Digital Stories
In December our first grade teachers did an Eric Carle author study and as a result each class rewrote one of his stories. The art teacher helped out by drawing a simple outline of each character or object in the story. The children then filled the outline with scraps of paper they had fingerprinted with bright colors. When I saw the pages I fell in love with the project and volunteered to put them into a digital format. Well now over a month later I have finally completed the process. It seemed like such a simple process but it was more time consuming than I anticipated.
At first I was going to do all three projects using Smilebox, a free download and if you tell them you’re a teacher you get the best version for free. But then I decided it would be better if I just did one story in Smilebox and then one in Photostory3, another free download and the third in Windows Movie Maker. I figured this would be a good opportunity for me to compare the three different processes and see the pros and cons of each. You can see all three stories on my wiki.
So, here’s what I’m thinking about each program at the moment:
Smilebox
Pros
- Colorful
- Choice of layouts-scrapbook or slideshow, I selected a slideshow
- Lots of music selections
- Easy to embed into a webpage.
Cons
- Limited #of slides for a slideshow
- Can’t add narrations
- Even though I downloaded Smilebox at school I couldn’t save it from home and take it to school to work on it.
Photo Story3
Pros
- Easy to record voices
- Picture and voice are kept together as one unit so easy to move around on timeline
- Music can be added
Cons
- Can’t edit recording but it is easy to delete and redo
- My file became corrupt and I couldn’t edit it. When I searched for a solution I didn’t find one but I found others have had this problem.
- No reminders to add a title slide or credits
- I put in a page turning transition but it does not show up in the finished product.
Movie Maker
Pros
Recordings can be done in Audacity so that the mistakes and long pauses or ummmms can be deleted.
Cons
Voice and picture were two different files and moving them around on the time line was not easy.
A little tricky to get recordings and pictures timed correctly.
At the end of the project I figured out I didn’t have to use Audacity and could narrate right on the timeline. I tried this but the voice went right on top of the next voice because I hadn’t put more space in the spot.
I’m not sure if music can be added or not.
I put in a star transition between the slide but it does not show up in the finished show.
Final Thoughts
If a teacher came to me and wanted to do a digital story I would recommend Photo Story 3 if the children were going to be doing the project. If the teacher is putting it together and they didn’t need narration I would also recommend Smilebox. I’m working on a Snow in 6 Words project thanks to Martha Thornburgh for the idea with my third graders. We’re building it in PowerPoint and when we’re done I may have them move their slides to Photo Story 3 and then post them on the wiki.
Your Thoughts
Please let me know your thoughts on these programs. What do you see as the pros and cons? Share tips and tricks that will make this easier or recommend other products to try out.
Thanks!
Filed under: Language Arts | Tagged: EricCarle, PhotoStory3, Smilebox, WindowsMovieMaker










Nedra,
I have found a solution to one of your cons in Smilebox- a limited number of slides for each design. It takes an extra step, but worth it if you really want to use the design. If you have more pictures than the design allows, just throw them into Windows Movie Maker and save as a video file. Then insert the video of your pictures into the slideshow (essentially only taking up one spot!).
Hope this helps.
Amber,
Thanks for the tip! You did that for the Christmas movie didn’t you? I remember that now. The kids loved that one by the way.
Nedra,
Hi! I was interested in your comparison when I saw your post link from plurk. I personally use Window Movie Maker way more than either Photostory or Smilebox. I just wanted to add that yes Music can be added in Windows Movie Maker although I think that it cannot be on top of or at the same time you have your voice recorded. I have my students record their voices and then adjust the timeline accordingly if necessary when finished to fix any timing issues. Right now my students are working on Stop motion video projects using Windows Movie Maker as well. This is the first time we have done these and I’m curious to see how they turn out. Thanks for the information.
nhill,
Thanks for your input. What grade level is doing the Stop Motion video project? If you post them online be sure to share the link. I’d love to see them. Nedra
Here are the responses I received on Plurk:
DianeA says not my personal experience – but 2 teachers in my wing have had trouble editing with movie maker – said it’s time consuming and tricky
sharon_elin says MM isn’t as flexible as premium movie editors like Premiere, but for a free program it’s OK for student work. I’m curious to know more about Smilebox
clong says Oh, I wish you hadn’t introduced me to Smilebox. I just signed up for the 14 day free trial and will probably join after the trial runs out. I introduced teachers on my campus to Photo Story 3, and they LOVE it compared to Movie Maker.