Friday, December 5 :: Click Link for assignment >
Either in your backpack or the lock box!
C: Voice Level 2 (only the people next to you can hear you and no shouting across the room)
H: Ask your team, elbow partner or raise hand
A: Work on the assignment
M: Stay in your assigned seat
P: Work till assignment is completed
S: Finishing your work
NO HOME GAMES/EVENTS THIS WEEK!
(November 10-14)
Check the schedules to see when you can take photos and interview!
DONE
Pool Party: Samantha/Mason
Senior Sunrise: Emma/Dominick
HOCO Rally: Anthony Y/Axel
HOCO Dance: Erwin/Melody
HOCO Game: Khalven/Kyle
Battle of Barstow: Eriana/Victoria
Football: Samantha/Jacob
WaterPolo: Aaron/Dominick
Unified Soccer: Carlos/Anthony P
Girls Volleyball: Eriana/Mason
Girls Golf: Samantha
Pates In Pink (VB): Jonah/Kaison
Pates In Pink (FB): Matthew/Elizabeth (10/17)
Girls Tennis: Leahlani (10/16)
NEED BY STUDENTS:
Halloween/T or T: Javier/Victoria/Allyson (10/28)
Winter Formal: Samantha/Jacob
PTC (Fall): Emma/Jessica
Revolution Bowl: Aaron/Noel (10/31)
Girls Tennis: Leahlani (10/16)
Erwin
(Need to pick a makeup event*)
YB:
Aaron
Allyson
Anthony Y
Elizabeth
Emma
Eriana
Jacob
Jessica
Jonah
Khalven
Mia
Melody
Samantha
Victoria
DPII:
Anthony P
Axel
Carlos
Dominick
Erwin
Javier
Kaison
Kyle
Leahlani
Mason
Matthew
Noel
Green=Done
Black=Signed up
Red=Need event
Let's take a moment to discuss what we came up with!
WHAT ARE WE LEARNING: Theme Development!
WHY IS IT IMPORTANT: A theme is a central idea or concept that sets the tone for telling the story of the year. Repeated throughout the yearbook on cover and endsheets and in opening, closing and dividers, it unifies the storytelling message of the book and gives it personality.
HOW WILL MY TEACHER KNOW WHAT I LEARNED: Today we will research previous publications and brainstorm on ideas for THIS school year's yearbook theme!
Let's take a moment to discuss what we came up with!
Artolesence
Artists of our Age
Print to Patriot
Art of Adolesents
Printed Proof We are Patriots
Drawn Together @ Hoover High
From Print to Patriot
The Path of a Pate
Nobody leaves a Mark like hoover
The Canvas of a Pate
Patriots Page
The Stroke of a Patriot
The Art of Hoover's Story, Painted in Bold
Pate's Not Perfect
26 Shades of Green
TAGLINE IDEAS
by Samantha Wilkey
The Artists of Our Age:
Hoover Students are the "artists"
Actual art, the art of athletics & community
From Print to Patriot/Pate
"Print" like Yearbook printing
"Print" line as in pen signatures on doodles
"Print" like implied imprint
The Art of Adolesents
Similar to Artist of Our Age
Adolesents art work
We are Adolesents
The Art of Adolesence
This implies that Adolesence and growth as a whole is the art
Youth and Growing up
The process of coming up with a tagline/theme
doo·dle /ˈdo͞od(ə)l/
Verb: scribble absentmindedly
Noun: a rough drawing made absentmindedly
Absentmindedly definition: lost in thought and unaware of one’s surroundings or actions. tending to forget or fail to notice things: given to absence of mind.
Is doodling the same as drawing?
No, doodling and drawing are not the same, though they both involve mark-making; doodling is casual, unfocused, and lacks specific purpose, while drawing is intentional and has a goal or theme. Doodling often happens subconsciously during other activities like phone calls or lectures and can be a source of relaxation, while drawing is an intentional act of creating something specific.
Word play?
Thesaurus' are a great way to expand on a theme. Find a word you think might work and try it in the thesaurus.
What do you get?
Would it work with Hoover?
Would it work with Patriots?
