Pixar in a Box: Free Online STEAM Curriculum

pixar in a box

Khan Academy launches Pixar in a Box, a behind-the-scenes look at Pixar Animation Studios’ creative process

Pixar has always been one of my favorite companies. I love all of their movies (who doesn’t) and now I have a reason to love them even more. My husband and I are super into STEAM and now – STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, ARTS, Math) – because we feel they are very important things for kids to learn and focus on. My husband is an engineer so he is always focusing on these type of things with the girls. My oldest is only 4 but she has helped him build robots already. We are very excited about the newly launched Pixar in a Box. Pixar has teamed up with Khan Academy to create an online resource that explores the academic concepts behind Pixar Animation Studios’ creative process. It shows how Pixar filmmakers use STEAM to create movie magic. Through a series of video lessons, interactive exercises, and hands-on activities, students will discover how the academic concepts they learn in school enable Pixar filmmakers to create new worlds, animate unique characters and tell stories through animation. Although designed especially for students in middle and high school, these resources are available to learners of all ages, and completely free of charge.

Our mission at Khan Academy is a free, world-class education for anyone, anywhere,” said Sal Khan, Founder and CEO of the not-for-profit Khan Academy. “Sparking student interest in math and other academic fields is a key part of that, and we’re delighted to collaborate with Pixar to achieve this goal. Pixar in a Box gives students a new way to engage with key academic concepts and see how creative these concepts can be.” “Learning makes us beginners again,” said Ed Catmull, President of Pixar and Walt Disney Animation Studios.  “In my experience, creativity involves missteps and imperfections, which is one more reason it is important for every one of us to keep learning – in order to remain flexible and keep our brains nimble.   By working with Khan Academy on Pixar in a Box, we hope to encourage the excitement of learning and creative thinking for middle and high school students and to provide the tools to do it.

For years, we’ve heard from teachers at every grade level interested in creating animation-based curricula,” said Elyse Klaidman, Director, Pixar University and Archives.  “We’ve wanted to provide free online resources for them, and Pixar in a Box makes that dream a reality. We hope that it not only gives students a behind-the-scenes look at how our movies are made but also gets them excited about STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics) concepts.

Many students start to lose interest in academics in middle and high school, partly because they don’t see how academic concepts relate to things they care about,” Tony DeRose stated at the unveiling of Pixar in a Box Wednesday. “Pixar in a Box aims to address this disconnect by showing how Pixar filmmakers use these concepts for creative benefit in their everyday work.

Students can access Pixar in a Box and learn:

  • How combinatorics are used to create crowds, like the swarm of robots in WALLŸE.
  • How parabolas are used to model environments, like the forest in Brave.
  • How weighted averages are used to create characters, like Buzz Lightyear and Woody.
  • How linear and cubic interpolation are used to animate characters.
  • How trigonometry is used to create the worlds in which Pixar stories take place.
  • How simultaneous equations are used to paint all of Pixar’s images.

These lessons are the first phase of the project,” said Cruise. “While the first year focuses on math, future Pixar in a Box lessons will explore science, computer science, arts, and humanities.”  All Pixar in a Box resources are available free of charge at PixarInABox.org. The site will be updated as additional lessons become available.

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