Bring on the Comic Books!
Photo by Miika Laaksonen on Unsplash.
Some people βpoo-pooβ comic books for their children. I donβtβchosen appropriately by the parents, I think they are a wonderful motivational andβdare I say it?βeducational tool.
This epiphany came the first time I purchased a comic book for my boys to read. It was Sonic the Hedgehog. My two oldest, who usually did nothing but bicker with each other, sat quietly in a chair and read the whole thing. Together. And again. And did I say quietly?
As they got older, they discovered Jasonβs and my Calvin and Hobbes books. We only had a few at the time, but they devoured themβto the point that I need to have one of them rebound. Despite the fact that most of the humour is over the head of an actual six-year-old, I loved that they loved them. I mean, Cβmon! Calvin sometimes uses words that I have to look up! Eventually, we got the entire collection (which we doled out on special occasions and birthdays for at least a year).
The obsession with Garfield is one that Jason and I have been less fond ofβwe havenβt purchased any, but they borrow them from the library. Jason and I both find Garfield to be kind of a negative jerk. Oh, well. None of the characters wear spandex, or have unrealistically-proportioned body parts, or is shown mostly naked, orβoh, wait. Yes they do. But in a funny way, not the give-you-nightmares-or-make-you-horny way. Could be worse.
Sonic comics have continued to be motivational to my children. After reading 10 books aloud to me (or 5 chapter books with book reports as they get older), they get a Sonic comic. Itβs a reward that is easy on the pocket book, and we thus reward reading withβ¦ Surprise! More reading!! What surprises me is that they havenβt just figured out that they can buy the comics themselves with their βspendβ money... but Iβm glad!
The latest comic obsession has had a result that I didnβt expect.
My kids are devouring the Bone books by Jeff Smith as quickly as we can buy them or borrow them from the library. So far, we own the first four.
Apparently, one of the characters likes quiche. So thereβs vocabulary and culinary expansion right there.
After I corrected their pronunciation, and explained what it is, they said, βThat sounds good!β
I said, βIt is! Iβve made it, but itβs been a while. Iβll make it again soon.β
βOkay!β
Yay! for getting them to want to try new things! :-)
Apparently also, one of the characters is obsessed with the book Moby Dick.
So, after a search through our Penguin Classics came up null, and then finding it among the books on our Aurora eReader, guess what Skipper started reading last night? Heβs already on chapter six, or something.
βThe way they write the English takes a little getting used to,β was his comment to me this afternoon.
After all my years trying to get my children interested in reading the classicsβand trust me, I own and have available nearly every age-appropriate classic I can find, and have tried repeatedly to get them interested in them via reading aloud to themβwho knew that a comic book would be the trigger that got them started on it?
So, yep, I like comic books. No one can tell me they arenβt educational!!