What it is: Sometimes I use a website and recommend a website so often in my own corner of the world, that I forget to share it with all of you. Scribble Maps is one of those websites. Jonathan Wylie posted about Scribble Maps on his blog, Educational Technology Blog, last week and it made me wonder if I had ever posted here about it. A quick search revealed I had not. That sent me on a search through my blog of websites that I use most often with my students, and many of them have been overlooked here. I guess I assume everyone knows about them because I use them so much. You know what they say about people assuming things… So, I will sprinkle in blog posts of some well known tools (in my classroom) as I realize they are absent! Scribble Maps is a website that lets you scribble, draw, and annotate over Google maps. Scribble Maps even lets you print your maps, save them, embed them on your website, blog, or wiki or save them as jpeg images to your computer. Sweet, huh?! In addition to annotating over maps, you can also add place markers with titles and descriptions, and add images to the map. Maps can be viewed as regular maps, terrain maps, hybrid maps, or satellite maps making it pretty ideal for every classroom need.
How to integrate Scribble Maps into the classroom: The days of bulky pull down maps taking up space in your classroom are over. If you have an interactive whiteboard or computer with projector, Scribble Maps is all you need. (You couldn’t write on those expensive maps anyway!) Scribble Maps is perfect for your every map need. Whether it is a quick reference or an in depth geography lesson, Scribble Maps is easy to use, save, and print. Use Scribble Maps in literature or history and drop place markers with descriptions on a map as students read. Students will have a better idea of what is happening in story when they can visually see places mentioned marked out on a map. Scribble Maps would be a great tool for those Flat Stanley projects that elementary classrooms across the country do each school year. Create a map and plot all of the places that Stanley traveled, attach pictures of Stanley, with those he visited, on the map. Play map games calling out geographical places and having students find them on the map and tag them with the information they know.
Scribble Maps lets you share maps via Facebook, in the high school classroom create a class page that students can become fans of and post homework help, links to educational websites, etc.
My Technology Tuesday tip of the week is for Scribble Maps. Check out Quick Tip 14 here.
Tips: As a side note, if you are not reading Jonathan’s blog, it is one to add to your RSS reader!
Please leave a comment and share how you are using Scribble Maps in your classroom.
It’s a fantastic resource, and I love your ideas for using it.
Count me among those who didn’t know about Scribble Maps until your post. Hard to believe I don’t have such a useful tool already in my Digital Backpack. Thanks for sharing it. I wonder what other great tools you are keeping to yourself. 🙂
How brilliant is this? Thank you for sharing .
Oh wow, I did not know about scribble maps. I will definitely use this with my 3-5 students. I like that you can save as a .jpg, then we could add to Comic Life, Keynote, or even in Pages. Thanks for this.
Thanks for the info! Scribble Maps look really useful.
The link to Jonathan’s blog is not working – do you have the URL?
Thanks!
Collette, thanks for letting me know about the broken link. The URL is: http://www.educationtechnologyblog.com/
Yes, .jpg makes it easy to add to any other application!
Wow, always exciting when I introduce a pro to something new 🙂