From Voice ~ Topics: illustration, K-12
Educating with Comics
Actually, educators have been looking at comic books for a long time.
By the 1940s, teachers in thousands of classrooms were trying to use comic books as a springboard to book-reading. When “The Journal of Educational Sociology” devoted an entire issue to "The Comics as an Educational Medium" 61 years ago, they included a bibliography that listed dozens of articles about comics that had been published in education journals. The 1949 textbook Teaching Children to Read by Adams, Gray and Reese faintly endorsed comic books (those "archenemies of good literary taste") in ways that would be repeated in many reading instruction textbooks for years to come.
Adams, Gray and Reese urged teachers to reconcile themselves to the huge popularity of comic books. They wrote that "The problem of comic books is not that many children regularly read them; it is that a large and growing number read them to the exclusion of better types of recreational reading." They warned teachers that sternly forbidding kids from bringing comics to school just leads them to hide their comics. (A 1955 textbook would call this "driving comic book reading underground.")
The Teaching Children to Read textbook went further to propose that teachers could use comic books in their classrooms to "aid children in learning to discriminate among the comics as among other forms of reading." (Other authors would add, "The better ones, such as True Comics and Classic Comics, can be safely allowed a place in the classroom library.") Like the Comic Book Initiative of today, reading instruction textbooks emphasized that assigning comic books can help "children who need remedial reading" gain a feeling of success in reading.
Adams, Gray and Reese assured their readers that "the exclusive interest many children take in comic books is but a passing phase which will eventually be outgrown." With patience, the comic book reader can move to a "higher literary level," from "Terry and the Pirates" to Treasure Island. (Other textbooks added the authors Rudyard Kipling, Jules Verne, H. Rider Haggard, and H.G. Wells as superior alternatives to comic books.) Many important differences separate then from now. These include the collapse of the comic book industry in the mid-1950s; the invention of newer entertainment media; and the acceptance of comics, in the form of the "graphic novel," as a legitimate medium which readers do not need to "outgrow." Also, the idea that teachers can help children see that Classics Illustrated and True Comics outrank comic books that feature "ridiculous antics" or violate "common-sense" now seems silly. Today's educators speak less of using kids' addictions to comic books as a springboard to reading trade books than of using comic books to entice reluctant readers toward the world of print.
Unlike the old reading instruction textbooks, Maryland defends the use of comics in classrooms as part of a "war on illiteracy," a "battle" whose progress ultimately will be measured in reading scores on standardized tests. This puts a grim spin on the potentially fun and enriching activity of reading comic books.
The authors of dozens of reading instruction textbooks published since the 1940s focused cursorily on comic books' words (for example, by quoting researchers who had analyzed comic book vocabularies for reading level, grammatical correctness, and prevalence of slang) but barely acknowledged the "atrocious" pictures. They treated comic book illustrations more as a dangerous lure than as a creative component of an evolving art form. These reading specialists defended the privileged status of unadorned text, and regarded a move from any comic book to any trade book as a step up. They promoted the value of knowing how to read on the shaky grounds that novels still offer the best medium for the recreational consumption of adventure stories. The "Comic Book Initiative," in an improvement over these older approaches, calls attention to comics' interplay of words and pictures as an important strength of this "visual medium."
One theory has it that educators lost interest in comic books after the mid-1950s because of successful efforts to discredit the medium led by psychiatrist Fredric Wertham and others. Actually, of the dozen reading instruction textbooks I have found that referred to Wertham by name or by clear implication, only one of their authors, Florence Damon Cleary, found Wertham's attack on comic books disquietingly convincing. The rest of them emphasized that Wertham's conclusions connecting comic books and juvenile delinquency were "controversial" or "unproven." Remarkably, even those authors who responded to Wertham's arguments connecting comic books with juvenile delinquency or racism ignored the fact that Wertham's book about comics also included an entire chapter about the negative effects of prior immersion in comic books on learning how to read. They paid no attention to Wertham's specific attacks on educational applications of comic books.
Educators and students lost interest in comic books as television and later media partially replaced them, but comic books did continue their sporadic presence in classrooms. In recent decades, several waves of artistically ambitious works have helped to establish comics as a serious medium and attracted the sustained, respectful attention of a growing community of "comics scholars" at the college and university levels.
Maryland's "Comic Book Initiative" does not propose to replace books with comic books, nor does it require any teacher to use them. It aims to use the attractiveness of carefully-selected comics to interest students who do not like to read (especially boys); to help students find pleasure in reading; and to give them a foundation to move up to reading novels and other "regular" materials. It would be hard to find anything bold, unprecedented or unreasonable in these goals.
