WEBVTT 00:00:00.853 --> 00:00:02.331 When I was in the fifth grade, 00:00:02.331 --> 00:00:06.759 I bought an issue of DC Comics Presents #57 00:00:06.759 --> 00:00:09.556 off of a spinner rack at my local bookstore, 00:00:09.556 --> 00:00:12.737 and that comic book changed my life. 00:00:13.292 --> 00:00:16.515 The combination of words and pictures did something inside my head 00:00:16.515 --> 00:00:18.288 that had never been done before, 00:00:18.288 --> 00:00:22.041 and I immediately fell in love with the medium of comics. 00:00:22.041 --> 00:00:25.224 I became a voracious comic book reader, 00:00:25.224 --> 00:00:27.036 but I never brought them to school. 00:00:27.036 --> 00:00:32.293 Instinctively, I knew that comic books didn't belong in the classroom. 00:00:32.779 --> 00:00:35.128 My parents definitely were not fans, 00:00:35.128 --> 00:00:38.302 and I was certain that my teachers wouldn't be either. 00:00:38.302 --> 00:00:40.333 After all, they never used them to teach, 00:00:40.333 --> 00:00:44.654 comic books and graphic novels were never allowed during silent sustained reading, 00:00:44.654 --> 00:00:48.104 and they were never sold at our annual book fair. 00:00:48.104 --> 00:00:50.333 Even so, I kept reading comics, 00:00:50.333 --> 00:00:52.396 and I even started making them. 00:00:52.396 --> 00:00:55.056 Eventually I became a published cartoonist 00:00:55.056 --> 00:00:57.935 writing and drawing comic books for a living. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:58.844 --> 00:01:01.223 I also became a high school teacher. 00:01:01.223 --> 00:01:02.464 This is where I taught: 00:01:02.464 --> 00:01:05.428 Bishop O'Dowd High School in Oakland, California. 00:01:05.428 --> 00:01:07.484 I taught a little bit of math and a little bit of art, 00:01:07.484 --> 00:01:09.098 but mostly computer science, 00:01:09.098 --> 00:01:11.684 and I was there for 17 years. 00:01:11.684 --> 00:01:13.527 When I was brand new teacher, 00:01:13.527 --> 00:01:16.776 I tried bringing comic books into my classroom. 00:01:16.776 --> 00:01:19.657 I remember telling my students on the first day of every class 00:01:19.657 --> 00:01:21.813 that I was also a cartoonist. 00:01:21.813 --> 00:01:25.265 It wasn't so much that I was planning to teach them with comics, 00:01:25.265 --> 00:01:29.646 it was more that I was hoping comics would make them think that I was cool. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:29.646 --> 00:01:30.654 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:01:30.654 --> 00:01:32.000 I was wrong. 00:01:32.000 --> 00:01:34.090 This was the '90s, 00:01:34.090 --> 00:01:38.100 so comic books didn't have the cultural cache that they do today. 00:01:38.100 --> 00:01:42.118 My students didn't think I was cool. They thought I was kind of a dork. 00:01:42.118 --> 00:01:45.154 And even worse, when stuff got hard in my class, 00:01:45.154 --> 00:01:48.365 they would use comic books as a way of distracting me. 00:01:48.365 --> 00:01:51.043 They would raise their hands and me questions like, 00:01:51.043 --> 00:01:52.930 "Mr. Yang, who do you think would win in a fight, 00:01:52.930 --> 00:01:55.146 Superman or the Hulk?" NOTE Paragraph 00:01:55.146 --> 00:01:56.074 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:01:56.074 --> 00:02:01.027 I very quickly realized I had to keep my teaching and my cartooning separate. 00:02:01.027 --> 00:02:04.097 It seemed like my instincts in fifth grade were correct. 00:02:04.097 --> 00:02:07.557 Comic books didn't belong in the classroom. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:08.011 --> 00:02:09.980 But again, I was wrong. 00:02:09.980 --> 00:02:12.101 A few years into my teaching career, 00:02:12.101 --> 00:02:16.912 I learned firsthand the educational potential of comics. 00:02:16.912 --> 00:02:20.613 One semester, I was asked to sub for this Algebra 2 class. 00:02:20.613 --> 00:02:24.895 I was asked to long-term sub it, and I said yes, but there was a problem. 