From Deseret News archives:
Comics may help readers
Teachers take a 2nd look at strips as step to literacy
In Maryland, the State Education Department is expanding a new comics-based literacy curriculum, after a small pilot program yielded promising results. In New York City, a group of educators applied to open a new small high school that would be based around a comics theme and named after the creators of Superman; their application was rejected but they plan to try again next year. And the Comic Book Project, a program run out of Teachers College at Columbia University that has children create their own comic strips as an "alternative pathway to literacy," is catching on. Six years after it started in one Queens elementary school, it has expanded to 860 schools across the country.
"It's very much a teacher-led kind of movement in that teachers are looking for ways to engage their children, and they're finding some of that in comic books," said Michael Bitz, who founded the Comic Book Project as a graduate student and is its director. "For kids who may be struggling and for kids who may be new to the English language, that visual sequence is a very powerful tool."
Still, skeptics fret that in the wrong hands, comics could become simply a vehicle for watering down lessons.
"If you're going to use comics in the classroom at all, which I have serious doubts about, it should be only as a motivational tool," said Diane Ravitch, an education professor at New York University. "What teachers have to recognize is that this is only a first step."
Lisa Von Drasek, the children's librarian at the Bank Street College of Education, said that "not a semester goes by that not a parent or a teacher expresses a concern about a comic-format book that their child has taken out or is using for their reading time." Usually, she said, the critics come around. "What we say is, 'Whatever works."'
Recent comments
I think comics are a good way to help kids enjoy reading.
no name | Dec. 27, 2007 at 7:20 p.m.
- FDIC: bank access lacking for poor 9:23 a.m.
- Publishers strengthen 'pay walls' 9:22 a.m.
- General Growth files reorganization 9:20 a.m.
- Panel OKs key regulatory measure 9:19 a.m.
- Bailout program will end soon 9:18 a.m.
- 3 men sought in Ogden robbery 8:52 a.m.
- Tiger Woods' statement 8:52 a.m.
- Woods says he lets family down 8:42 a.m.
- Offer Taliban chance to end fight 8:34 a.m.
- Party crashers had no invitation 8:33 a.m.
- 2 citations issued at Y.-U. game
- Witness: Mitchell wanted attention
- BYU says Hall incident resolved
- Max Hall: a fixture in rivalry lore
- Why is Y. ignoring spew of hatred?
- Find joy in life, Bishop Burton says
- Unbeaten BYU takes trip to Logan
- 'Grandfamilies' a growing trend
- MWC '09 season in review
- McCoy to resign from Utah Senate
- Hall mouths off about hate of Utah
907 - Cougars beat Utes in overtime
483 - Hall reprimanded by MWC
404 - Max Hall issues apology
388 - Hall's pain reflects self-betrayal
349 - Utes won't respond to Hall
276 - BYU says Hall incident resolved
238 - 2 citations issued at Y.-U. game
164 - BYU is champion of the state
143 - Religion in politics is tiresome
134
My husband was teaching his 6th-grade class in Salt Lake last year when...
Late perhaps to catch it on newstands, but SI had an article on Peyton...
Thank you Mrs. Bailey, Mrs. White, and Mrs. Greenwood for your posts!
To "Smity | 7:45 a.m. " how well did the risk sharing work out for the...
you haven't learned yet the politics that lies in sports...at every...
I am just amazed at how tender hearted the Utes are. Year after year I hear...
Benson, Would you impose thought control rules on the BYU players. Or just...
What's wrong with oil? It powers cars, heats homes, creates jobs (lots of...
'I, too, have lived other places and have noticed a difference between Utah...
Just as I though, most on the critical end of the President's plan. So, to...
for all the time you spent complaining on here you could have turned in...


