Articles:
- Jacobs, Dale. "More Than Words: Comics as a Means of Teaching Multiple Literacies." English Journal. 96.3 (2007): 19-25.
This is a fantastic article, and probably the closest I've found to what I would actually like to write about in my dissertation. Jacob's main premise is twofold:
1) Reading comics involves a complex, multimodal literacy; and
2) by using comics in our classrooms we can help students develop as critical and engaged readers of multimodal texts (19).
Jacobs argues that our past focus on comics and graphic novels as tools for motivating reluctant readers or for stimulating students into reading more "significant" literary texts, "places severe limitations on the possibilites of our uses of the medium as literacy educators" (20).
Jacobs considers the "complex environment" whereby we negotiate meaning inside of comic texts. Through analysis of panels, gutters, word balloons, sound effects, and conceptual spaces, Jacobs argues that comics provide "multiple realms for meaning making" (21). He reference the work of the New London Group and concludes that "embracing the idea of multimodal literacy in relation to comics" allows us to "help students engage critically with ways of making meaning that exist all around them"--for example, the Internet, multimedia, newspapers, TV, film, etc.
Jacobs continues his discussion through a close reading of a passage from Polly and the Pirates. In this close reading he examines how comics address the six design elements of multimodal learning: linguistic, audio, visual, gestural, and spacial modes of interpretation.
While the close reading provides a profound way for teachers to begin understanding how comics and graphic novels can work in the classroom to build critical literacy, Jacobs does not show how his theories work with real classrooms, teachers, and students.
- Frey, Nancy and Douglas Fisher. "Using Graphic Novels, Anime, and the Internet in an Urban High School." English Journal. Urbana: Jan. 2004. Vol. 93, Iss.3, p. 19-25
- Schwartz, Gretchen E. "Graphic Novels for Multiple Literacies." Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy. Newark: Nov 2002. Vol. 46, Iss. 3. pp. 262-265.
- Versaci, Rocco. "How Comic Books Can Change the Way Our Students See Literature: One Teacher's Perspective." English Journal. Urbana: Nov. 2001. 61-67.
Versaci believes that comic books "force students...to reconcile these two means of expression" (64). Some of the essential questions he poses to his students include: "How does the drawing style interact with the story?" "Why these particular pictures?" "How would a different style change the story?" A few paragraphs are dedicated to a discussion of how his students "read" and analyzed a passage from Debbie Drecshler's Daddy's Girl. Students examined the use of light and shadow and made connections to the way the girl felt emotionally in this passage.
- Weiner, Stephen. "Show, Don't Tell: Graphic Novels in the Classroom." English Journal. Urbana: Nov. 2004. 114-117.
- Weiner, Stephen. 101 Best Graphic Novels. 1996.
Weiner offers a brief history on the rise of the graphic novel and argues, as many texts do, that graphic novels can serve as "transitions" into more intensive works." Much of the article (and the book) is focused around introducing graphic texts that teachers might consider for use in the classroom. In this way it serves more as an annotated bibliography rather than a critical consideration of how comics work in the classroom.
- Gorman, Michele. Going Graphic: Novels to Promote Literacy With Preteens and Teens. Linworth Publishers. 2004
Probably the most interesting part of Gorman's text is the Forward written by Jeff Smith in 2003. Smith writes:
"When you read a comic--when you experience the words and the pictures simultaneously--the drawings take on a dimension of time and begin to perform. The implied movement of the subject matter from one panel to the next, and indeed the panels themselves become instantaneous signals on how to proceed. The reader then--and this is the cool part--experiences in real time anything that happens inside the comic...the reader is witnessing a private film in his imagination...They are a secret that only you can activate" (ix).
The rest of the text, similar to Weiner and Gravett's texts, concerns itself with providing a brief history of the graphic novel. An exhaustive annotated bibliography makes up the bulk of the text. Rather than focusing on teachers, Gorman addresses librarians. Her goal is to build literacy through graphic novels by ensuring that library's begin to offer access these texts.
1 comment:
hey, sounds like an important project. hope it's all going well.
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