00:02:24.895 --> 00:02:28.559 At the time, I was also the school's educational technologist, 00:02:28.559 --> 00:02:30.572 which meant every couple of weeks 00:02:30.572 --> 00:02:33.876 I had to miss one or two periods of this Algebra 2 class 00:02:33.876 --> 00:02:36.813 because I was in another classroom helping another teacher 00:02:36.813 --> 00:02:38.903 with a computer-related activity. 00:02:38.903 --> 00:02:41.940 For these Algebra 2 students, that was terrible. 00:02:41.940 --> 00:02:44.580 I mean, having a long-term sub is bad enough, 00:02:44.580 --> 00:02:48.222 but having a sub for your sub? That's the worst. 00:02:48.222 --> 00:02:52.386 In an effort to provide some sort of consistency for my students, 00:02:52.386 --> 00:02:55.447 I began videotaping myself giving lectures. 00:02:55.447 --> 00:02:58.939 I'd then give these videos to my sub to play for my students. 00:02:58.939 --> 00:03:03.139 I tried to make these videos as engaging as possible. 00:03:03.139 --> 00:03:05.550 I even included these little special effects. 00:03:05.550 --> 00:03:08.317 For instance, after I finished a problem on the board, 00:03:08.317 --> 00:03:10.332 I'd clap my hands, 00:03:10.332 --> 00:03:12.618 and the board would magically erase. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:12.618 --> 00:03:14.046 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:03:14.046 --> 00:03:16.452 I thought it was pretty awesome. 00:03:16.452 --> 00:03:19.223 I was pretty certain that my students would love it, 00:03:19.223 --> 00:03:20.852 but I was wrong. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:20.852 --> 00:03:22.350 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:03:22.350 --> 00:03:24.809 These video lectures were a disaster. 00:03:24.809 --> 00:03:26.915 I had students coming up to me and saying things like, 00:03:26.915 --> 00:03:29.233 "Mr. Yang, we thought you were boring in person, 00:03:29.233 --> 00:03:32.613 but on video, you are just unbearable." NOTE Paragraph 00:03:32.613 --> 00:03:34.752 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:03:34.752 --> 00:03:40.132 So as a desperate second attempt, I began drawing these lectures as comics. 00:03:40.132 --> 00:03:42.409 I'd do these very quickly with very little planning. 00:03:42.409 --> 00:03:45.571 I'd just take a sharpie, draw one panel after the other, 00:03:45.571 --> 00:03:48.185 figuring out what I wanted to say as I went. 00:03:48.185 --> 00:03:52.154 These comics lectures would come out to anywhere between four and six pages long, 00:03:52.154 --> 00:03:55.033 I'd xerox these, give them to my sub 00:03:55.033 --> 00:03:56.945 to hand to my students, 00:03:56.945 --> 00:03:59.130 and much to my surprise, 00:03:59.130 --> 00:04:02.252 these comics lectures were a hit. 00:04:02.252 --> 00:04:04.856 My students would ask me to make these for them 00:04:04.856 --> 00:04:07.762 even when I could be there in person. 00:04:07.762 --> 00:04:12.569 It was like they liked cartoon me more than actual me. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:12.569 --> 00:04:14.980 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:04:14.980 --> 00:04:18.472 This surprised me, because my students are part of a generation 00:04:18.472 --> 00:04:20.282 that was raised on screens, 00:04:20.282 --> 00:04:23.515 so I thought for sure they would like learning from a screen 00:04:23.515 --> 00:04:26.015 better than learning from a page, 00:04:26.015 --> 00:04:27.991 but when I talked to my students 00:04:27.991 --> 00:04:31.125 about why they liked these comics lectures so much, 00:04:31.125 --> 00:04:35.595 I began to understand the educational potential of comics. 00:04:35.595 --> 00:04:38.042 First, unlike their math textbooks, 00:04:38.042 --> 00:04:40.733 these comics lectures taught visually. 00:04:40.733 --> 00:04:43.777 Our students grow up in a visual culture, 00:04:43.777 --> 00:04:46.186 so they're used to taking in information that way. 00:04:46.186 --> 00:04:49.145 But unlike other visual narratives, 00:04:49.145 --> 00:04:53.501 like film or television or animation or video, 00:04:53.501 --> 00:04:56.718 comics are what I call permanent. 