I remember when I first joined scratch. It was one of the funnest experiences of my life. Popularity to me didn't matter. As long as I got to use scratch that would be the only thing that would matter to me. My school (at the time when I first joined scratch [2008]) had typing in Mavis Beacon as their main curriculum, and we all suffered from boredom after a while. When I first suggested scratch to my technology professor he was delighted. I was thanked for most of my time of that year too. The funnest part of that year was when I got to teach 4th graders about scratch. And so, I made a simple project teaching them 3 blocks that will heavily be used as they used scratch. At a time, I thought the project would be lost forever but I have finally found it once again!
Since it was created in Scratch 1.2.1 I decided to recode it using the original sprites and stages and add some new stuff using Scratch 1.4. Most of you probably already know this in a flash but I am still going to publish it for a reference of my past work. I decided to convert "Never gonna give you up" into 8-bit so it sounds great not too.
As long as you view it on the experimental project viewer or download it and view it on scratch it should work properly. It didn't take to much to make but it was fun making it.
Link to the project: http://scratch.mit.edu/projects/DistantVisit/1275891
Hope you like the awesome music and the project overall. Scratch on!
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Thanks for the nice comment Sunrise-Moon. I hope other people get to see it too.
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DistantVisit wrote:
Thanks for the nice comment Sunrise-Moon. I hope other people get to see it too.
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You're welcome
. You should make a bunch of these tutorials, and then post a link to all of them in the New Scratchers forum.
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Sunrise-Moon wrote:
DistantVisit wrote:
Thanks for the nice comment Sunrise-Moon. I hope other people get to see it too.
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You're welcome
. You should make a bunch of these tutorials, and then post a link to all of them in the New Scratchers forum.
I never really thought of that, so thanks for the nice idea. This was just something I made two years ago to teach fourth graders basic blocks to experiment around with during their first day of using scratch. Maybe some of them that I taught are still here in the scratch community.
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