Bill Zimmerman Pulitzer Prize Nominee Encourages Children To Read Write and Express Feelings With Comics
July 6th, 2008 by Pat Wyman
Bill Zimerman, twice nominated for a Pulizter Prize, encourages reading, writing and and a unique way for your child to express their feelings through his extraordinary site where your child can create comics.
Children love comics and it stimulates their interest in reading and writing. What’s more, child pschologists says that your child can express feelings when they create their own comics. When you look at their comics you may be enlightened about how they feel at that particular moment.
Interview With Bill Zimmerman - Click Here -Should open in Windows Media Player or whichever player you have on your computer.
Bill wrote a wonderful article for Raising Smarter Children and you can read it in the comment section below.
We encourage you to comment on Bill’s vision, try out his http://www.MakeBeliefsComix.com site and tell us how much your child loved making the comics online.
Thank you Bill for your visionary actions, humility and the honor to interview you!
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Remember, Every Child Is Smart!
Warmly, Pat Wyman and Erin Mavredakis, M.D.
This entry was posted on Sunday, July 6th, 2008 at 3:42 pm and is filed under Smart With Heart. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
July 6th, 2008 at 3:50 pm
Bill Zimmerman has given his permission to post this article on http://www.Raising marterChildren.com
Thank you Bill for your mindful interview and showing us all how we can encourage our kids to become the best they can be.
Title:
Encouraging Children to Write, Read, and Express Feelings by Creating Comics
By Bill Zimmerman
Want your children to develop their imaginations, as well as a fondness for reading and writing and telling stories? Then encourage them to create their own comic strips.
My own love of comics and understanding of their value as a learning tool began when I was a child.
Back then, the very best day of the week was Sunday mornings when my dad left home early to bring back an armload of newspapers, all with their glorious color comics sections.
The funnies were my paradise – I’d spend the morning going over each strip, following the adventures of my favorite characters, even flying in the sky with them.
I’d look at the dazzling illustrations, be drawn into their colorful worlds and be challenged to decipher the letters in the white balloons coming from the characters’ mouths or floating above their heads.
And with help from my father, I’d try my best to sound out the words in the talk balloons and make sense of the stories they told.
Comic strips provide perfect vehicle for learning and practicing language.
Each strip’s three or four panels provide a finite, accessible world in which funny, interesting looking characters live and go about their lives.
And children with limited reading skills are not as overwhelmed in dealing with the size of a comic strip as they may be with a book of many pages.
Comic strips also don’t require long sentences or paragraphs to tell a good story.
Only a few words are required for the characters to go about their lives and reveal their stories. And, anyone who sees a blank talk or thought balloon floating over the head of a character wants immediately to fill it in with words and thoughts; doing so is the beginning step to telling a story.
Comics are how children can begin learning how to read and think imaginatively.
The comic characters can became their friends and family, and they began to realize that reading can be fun and open up new worlds to them.
By giving students a choice of fun animal and human characters with different emotions – happy, sad, angry, worried – as well blank thought and talk balloons to fill in with their written words, and some story prompts to spark ideas, youngsters will be able to tap into their creativity to tell stories and create their own graphic stories.
The best educators understand that playing is learning. Parents and teachers can use the process of creating comic strips to encourage youngsters to practice language, reading, writing, and communication skills.
For those who teach young and old how to read and write or to learn English as a second language, comics can be an invaluable tool in achieving these objectives.
A parent or teacher, for example, could put together a comic strip with characters and blank thought or talk balloons, print it out, and ask children to fill in the balloons with words and narration.
Better yet, a student can choose his or her own characters and develop stories alone or with a partner. Educational therapists who work with deaf, learning disabled, and autistic youngsters, as well as trauma victims, also use comic strips to help their clients understand concepts and to communicate.
Comic strips are a great way for children to practice new vocabulary words and to practice dialogue in different situations.
A child, for example, who may be having trouble with another child at school can use the comic to come up with words and actions to help him deal with this problem.
In effect, the comic characters can serve as surrogates for children to work out different problems. And, by creating comic strips together, parents and children learn how to work and communicate more effectively with each other to create something new and imaginative.
A child reading a novel or short story, could also storyboard the stories in comic strip form, or keep developing the story after the book ends. A comic created can also be the beginning of a much longer written story, too.
Here are some ideas for comic strips: Make believe that your animal characters can talk to each other or read each other’s thoughts.
They can joke and have great adventures together. Or, imagine they could tell a beautiful love story. How would it go? How about a comic strip retelling a favorite fairy tale?
What about a comic strip in which a character writes a poem or sings a song to another? Or make believe a character could say the words to heal all people.
What are the words your character would use? How about a comic strip in which characters throw the most fun party in the world? Where would it be? Whom would you invite? Or, maybe your party turns into a disaster. What happens?
Or, what if your characters could be bold and brave for a day?
Just what great deeds would they do?
Make believe your character could pass on a message to another, and that character passes the message on to another, and so on. How would the original message keep changing?
After creating their own comics, children can print out and color them, and if working online, email them to a friend or relative.
They can also use the comic strip to create personalized greeting card stories for family and friends and to celebrate special times in their lives.
Wouldn’t you like to receive one on your own birthday or when you’re in need of cheering up? In creating their own comic strips, children can practice their language skills, express their feelings and imaginations, and have fun as well.
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A journalist and prize-winning newspaper editor, Bill Zimmerman is the creator of MakeBeliefsComix.com (http://www.makebeliefscomix.com), a free educational web site where children and adults can create their own comic strips online. MakeBeliefsComix.com was selected by Google as among the world’s most innovative literacy and reading-related projects.
His interactive, syndicated current events “Student Briefing Page” for Newsday was nominated twice for a Pulitzer Prize. At Newsday, Bill also created a series of comic books to teach history and current events to young readers.
Bill also has written 18 books which are aimed at helping people find their writers’ voices. They are featured on his other web site: http://www.billztreasurechest.com, which offers prompts to encourage writing.
Here are a few more comic-strip themes:
You have three wishes which can come true. What are they? Or, make believe you planted your dreams. What would you hope to grow?
Make believe that with the snap of your fingers you could change yourself. How or what would you become?
Make believe someone gave you a golden treasure box. What would you place in it?
Imagine that you could talk with a character from a favorite book. Who would that be? What would you both talk about?
What if you were given a characteristic of some animal you loved? Which animal would you choose and which animal trait would you like to have?
Or, make believe that your meal consisted only of flowers. What would you have for dinner this summer?
Make believe that you could create a new season so very different from those we know. What would your season be like, and what would you call it?