup. (below) If you do not have enough equipment-, don’t worry, pupils can take it in turns to use the equipment. 2. Assign each pupil a role in their group. If there are more than below, you can double up the roles i.e. have two animators. Camera operator (takes the frames on the laptop) Director (keeps an eye on the storyboard and oversees the group) Animator (moves the characters) Storyboarder (assistant to the director) 3. Open the animation software. Save the project before you start. Label the animation files in a methodical way. E.g. Group 1 Frame 1 (child’s name) 4. Set the fps (frames per second) to 8. 5. When happy with the position of the camera and it is in focus, take the first frame by clicking on the camera button on the software. Take five frames of the background so that gives a bit of time to introduce the audience to the scene. 6. Start to move the character into the frame according to the storyboard. Move just a little bit at a time. 7. Consider other parts of the animation that could be moved too – other elements of the process like the blobby cell splats created earlier. Cut them out and if using charcoal you can draw onto the background with and rub away to create a sense of movement. Remember to keep saving and to delete any frames that are out of sync or if you have accidentally taken any images of hands or fingers! 8. When you have finished, you can export to edit it. Go to file and click export. It will save as a mov file. 9. Open up all of the groups animations in iMovie. Put them in order along the timeline. 10. To add a title sequence and credits, if you haven’t hand drawn them in your animation already. 11. Add sound effects and a soundtrack (see video editing software links below) to your edit. 12. When you have finished, export the animation as a Quicktime movie. 13. Share it by embedding it on your school website. Have a screening at school. 11 THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: RESOURCES USEFUL RESOURCES: Animation Software Listed below is a range of software and hardware for making animated films. Making the choice is probably the hardest part. Software applications such as HYPERLINK “http://www.kudlian.net/products/icananimate” I Can Animate and the free HYPERLINK “http://www.giantscreamingrobotmonkeys.com/monkeyjam” MonkeyJam make use of this technique. I Can Animate PC & MAC: I Can Animate KS2+ See link for cost www.kudlian.net/products/icananimate Monkey Jam PC: MonkeyJam KS2+ Free! www.giantscreamingrobotmonkeys.com/monkeyjam/ Flip Boom Classic, ToonBoom PC & MAC: Flip Boom Classic, ToonBoom See link for cost. Recommended for ages 6 to 12 www.toonboom.com/edu/k12.asp Pivot Stickfigure Animator PC: Pivot Stickfigure Animator KS 2+ Free! www.pivot-stickfigure-animator.en.softonic.com/ Stykz MAC: Stykz KS 2+ Free! www.stykz.net/Home.html Video Editing Software Windows Movie Maker & Imovie for Mac... are simple, free editing systems perfect for editing simple animated films. Not only do they have a simple interface for pupils and teachers to work with, they allow pupils to continue to pursue their filmmaking at home. www.apple.com/ilife/imovie www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/downloads/updates/moviemaker2 12 THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: RESOURCES How To Use The Comic Strip Templates A variety of comic strip templates for your to download and print have been provided with this resource. Creating comics is a suggested additional activity to the animation activities. It can work in conjunction and can be used to explore deeper learning about the circulatory system, such as other facts about the vessels, the heart and lungs. The process can also be applied to many other scientific topics or subjects to develop narrative, planning and design skills. Creating Comics to support learning this topic could begin by... • • • Responding to the beginning of the Shrinking Scientists Story. Using the Shrinking Scientists comics as inspiration – devising the next page of this comic starter. Using a map of the circulatory system. Objectives: Students will practice writing skills in a fun and creative manner. They will create their own comic strip using the templates provided and can use the characters they have developed in the animation. Students will write and edit text for conversation and storytelling. Pupils can use characters they have created in the animation and the plot and place they have explored in the animation activities. Keywords: comic book, comic strip, cartoon, speech bubble, thought bubble, artist, story, edit. Process: 1. Explain how a comic strip works. Explain how it is read: boxes left to right in rows, using speech, thought, and exclamation bubbles, etc. Show examples. 2. Create the storyline. Pair/group or single work all work well. Give each pupil/pair/group a template and explain that they have to create a story to fit the images and speech bubbles. 3. Using one of the comic strip templates provided, elicit ideas for a story from the class and put the results on the board. Use fewer words than in the sample board plan included – keep to the main points and use verbal communication as much as possible. 4. Create the speech that tells the story. Demonstrate the use of speech and thought bubbles on the board. 5. Stress that pupils have to come up with another original story. You may want to use another template as the example so that the students have a fresh template to come up with their own ideas. 6. Completed comics can be collated into a class comic anthology. 13 THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: RESOURCES 14 THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: RESOURCES USEFUL RESOURCES: Cell images www.images.wellcome.ac.uk/ Human Blood Circulation Chart www.healthandcare.co.uk/oversize-anatomy-charts/3BS_V2018U.html Cutout stop frame animations Terry Giliam from Monty Python - How to create his style of cutout animations www.cartoonbrew.com/how-to/terry-gilliam-teaches-cut-out-animation.html Turtle’s Escape Stop Motion Animation with Cut Paper www.youtube.com/watch?v=SaBw8id6aXQ&playnext=1&list=PLBDC55A215C604CCD&f eature=results_main I Create To Educate Student examples of animations created in primary schools with SAM software and their bendy webcams. wwSome excellent scientific themed examples to show your pupils. The Seed www.icreatetoeducate.com/view-video/?vid=247 Cow’s Digestion www.icreatetoeducate.com/view-video/?vid=246 An online video about how to use a storyboard www.bbc.co.uk/21cc/resources/animation/storyboarding# Books: The Concise Human Body Book: An Illustrated Guide to Its Structure, Function and Disorders (Dorling Kindersley) Drawing for the Artistically Undiscovered (Klutz) by Quentin Blake and John Cassidy 15 THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: RESOURCES 16 THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: RESOURCES 17 THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: RESOURCES 18 THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: RESOURCES 19 THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: RESOURCES 20 THE HEART AND CIRCULATION: RESOURCES 21 22 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This resource was commissioned and edited by Emily Jost, House of Illustration’s Education Manager, and designed by Mark Long. The contents have been devised and illustrated by Liv Bargman, Mark Oliver and Sion ap Tomos, with additional illustrations by the pupils of Thornhill Primary School. The project and resource was made possible by generous support from the Wellcome Trust. With thanks to scientists Sarah Gerver and Kath O’Reilly from Imperial College, London. With thanks to teachers and pupils from Sir John Cass Foundation Primary School, Thornhill Primary School and Torriano Junior School. PLANT LIFE CYCLES: USING WATERCOLOUR FOR BOTANICAL ILLUSTRATION Liv Bargman ‘The Heart and Circulation ‘was compiled by Liv Bargman. Liv is an illustrator working in the UK. She likes to explain the intangible through drawing silly things. She has been involved in a variety of projects from advertising to editorial that let her explore the possibilities of hand drawn type, forgotten inventors, cells, particles and the justification of putting eyes on inanimate objects. www.livbargman.co.uk 23