TESOL 2010: Using Graphic Novels (handouts)

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Pictures (and Words) Speak Pictures (and Words) Speak Louder: Louder: Graphic Novels Graphic Novels in the ELL Classroom in the ELL Classroom TESOL 2010 Tom Carrigan, Library/Media Specialist Adrienne Viscardi, Coordinator of ESL Bedford Central School District Bedford, New York

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Abbreviated version of PowerPoint presentation by Tom Carrigan and Adrienne Viscardi of Bedford Central School District, NY.

Transcript of TESOL 2010: Using Graphic Novels (handouts)

Page 1: TESOL 2010: Using Graphic Novels (handouts)

Pictures (and Words) Speak Pictures (and Words) Speak Louder: Louder: Graphic NovelsGraphic Novelsin the ELL Classroomin the ELL Classroom

TESOL 2010

Tom Carrigan, Library/Media Specialist

Adrienne Viscardi, Coordinator of ESL

Bedford Central School District

Bedford, New York

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Collaborative Process

� ESL Coordinator and Library/Media Specialist

� Summer reading and research

� Conferences and workshops

� Classroom instruction

� Faculty book study

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The graphic novel: Why and how

� Curricular value

� Classroom application

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Comics

� Adolescents who read comics

are more likely to become

serious readers

� Appeal to different cultures(Cary, 2004)

(Krashen, 2004)

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Key Factors in Literacy Development for Adolescents

� Identity

� Engagement

� Motivation

(Short and Fitzsimmons, 2007)

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Dilemma in Adolescent Literacy

� Prototypical human practices and conditions

� Varied, specialized text structures and

complex literary elements

� Inter-textual links to prior knowledge

(Lee and Spratley, 2010)

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Elements of effective adolescent literacy programs

� Diverse texts

� Motivation and self-directed learning

� Text-based collaborative learning

� Effective instructional principles

embedded in content

� Direct, explicit comprehension instruction

(Biancarosa and Snow, 2006)

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What we know about ELLs

(O(O’’Keefe et al., 2007)Keefe et al., 2007)

� ELLs have limited and varied

background knowledge

� Cognitive ability differs from

linguistic proficiency

� Advanced ELLs understand

85-90% of the words in text

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What is a graphic novel?

“A book-length sequential art narrative

featuring an anthology-style collection of

comic art, a collection of reprinted comic

book issues comprising a single story line,

or an original, stand-alone narrative”

(Carter, 2007)

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Art Spiegelman’s Maus

� Published in 1986

� Won Pulitzer Prize in

1992

� Guggenheim Fellowship

� Nominated for National

Book Critics Circle Award

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How do you read a graphic novel?

� Text features of a novel

� Storyline entirely illustrated in panels

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Instructional benefits

� Appeals to multiple learning styles

� Encourages struggling readers– Visual scaffold

– Sense of accomplishment

� Promotes wide reading

(Krashen, 2004)

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Instructional benefits

� Provides vehicle for discussion of other texts and issues

� Increases accessibility of unfamiliar settings and themes

� Promotes heterogeneous grouping

� Facilitates differentiated instruction

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Promising applications

� Pairing graphic novel and other genre

� Models for integration of art and writing

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American Born Chinese

� National Book Award Finalist

� The Monkey King, Jin Wang

and Chin-kee

� Universal themes that appeal

to ELLs and adolescents

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Themes

� Cultural conflict

� Enlightenment

� Identity

� Love and friendship

� Loyalty

� Reconciliation

� Transformation

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Literary language

� Allusion

� Characterization

� Climax

� Conflict

� Dialogue

� Flashback

� Foreshadowing

� Motif

� Narrator

� Parable

� Plot

� Prologue

� Resolution

� Setting

� Symbol

� Theme

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Building background

� “The All-American Slurp” by Lensey Namioka

� The Monkey King: A Superhero’s Tale of

China by Aaron Shepard

� YouTube clip and

newspaper article

on Gene Yang

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Caricatureand stereotypes

� Provocative images

� Sensitive discussions

� Background knowledge

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Caricatures and Stereotypes

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During- and after-reading activities

� Shared reading

� Small group reading

� Image grammar

(Noden, 1999)

� Literary elements

and devices

� Recursive

vocabulary

instruction (Allen,

2007)

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During- and after-reading activities

� Journal writing

� PowerWriting (Fisher, Rothenberg, and Frey, 2007)

� Writing between the panels (Carter, 2007)

� Teachbacks (Kirshbaum, 2009)

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The Fox Lane High School Library Website

http://www.bcsdny.org/flhs.cfm?subpage=3881

� Recommended titles and reviews

� Bibliography

� Links to instructional resources