“By using the product, they were so excited and they learned so much...”–K-5 Librarian and Instructinal Technology Teacher
Fathers take on many roles. Sometimes, we forget how much dads do for their kids. Have your students think of at least four roles or jobs that their fathers have. These roles should show many different sides to fathers.
A spider map template works very well with this activity because there is less emphasis on ordering than there would be with a list. The Frayer Model template works similarly well, but you are limited to exactly four items.
Pair this activity with a lesson or review of metaphors and poetic language!
(These instructions are completely customizable. After clicking "Copy Activity", update the instructions on the Edit Tab of the assignment.)
Student Instructions
Grade Level --- N/A ---
Difficulty Level 2 (Reinforcing / Developing)
Type of Assignment Individual
Type of Activity: Use Storyboard That All Year Long
(You can also create your own on Quick Rubric.)
| Proficient | Emerging | Beginning | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visualizations | Images show creativity and care. | Scenes, characters, and items are appropriate for this purpose. | Images are confusing or do not make sense for this purpose. |
| Evidence of Effort | Work is complete, thorough, and neat. | Work shows some evidence of effort. | Work shows little evidence of any effort. |
| Conventions | Ideas are organized. There are few or no grammatical, mechanical, or spelling errors. | Ideas are mostly organized. There are some grammatical, mechanical, or spelling errors. | Ideas may be disorganized or misplaced. Lack of control over grammar, mechanics, and spelling reflect a lack of proofreading. |
Fathers take on many roles. Sometimes, we forget how much dads do for their kids. Have your students think of at least four roles or jobs that their fathers have. These roles should show many different sides to fathers.
A spider map template works very well with this activity because there is less emphasis on ordering than there would be with a list. The Frayer Model template works similarly well, but you are limited to exactly four items.
Pair this activity with a lesson or review of metaphors and poetic language!
(These instructions are completely customizable. After clicking "Copy Activity", update the instructions on the Edit Tab of the assignment.)
Student Instructions
Grade Level --- N/A ---
Difficulty Level 2 (Reinforcing / Developing)
Type of Assignment Individual
Type of Activity: Use Storyboard That All Year Long
(You can also create your own on Quick Rubric.)
| Proficient | Emerging | Beginning | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visualizations | Images show creativity and care. | Scenes, characters, and items are appropriate for this purpose. | Images are confusing or do not make sense for this purpose. |
| Evidence of Effort | Work is complete, thorough, and neat. | Work shows some evidence of effort. | Work shows little evidence of any effort. |
| Conventions | Ideas are organized. There are few or no grammatical, mechanical, or spelling errors. | Ideas are mostly organized. There are some grammatical, mechanical, or spelling errors. | Ideas may be disorganized or misplaced. Lack of control over grammar, mechanics, and spelling reflect a lack of proofreading. |
Encourage students to write a short paragraph or poem about one important role their dad or father figure plays. This helps students process and express their thoughts, and integrates written language skills into the lesson.
Invite students to share their maps and discuss how father roles can look different in every family. This builds empathy and helps students appreciate diversity in family structures.
Ask students to create a metaphor describing each role (e.g., 'My dad is a chef because he cooks up fun adventures'). This strengthens creative thinking and reinforces figurative language concepts.
Let students illustrate each role using drawings or digital tools. Visuals make learning memorable and tap into multiple intelligences for deeper engagement.
Easy Father's Day lessons for K-12 students include activities like brainstorming different roles fathers play, creating spider maps or Frayer Model templates, and pairing these with lessons on metaphors or poetic language for deeper engagement.
Encourage students to identify at least four roles their fathers have, such as protector, teacher, friend, or coach. Use visual organizers and creative activities to help them understand and celebrate these roles.
A spider map is a graphic organizer with a central idea and branches for related points. For Father's Day, students can put 'Dad' at the center and add different roles or jobs on the branches, illustrating each one creatively.
After students list their fathers' roles, have them write short metaphors or poems comparing their dads to things that represent those roles, fostering creative expression and language skills.
The spider map allows students to list multiple roles or attributes, while the Frayer Model limits them to four items, providing more structure. Both help students organize and visualize their ideas about fathers’ roles.
“By using the product, they were so excited and they learned so much...”–K-5 Librarian and Instructinal Technology Teacher
“I'm doing a Napoleon timeline and I'm having [students] determine whether or not Napoleon was a good guy or a bad guy or somewhere in between.”–History and Special Ed Teacher
“Students get to be creative with Storyboard That and there's so many visuals for them to pick from... It makes it really accessible for all students in the class.”–Third Grade Teacher