00:04:56.718 --> 00:05:02.460 In a comic, past, present, and future all sit side by side on the same page. 00:05:02.460 --> 00:05:05.628 This means that the rate of information flow 00:05:05.628 --> 00:05:08.976 is firmly in the hands of the reader. 00:05:08.976 --> 00:05:13.758 When my students didn't understand something in my comics lecture, 00:05:13.758 --> 00:05:18.119 they could just reread that passage as quickly or as slowly as they needed. 00:05:18.119 --> 00:05:21.841 It was like I was giving them a remote control over the information. 00:05:21.841 --> 00:05:24.759 The same was not true of my video lectures 00:05:24.759 --> 00:05:27.653 and it wasn't even true of my in-person lectures. 00:05:27.653 --> 00:05:32.424 When I speak, I deliver the information as quickly or slowly as I want. 00:05:32.424 --> 00:05:36.045 So for certain students and certain kinds of information, 00:05:36.045 --> 00:05:40.957 these two aspects of the comics medium, its visual nature and its permanence, 00:05:40.957 --> 00:05:44.574 make it an incredibly powerful educational tool. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:44.574 --> 00:05:46.574 When I was teaching this Algebra 2 class, 00:05:46.574 --> 00:05:50.686 I was also working on my Masters in Education at Cal State East Bay, 00:05:50.686 --> 00:05:54.823 and I was so intrigued by this experience that I had with these comics lectures 00:05:54.823 --> 00:05:59.936 that I decided to focus my final Masters project on comics. 00:05:59.936 --> 00:06:03.005 I wanted to figure out why American educators 00:06:03.005 --> 00:06:08.137 have historically been so reluctant to use comic books in their classrooms. 00:06:08.137 --> 00:06:10.373 Here's what I discovered. NOTE Paragraph 00:06:10.373 --> 00:06:13.096 Comic books first became a mass medium in the 1940s, 00:06:13.096 --> 00:06:15.263 with millions of copies selling every month, 00:06:15.263 --> 00:06:17.719 and educators back then took notice. 00:06:17.719 --> 00:06:17.969 A lot of innovative teachers began bringing comics into their classrooms 00:06:23.252 --> 00:06:24.165 to experiment. 00:06:24.165 --> 00:06:26.785 In 1944, the Journal of Educational Sociology 00:06:26.785 --> 00:06:30.227 even devoted an entire issue to this topic. 00:06:30.638 --> 00:06:32.929 Things seemed to be progressing. 00:06:32.929 --> 00:06:35.197 Teachers were starting to figure things out. NOTE Paragraph 00:06:35.197 --> 00:06:37.399 But then along comes this guy. 00:06:37.399 --> 00:06:41.410 This is child psychologist Dr. Fredric Wertham, 00:06:41.410 --> 00:06:45.352 and in 1954, he wrote a book called "Seduction of the Innocent," 00:06:45.352 --> 00:06:50.271 where he argues that comic books cause juvenile delinquency. NOTE Paragraph 00:06:50.271 --> 00:06:51.302 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:06:51.302 --> 00:06:52.863 He was wrong. 00:06:52.863 --> 00:06:54.877 Now, Dr. Wertham was actually a pretty decent guy. 00:06:54.877 --> 00:06:58.293 He spent most of his career working with juvenile delinquents, 00:06:58.293 --> 00:07:03.248 and in his work he noticed that most of his clients read comic books. 00:07:03.248 --> 00:07:07.115 What Dr. Wertham failed to realize was in the 1940s and '50s, 00:07:07.115 --> 00:07:11.263 almost every kid in America read comic books. NOTE Paragraph 00:07:11.263 --> 00:07:14.657 Dr. Wertham does a pretty dubious job of proving his case, 00:07:14.657 --> 00:07:18.493 but his book does inspire the Senate of the United States 00:07:18.493 --> 00:07:20.118 to hold a series of hearings 00:07:20.118 --> 00:07:25.043 to see if in fact comic books cause juvenile delinquency. 00:07:25.043 --> 00:07:27.711 These hearings lasted for almost two months. 00:07:27.711 --> 00:07:31.953 They ended inconclusively, but not before doing tremendous damage 00:07:31.953 --> 00:07:36.480 to the reputation of comic books in the eyes of the American public. NOTE Paragraph 00:07:36.480 --> 00:07:40.669 After this, respectable American educators all backed away, 00:07:40.669 --> 00:07:42.781 and they stayed away for decades. 