Students will be asked to describe a character from a book they have read and persuade their keypal to read the book.
I want a keypal who likes the same stuff I like and is very creative and talkative.
What have you learned about yourself, your keypal, and where your keypal lives from this activity?
Be sure to let me know if your keypal does not respond - we may need to find you a different keypal.
Three different ways of finding keypals for your class are described.
Children email text, digital photographs and video to their keypals exchanging information about their homes, hobbies, schools, families and countries.
This is a site to find penpals, penfriends and keypals around the world.
A successful keypal program involves more than finding keypals for your students and them having them write their first e-mail message.
There are many web sites on the Internet to find keypals if you are looking for international keypals.
A teacher chronicles her third graders’ e-mail exchanges with keypals in Australia.