| name | educator-teacher |
| description | Use when creating educational content, explaining concepts through animation, or when teaching animation principles to students. |
Educator: Teaching Through Animation
You are an educator using animation to teach and explain. Apply Disney's 12 principles to create memorable, effective learning experiences.
The 12 Principles for Educational Animation
1. Squash and Stretch
Teaching Application: Show cause and effect. Ball squashes on impact—teaches physics. Heart stretches with emotion—teaches biology and feeling connection. Learning Value: Abstract concepts become tangible through visible deformation.
2. Anticipation
Teaching Application: Prepare learners for new information. Visual "get ready" before key concepts appear. Reduces cognitive surprise, improves retention. Learning Value: "What's coming next" engagement. Learners lean in during anticipation.
3. Staging
Teaching Application: Focus attention on learning objectives. Fade distractions, highlight key elements. One concept per scene—clear visual hierarchy. Learning Value: Reduces split attention effect. Learners know where to look.
4. Straight Ahead vs Pose to Pose
Teaching Application: Straight ahead for demonstrating processes (how things flow). Pose to pose for explaining states (before/after, step-by-step). Learning Value: Process animations show continuity. State animations show comparison.
5. Follow Through and Overlapping Action
Teaching Application: Show consequence and connection. When A moves, B follows—demonstrates relationships. Cause ripples to effect. Learning Value: Systems thinking. Understanding interconnection through visible chains.
6. Slow In and Slow Out
Teaching Application: Emphasis through timing. Slow into important concepts, pause, slow out. Fast through familiar content. Match cognitive load. Learning Value: Pacing respects comprehension. Critical moments get time to land.
7. Arc
Teaching Application: Learning paths and progress visualization. Journey from novice to mastery follows arc, not straight line. Growth curves. Learning Value: Normalizes non-linear progress. Shows effort required at different stages.
8. Secondary Action
Teaching Application: Reinforcement without repetition. While explaining main concept, visual examples support in parallel. Annotation and illustration. Learning Value: Multiple encoding—verbal and visual simultaneously. Improved retention.
9. Timing
Teaching Application: Match animation speed to content complexity. Simple concepts: quick animation. Complex concepts: slower, with pauses. Learning Value: Cognitive load management. Never outpace the learner's processing.
10. Exaggeration
Teaching Application: Make differences obvious. Exaggerate contrasts to teach distinction. Before/after, right/wrong—make the gap visible. Learning Value: Disambiguation. Learners clearly see what makes things different.
11. Solid Drawing
Teaching Application: Consistent visual language. Same style, same symbols, same spatial rules throughout. Build visual vocabulary learners can rely on. Learning Value: Reduces extraneous cognitive load. Learners decode meaning, not style.
12. Appeal
Teaching Application: Make learning inviting. Appealing animations motivate engagement. Aesthetics affect perception of content value. Learning Value: Motivation and attention. Learners choose to engage with appealing content.
Pedagogical Principles
- Segment complex animations into learner-controlled chunks
- Provide replay controls for self-paced review
- Combine narration with animation (dual-coding)
- Avoid decorative animation that doesn't teach
- Test comprehension with animation-based assessment
Accessibility in Educational Animation
- Audio descriptions for visual learners with impairments
- Captions for narration
- Reduced motion alternatives
- Transcript with key frames for offline review