This article reports on a study of how a class of fifteen- and sixteen-year-old gifted high school students “mixed” the media of poetry and comics to unveil and interrogate (what they called) their “nerd identities.” Both co-authors constructed and co-taught a class within a literature-based comics course that led students through various writing processes that focused on the visual and textual properties of poetry and comics. Researchers asked: How may gifted students use poetry and comics to write about identity? How can the mixing of poetry and comics contribute to media literacy education? Using their poetry comics to connect their “nerd identities” to superheroes, students reported seeing parallels between the trials and tribulations o...
How do definitions of literacy in the academy, and the pedagogies that reinforce such definitions, i...
The purpose of this article is to provide teachers and students useful methods for utilizing the pow...
So You Want to Be a Superhero? How Making Comics in an Afterschool Setting Can Develop Young People’...
This article explores how eighth-grade students in a reading support class responded to the novel Th...
Most educators are unfamiliar with ways to use comics and cartooning, thus classroom opportunities f...
This article summarizes a project that oriented one hundred and twenty-five gifted and talented midd...
Indexing identity through writing responses among ELL students in response to a graphic novel helps ...
Literacy scholars have argued that curricular remediation marginalizes the dynamic meaning-making pr...
This article examines how an after-school comics club made a space for children’s literacy practices...
The ways in which teachers adjust to challenges in the process of becoming professionals are complic...
As a comics artist and educator, I have a strong interest in the application of comics in education...
Comics and graphic novels are redefining what and how we read and see. And, increasingly, they are ...
Visual narratives (in the form of comics, cartoon strips and storyboards) offer a wealth of potentia...
Literacy scholars have argued that curricular remediation marginalizes the dynamic meaning-making pr...
The popularity and cultural influence of the superhero genre is undeniable. Despite the rise of the ...
How do definitions of literacy in the academy, and the pedagogies that reinforce such definitions, i...
The purpose of this article is to provide teachers and students useful methods for utilizing the pow...
So You Want to Be a Superhero? How Making Comics in an Afterschool Setting Can Develop Young People’...
This article explores how eighth-grade students in a reading support class responded to the novel Th...
Most educators are unfamiliar with ways to use comics and cartooning, thus classroom opportunities f...
This article summarizes a project that oriented one hundred and twenty-five gifted and talented midd...
Indexing identity through writing responses among ELL students in response to a graphic novel helps ...
Literacy scholars have argued that curricular remediation marginalizes the dynamic meaning-making pr...
This article examines how an after-school comics club made a space for children’s literacy practices...
The ways in which teachers adjust to challenges in the process of becoming professionals are complic...
As a comics artist and educator, I have a strong interest in the application of comics in education...
Comics and graphic novels are redefining what and how we read and see. And, increasingly, they are ...
Visual narratives (in the form of comics, cartoon strips and storyboards) offer a wealth of potentia...
Literacy scholars have argued that curricular remediation marginalizes the dynamic meaning-making pr...
The popularity and cultural influence of the superhero genre is undeniable. Despite the rise of the ...
How do definitions of literacy in the academy, and the pedagogies that reinforce such definitions, i...
The purpose of this article is to provide teachers and students useful methods for utilizing the pow...
So You Want to Be a Superhero? How Making Comics in an Afterschool Setting Can Develop Young People’...