• arbeitsblatt lego-standbild
  • anonym
  • 03.06.2025
  • Englisch
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Work sheet: How to crea­te a LEGO free­ze frame

1
Scene sel­ec­tion
- brain­storm which sce­nes you have read were most im­portant to you
Sum­ma­ri­ze the scene in 2-3 sen­ten­ces. Why did you choo­se this scene?
2
Scene break­down
Iden­tify the key ele­ments by ans­we­ring the ques­ti­ons below.

Who is in­vol­ved?

Where does it take place?

What is hap­pe­ning?
3
Plan­ning the LEGO model
What bricks do you need? Write them down below. Think about the dif­fe­rent cha­rac­ters, the set­ting and cer­tain ac­tions in the scene and how they could be por­t­ray­ed in a free­ze frame.
4
Buil­ding the LEGO scene
- try dif­fe­rent ar­ran­ge­ments, pay at­ten­ti­on to the extra tips at the bot­tom
Write down the aspects of your free­ze frame or take a pic­tu­re of it.
5
Pre­pa­re the pre­sen­ta­ti­on
How do you want to pre­sent your LEGO free­ze frame? Write some notes down below. You could also use the ques­ti­ons from the How to-​poster.
Extra tips

-  use co­lors for sym­bo­lism: cer­tain co­lors are as­so­ciated with spe­ci­fic emo­ti­ons (e.g. red for anger, blue for sad­ness, ...)

-  ac­tion poses: use dy­na­mic poses to show mo­vement or emo­ti­on (e.g. a fi­gu­re with a rai­sed arm/fist might show anger)

- add simp­le back­ground pieces to show the set­ting more clear­ly (e.g. a tree for out­doors, a table for in­ doors, ...)

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