-
Theres a lot to be said for creative teaching and new ways of learning. We're all different, each with strengths and interests of our own.
-enter flashback here-
Dead Poets Society is one of my all time favorites. A strict boarding school in its methodology in teaching and in comes a free thinker with an approach to teaching that sparks passion in his students. For one class these boys kicked a soccer ball while yelling out famous literary quotes. He was innovative in his aproach. The overall message in the movie reeks of self discovery. Individuality was first introduced when they ripped out Mr Prichards introduction of his opinion of the poetry that was in the book that was written as an expression up for interpretation. Interpretation achived by Robin Williams' approach that was frowned upon. Meanwhile kids we're finding so much out about reading and the contents of these books they wrote passionatly, exihbited a sense of freedom and it was a good flick.
-back in the time machine-
I myself didn't do to well in grade school. I was more interested in things that were grabbing my attention when my mind became its own. Why teach a foundation for purpose when what your really churning out is the ones who get you not vice versa. Grab as many minds as you can. Why not give em a comic book. There's a cultural aspect to this as well as a possible literacy increase. I know I'm going a little off direction here, truth is i've been developing my reading skills lately and the culture thing is too deep for the hour.
So I wrote poetry and daydreamed through high school. At 26 the last four years I spet getting into literature of all kinds cause of my intrest in other poets, then came various things, they're all really complex. After seeing American splendor the other day i might start educating myself with pictures and words. I hope I'm reading the right way. -
In Japan, Manga comics have been used in the classroom to expose students to the complexities of algebra and the yarns of Shakespeare. As an adolescent, I read comics about super heroes and ghouls, and even recall some that told Biblical tales. We must overcome the notion that these literary forms are "low" compared with "traditional" texts.
The Sistine Chapel, the Lascaux Caves, or William Clark's maps (of Lewis & Clark) could be placed in the category of communicative "visual mediums." Comic books belong there too. -
Slightly off topic (but only slightly so): Michael Dooley and Steve Heller’s new book, The Education of a Comics Artist, is out from Allworth press. Info at http://www.allworth.com/Pages/PR_ILL371.htm
-
When most people think of comic books, they think of those with little or no literary value. So-called comics have come a long way, thanks mainly to the Japanese. Today, when people talk of using comics in schools, they probably refer to graphic novels which, as someone has stated, are on a totally different level than comics.
-
I purchased a graphic novel, and I dig it.
If grade school systems were more on top of their game more XL57's could be produced.
I don't know, I probably feel through the cracks somewhere, I don't doubt it.
There's more possibilities in variety. Backing up though there has to be a starting point. The standard isn't on my mind as much as a selection. A little regulated freedom for the children.
Graphic novels appear to be smart, I only have the one. Those words and pictures are something else. I still say there's potential with old fashion comics. Adventure is adventure no matter what reading level your at. Comedy. Everyday life.
Throw some sprinkles on it.
Imagination keeps popping up in my head, the word, sometimes the real deal. I hesitate to say. I might be an ideator, or carrying on creating them like ideator anonymous isn't just a place to go but in some way where I have been and uncontrollably wander.
I apologize for adding that. -
As a former educator who, in the mid-90s, created a reader-response literature workshop based largely on Stephen Krashen's and Nancy Atwell's work, I am shocked that Maryland authorities presented this as a new idea. It sounds to me as if Maryland's authorities were left behind if they are only introducing this "initiative" now.
-
Your readers might be interested to know that AK Comics of Egypt's UK division is looking at supplementing the 'Middle East Heroes' series with their own series called 'Media Heroes' which will portray the lives of celebrity campaigners and activists such as George Clooney, Bob Geldof, Bono, Sting, Sharon Stone and so on.
I really enjoy your blog and would like to invite you to take a closer look at AK Comics - Aya and the other Middle East Heroes - now distributed in the US and UK by Diamond. If you let me have your address, I would be pleased to send you a copy for review.
www.akcomics.com -
We have been developing comic books/graphic novels for the Department of Homeland Security for some time now. It is interesting how well received they are by the volunteer forces however when I mention to people what I am working on the first reaction is, "Huh! Has it come to that?" We find the comic medium is an effective way to communicate information combining visuals with text in a self-paced delivery. However old conceptions can get in the way, especially among the female audience. Not true however when the same content is delivered electronically.


Comments