Stand Alone Presentation

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In order to effectively teach reading and writing, a teacher must have student engagement. Too many students are not engaged during literacy instruction and therefore are only skimming the surface, and not experimenting with various reading strategies. I would like to change the way teachers look at literacy instruction, especially for boys. Using this presentation, I want to inform teachers and parents that comic books and graphic novels are not just dumbed-down, disposable literature. Graphic novels possess a great deal of academic integrity and often engage the imagination more using panel to panel inferencing.

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Does this ever happen to you

Ok, class. Today we are going to discuss...

Um......excuse me.

Can you please pay attention?

Am I boring you?

What is THAT you are reading exactly?

Oh, a graphic novel.

Am I not interesting enough?

Ever wonder how you can engage your students through reading?

Especially your boys?

Dress like this:

Just kidding!

There is a way to engage ALL of your students.

Use Graphic Novels!

Interested?

???

I thought so.

You're probably wondering...

Why graphic novels?

??

Aren't graphic novels and comics the same thing?

Graphic novels are a format that uses sequential art to tell a story.

Will Eisner popularized the term after he published:

Comics are...

a magazine devoted to comic strips.

Ok, but why use them?

"Reading light materials, such as comic books, is the way many students develop a taste for reading."

(Krashen, 2004)

Kids LOVE them!

They motivate boys to read.

Graphic novels contain 20% MORE rare vocabulary than a typical chapter book.

(Krashen, 1993)

They help reluctant readers, well....start reading!

Graphic novels contain 40% MORE vocabulary than a typical conversation between a child and an adult.

(Krashen, 1993)

But are graphic novels real books?

Do they actually count as reading?

YES!!!

All reading is good reading.

But, aren't graphic novels only about superheroes?

For example...

Graphic novels have a variety of themes.

have characters traveling to different worlds.

&

Struggling to fit in?

Read!

An immigrant's

universal search

for belonging.

"...comics are just as sophisticated as other forms of literature, and children benefit from reading them at least as much as they do from reading other types of books..."

(Science Daily,2009)

Ok, I get it!

You LOVE graphic novels.

But, what

does the

research say?

A 1992 study of more than 200,000 students...

...from 32 countries...

...revealed that

...revealed that

Finland

has a 99% literacy rate!

They also have the highest proportion of comic book reading students.

nearly 60%!

Wow!

Need more?

The U.S. Military Academy at West Point

requires that ALL cadets read:

...before they graduate.(Foroohar, 2005)

Maybe I should rethink my literacy instruction.

I'm not saying you should replace EVERYTHING with graphic novels.

Just consider it another tool.

When teaching...

...you take advantage of the tools available.

Even if it means using:

Graphic Novel!(an awesome)

Works Cited:Brunnel, V., & Linnakyla, P. (1994). Swedish speakers' literacy in the Finnish society.

Journal of Reading, 37(5), pp. 368-375.

Foroohar, R. (2005, August 25) Comic Relief. Newsweek, 146(8), 50-54. Retrieved from http://web.ebscohost.com

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (2009, November 5). For Improving Early Literacy, Reading Comics Is No Child's Play. Science Daily. Retrieved from http://www.sciencedaily.com

Krashen, Stephen D. 2004. The Power of Reading: Insights from the Research. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.

Krashen, Stephen D. 1993. The Power of Reading. Englewood: Libraries Unlimited, Inc.

McCloud, S. (2006). Making Comics: Storytelling Secrets of Comics, Manga and Graphic Novels. New York: Harper.

Images Cited:

Eisner, Will. A Contract with God And Other Tenement Stories. W.W. Norton & Company, 2006.

Kibuishi, Kazu. The Stonekeeper (Amulet, Book 1). GRAPHIX, 2008.

Tennapel, Doug. Ghostopolis. GRAPHIX, 2010.

Telgemeier, Raina. Smile. GRAPHIX, 2010.

Tan, Shaun. The Arrival. Arthur A. Levine Books, 2007.

Moore, Alan. The Watchmen. DC Comics, 1995.

All other images are care of Marvel Comics, DC Comics, and Harvey Comics Creative Commons Licensing.

Corlett, M.L., Fine, R.E., & Lichenstein, R. (2002). The Prints of Roy Lichtenstein: A Catalogue Raisonne 1948-1997. Hudson Hills Press.