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Comic Relief?

Schools embrace graphic novels as learning tool

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Half the students spent nearly six hours on average reading the full traditional text. The other half, who read a “Beowulf” graphic novel, spent about two hours.

Both groups took the same 25-question multiple-choice test. Students who read the traditional text scored 81 percent on average compared with 75 percent for those who read the graphic novel.

The teachers’ presentation raised the question: Is the score difference worth the additional time spent by kids who read the traditional poem or “would that time be better spent doing other things?”

Though the audience didn’t respond, Kallenborn believes the score difference of 6 percentage points isn’t worth the extra reading time.

James Bucky Carter, an assistant professor at the University of Texas at El Paso, wrote a book that guides teachers in pairing graphic novels with traditional texts.

“I think we live in an age where we should not study text in isolation,” he said. “Every text should be put in relation to something else,” such as graphic novels as supplements to traditional literature.

Carter works to dispel notions that such material is just for kids or struggling readers.

“Comics,” he said, “are for everybody.”

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GRAPHIC NOVELS FOR EVERY SUBJECT

Comic book-style books known as graphic novels come in all categories — from biographies to adaptations of classics. The subject areas also include math, science, social studies and sports.

Here are some examples compiled by Karen Gavigan, an assistant professor at the University of South Carolina, and Mindy Tomasevich, a middle school librarian in North Carolina.

The two co-wrote a book published in 2011 called “Connecting Comics to Curriculum: Strategies for Grades 6-12.”

Classics:

“Manga Shakespeare: Romeo and Juliet” by William Shakespeare

“Nevermore: A Graphic Adaptation of Edgar Allan Poe’s Short Stories” by Edgar Allan Poe

“Beowulf” by Gareth Hinds

Biography:

“Houdini: The Handcuff King” by Jason Lutes

Math:

“The Cartoon Guide to Statistics” by Larry Gonick and Woollcott Smith

Fine Arts:

“The Photographer: Into War-torn Afghanistan with Doctors Without Borders” by Emmanuel Guibert

Political Science:

“The United States Constitution: A Graphic Adaptation” by Jonathan Hennessey

Science:

“The Stuff of Life: A Graphic Guide to Genetics and DNA” by Mark Schultz

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