IDEAS...
Doodle Your Story
Patriot Pages in Pencil
Sketching the Year That Was
Drawn to Hoover
Scribbled. Sketched. Remembered.
Doodles of a Patriot
Patriot Pride in Every Line
Sketched by Us
Drawn Together
Leaving Our Mark
Doodling the Spirit of Hoover
Patriot Pages: Hand-Drawn & Heart-Felt
Green, Gray, and Doodled All the Way
The Patriot Storyboard
Sketching Tomorrow’s Patriots
Doodling Through the Halls of Hoov
Where Patriots Scribble Their Legacy
From Sketches to Stories
Patriot Pride, One Doodle at a Time
The Year We Drew It All Out
Margins Full of Memories
A Year Worth Doodling About
In the Scribbles, We Found Ourselves
Every Line Tells a Hoover Story
The Art of Being a Patriot
Sketched Moments, Lasting Memories
Drawn by Us. Remembered Forever.
Doodle Like Hoov
Hoov in the Margins
The Year We Doodled Not Like Hoov
Too Much Hoov… Not Enough Paper
Hoover: Drawn Different
A Year in the Margins
Scribbles Become Stories
The Notebook of 2026
Margins of Memory
Your Story, Sketched
Doodley Noted
Doodle This Year
The Patriot Sketchbook
Drawn at Hoover
All Scribbled Up
The Year in Doodles
Patriot Doodles
Scribbles & Stories
Sketches of Us
Lines, Layers, & Hoover
Margins of 2026
Ink, Imagination, Hoover
Doodling the Patriot Way
Patriot Pages: The Doodle Edition
Hoover, Hand-Drawn
The Doodled Patriot
Green & Gray, Sketched Our Way
Doodled by Hoov
Drawn Like Hoov
The Hoov Book
Too Much Hoov: The Doodle Edition
Hoover: Drawn Different
The Year We Sketched Our Story
A Collection of Doodled Memories
A Patriot’s Sketch of 2026
Hand-Drawn Moments. Hoover Memories.
Every Doodle Tells a Story.
Sketch You Later, 2026
Sketching It Real
Sketch Happens
A Year Well-Drawn
Drawn to Be Patriots
Drawn Together (pun on drawn = pulled + sketched)
Drawn to Hoov
Scribble Me This
Scribbles & Bits
Scribble in the Middle
Scribbled in Green & Gray
Scribblin’ Like Hoov
Patri-Doodles
Hoov-Doodles
The Doodle-triot
Doodle Like Hoov (pun on "They Not Like Hoov")
Patriot Pride, Illustrated
Patriot Pride, Line by Line
Unapologetically Doodled by Patriots
IDEAS based on theme
Before we start a new feature, think about the different ways that our yearbook theme could be woven throughout the storyline.
Common "DOODLE" Elements
A fun way to incorporate our theme across our entire publication is to create a common element for our photos or text.
Ripped paper
Lined paper
Doodles
Fonts
etc
Design will drive the message home!
Remember, the design of our publication can also bring out more of our yearbook theme.
From the bright reds and blues that is used in the headlines to supplement the Dr. Seuss concept to how to incorporate stunning, original graphics with a More Than Words theme, use the design of each page to pull your features and the overall concept behind your book together.
Key areas of your design that should meld with your theme include:
Cover: The first thing that our readers will see, our cover should be a direct visual tie-in between our theme and our school.
Headlines: Use font design, size, and color to evoke more of the idea behind our yearbook theme.
Visual Cues: Find different supplemental images and graphics that support our theme for use throughout our book.
Layout: The layout, or template, of our book should reflect our yearbook theme in more subtle ways. Think about how to best convey our concept across our layout before we start writing content, as this will affect the amount of space we have available for each story.
AGAIN...How can WE convey this story this year?
Many times, students come up with a catch phrase and want it to dictate the content. Our story—whether we have a visually strong, photographic book, or a journalistic yearbook full of features—should lead your look.
Yes! We are committing to it!
Ctrl+Alt+Delete then select SIGN OFF!
Please place HEADPHONES on your Monitors!