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Comic Relief?

Schools embrace graphic novels as learning tool

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That might surprise some parents who may not be familiar with graphic novels in the classroom or who may be wary of this modern twist on literature.

Jennifer Williams’ son Larry Lesniak is in Kallenborn’s sophomore honors course at Shepard. She admitted to being “a little opposed” when Larry and his younger brother began reading graphic novels.

“This is not a book,” Williams recalled saying when the boys picked out graphic novels at the library.

She remembers reading classics by authors Edgar Allan Poe and John Steinbeck when she was a high school honors student. She also recalls not liking some of the material she had to read.

So if a graphic novel can hold her sons’ interest, “I’m all for it,” Williams said.

Whether districts will increase their use of graphic novels is unclear and likely will depend on a buy-in from teachers and curriculum officials, experts said.

“I don’t teach a lot of graphic novels only because there are certain hoops to jump through,” said Brian Curtin, an English teacher at Schaumburg High School and the 2013 Illinois Teacher of the Year.

In most districts, an approval process determines which textbooks and other books are used. In his district, very few graphic novels get a green light, he said.

Curtin said he loved the graphic novels he read in his master’s classes and believes they can help build comprehension and engage unmotivated readers. But “I think you’d be on a slippery slope to look at graphic novels as a substitute for the real thing,” he said.

In Oak Lawn-based Community High School District 218, which includes Shepard High, English department curriculum director Mike Jacobson said he “grew up on comic books.”

He has embraced graphic novels as a teaching tool, he said, giving teachers leeway to use them.

English teacher Kallenborn has used graphic novels ranging from a version of Shakespeare’s “Hamlet” to “Maus” and “Ultimate Spider-Man.”

He joined Jacobson and another teacher last month in a presentation at a National Council of Teachers of English conference. Their discussion included Kallenborn’s experiment with senior Advanced Placement and honors students who were studying the epic Old English poem “Beowulf.”

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