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Comic Relief?

Schools embrace graphic novels as learning tool

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“People thought we were crazy,” Argentar said.

The Holocaust-related book won a special Pulitzer Prize award in 1992, the first graphic novel to do so.

At the time, many Stevenson students already had read Elie Wiesel’s Holocaust book “Night,” so Argentar was looking for an alternative that would appeal to students more attuned to the visual. Some colleagues didn’t think the comic-book format of “Maus” was rigorous enough, Argentar said, but students liked it.

A website he and his colleague created to help educators teach “Maus” still generates calls and emails from around the country, Argentar said.

“You’re always going to have the traditionalists say comic books aren’t real literature, and I guess to a certain extent they have a point,” he said. “But my point is that it is different literature. It is visual literature, and I’d be failing my kids if I didn’t train them for all the visual reading they do today.”

Professor Gavigan said graphic novels help students develop language skills, reinforce vocabulary and develop critical thinking skills, among other benefits.

The comic book-style format goes back decades or even centuries, depending on scholars’ interpretations. In the 1970s, the term graphic novel emerged when Will Eisner’s “A Contract with God” stories were published, Gavigan said.

“Then ‘Maus’ won the Pulitzer, and I think that changed everything,” she said. “I think that gave a lot of credibility to the format.”

More recently, graphic novels moved further into the mainstream when most states began adopting the new common core learning standards that guide schools on what students should learn.

Illinois adopted the rigorous standards in 2010, and the state’s public school students are scheduled to be tested on them beginning in 2014-15.

“Graphic novels are specifically addressed in the common core standards,” said Michelle Ryan, president of the Illinois Association of Teachers of English.

The standards refer to “texts” as the medium through which literature and reading skills are taught, Ryan said, and can include picture books used in kindergarten or the graphic novels available in high school.

“Graphic novels ... are specifically identified in the expected reading materials for students,” she said in an email.

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