00:07:42.781 --> 00:07:46.114 It wasn't until the 1970s that a few brave souls 00:07:46.114 --> 00:07:47.617 started making their way back in, 00:07:47.617 --> 00:07:49.630 and it really wasn't until pretty recently, 00:07:49.630 --> 00:07:51.290 maybe the last decade or so, 00:07:51.290 --> 00:07:53.816 that comics have seen more widespread acceptance 00:07:53.816 --> 00:07:56.098 among American educators. NOTE Paragraph 00:07:56.098 --> 00:07:59.991 Comic books and graphic novels are now finally making their way 00:07:59.991 --> 00:08:02.021 back into American classrooms, 00:08:02.021 --> 00:08:06.025 and this is even happening at Bishop O'Dowd, where I used to teach. 00:08:06.025 --> 00:08:07.735 Mr. Smith, one of my former colleagues, 00:08:07.735 --> 00:08:10.647 uses Scott McCloud's "Understanding Comics" 00:08:10.647 --> 00:08:14.503 in his literature and film class, because that book gives his students 00:08:14.503 --> 00:08:19.739 the language with which to discuss the relationship between words and images. 00:08:19.739 --> 00:08:23.423 Mr. Burns assigns a comics essay to his students every year. 00:08:23.423 --> 00:08:27.661 By asking his students to process a prose novel using images, 00:08:27.661 --> 00:08:30.125 Mr. Burns asks them to think deeply 00:08:30.125 --> 00:08:32.282 not just about the story 00:08:32.282 --> 00:08:35.390 but also about how that story is told. 00:08:35.390 --> 00:08:38.450 And Ms. Murrock uses my own "American Born Chinese" 00:08:38.450 --> 00:08:40.338 with her English 1 students. 00:08:40.338 --> 00:08:43.870 For her, graphic novels are a great way of fulfilling 00:08:43.870 --> 00:08:45.739 a Common Core Standard. 00:08:45.739 --> 00:08:48.750 The Standard states that students ought to be able to analyze 00:08:48.750 --> 00:08:54.788 how visual elements contribute to the meaning, tone and beauty of a text. NOTE Paragraph 00:08:54.788 --> 00:08:57.984 Over in the library, Mr. ?? has built a pretty impressive 00:08:57.984 --> 00:09:00.370 graphic novel collection for Bishop O'Dowd. 00:09:00.370 --> 00:09:03.672 Now, Ms. ?? and all of her librarian colleagues 00:09:03.672 --> 00:09:06.697 have really been at the forefront of comics advocacy, 00:09:06.697 --> 00:09:09.846 really since the early '80s, when a school library journal article 00:09:09.846 --> 00:09:14.594 stated that the mere presence of graphic novels in the library 00:09:14.594 --> 00:09:17.339 increased usage by about 80 percent, 00:09:17.339 --> 00:09:21.070 and increased the circulation of non-comics material 00:09:21.070 --> 00:09:23.094 by about 30 percent. NOTE Paragraph 00:09:23.094 --> 00:09:26.612 Inspired by this renewed interest from American educators, 00:09:26.612 --> 00:09:31.417 American cartoonists are now producing more explicitly educational content 00:09:31.417 --> 00:09:34.562 for the K-12 market than ever before. 00:09:34.562 --> 00:09:37.561 A lot of this is directed at language arts, 00:09:37.561 --> 00:09:39.784 but more and more comics and graphic novels 00:09:39.784 --> 00:09:43.378 are starting to tackle math and science topics. 00:09:43.378 --> 00:09:47.823 STEM comics graphics novels really are like this uncharted territory, 00:09:47.823 --> 00:09:49.842 ready to be explored. NOTE Paragraph 00:09:49.842 --> 00:09:55.511 America is finally waking up to the fact that comic books do not cause 00:09:55.511 --> 00:09:57.586 juvenile delinquency, 00:09:57.586 --> 00:10:01.848 that they really do belong in every educator's toolkit. 00:10:01.848 --> 00:10:05.475 There's no good reason to keep comic books and graphic novels 00:10:05.475 --> 00:10:07.281 out of K-12 education. 00:10:07.281 --> 00:10:09.009 They teach visually, 00:10:09.009 --> 00:10:12.567 they give our students that remote control. 00:10:12.567 --> 00:10:15.244 The educational potential is there 00:10:15.244 --> 00:10:17.890 just waiting to be tapped 00:10:17.890 --> 00:10:19.537 by creative people like you. NOTE Paragraph 00:10:19.537 --> 00:10:21.150 Thank you. NOTE Paragraph 00:10:21.150 --> 00:10:23.753 (Applause)