Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The librarian at our elementary school says graphic novels are great for kids to read.
I say let it go.
Librarians aren’t experts in education or parenting. They can tell you a book is popular but that’s it. And frankly, if a librarian tells me a book is popular with kids these days, I’m probably steering clear of it for my own kids.
Anonymous wrote:My DD is younger, but I will qualify that as an avid Gen X reader, I hated the idea of graphic novels. But, I have really softened to the idea that reading is reading. Reading should be enjoyable, and who knows - my parents may have hated the choose your own adventure books I loved (Along with stuff too old for me, like Flowers in The Attic).
DD was begging for Raina Telgemier’s books. They’re graphic, but far from “comics” I think. “Guts” really struck a chord with me, even as an adult. There’s lots of challenging vocabulary, an excellent story, but laid out in a way that makes it interesting to engage in.
The thing is, this is what kids who have been raised on screens and in a media world are consuming. I’d rather my kid read a book with pictures than be on a screen.
Literature changed from Shakespeare to Jusy Blume. Language and story telling are always changing. You need to understand that these books are not to speak to you, they are to speak to the generation that your child is part of.
They can explore the classics when they’re older, but you probably didn’t read Ulysses as a child, and if you did, it probably didn’t resonate like it would now. Let them love reading, in whatever form speaks to them, so they can explore their world, and learn about what’s around them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looking at our library account, my daughters have read hundreds of graphic novels over the past few years (along with e-graphic novels, graphic novels in school, etc.) There are so many great ones - we will sometimes read them together. I am an avid reader and am mostly just happy that my kids enjoy any kind of books/magazines.
That said- I agree they do need to learn reading stamina. Around 3rd grade I noticed my kids really never read chapter books. What helped was (1) finding a series to start on as a read aloud that they would then get hooked on (for dd1 this was Warriors, dd2 got hooked on the Kate DiCamillo books); and (2) school reading competitions. We are in Missouri, where they have nominate 12 or so books for an award every year, and kids who read 8 of them get a special field trip. Then if they'd read an Alan Gratz or Gordon Korman book in the reading challenge, they would often read more by that author.
Those two things really got them over the hump, and now at 10 and 12, they both read a lot of chapter books, especially the 12 yo. I see the 10 yo getting there soon. Graphic novels are still big too.
Oh - a third thing we do is watch the movie after all reading a book. If someone hasn't finished when everyone else has, there is some peer pressure to finish up so we can have the movie night.
Are you saying they never read chapter books in elementary school?
Alan Gratz writes great books. He also does graphic novels too because as a former 8th grade teacher he knows his audience.
They rarely read chapter books in elementary school until 4th grade. Their reading groups would often have a chapter book they all read together. And their teacher would read aloud a chapter book. But they very rarely picked up chapter books during free reading time, whether at school or at home, until 4th grade. Even then, there was still a strong preference for graphic novels until they started 5th grade, when it became more balanced.
Anonymous wrote:^ To clarify, their reading groups would read chapter books before 4th grade. But they did not pick the up independently before then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looking at our library account, my daughters have read hundreds of graphic novels over the past few years (along with e-graphic novels, graphic novels in school, etc.) There are so many great ones - we will sometimes read them together. I am an avid reader and am mostly just happy that my kids enjoy any kind of books/magazines.
That said- I agree they do need to learn reading stamina. Around 3rd grade I noticed my kids really never read chapter books. What helped was (1) finding a series to start on as a read aloud that they would then get hooked on (for dd1 this was Warriors, dd2 got hooked on the Kate DiCamillo books); and (2) school reading competitions. We are in Missouri, where they have nominate 12 or so books for an award every year, and kids who read 8 of them get a special field trip. Then if they'd read an Alan Gratz or Gordon Korman book in the reading challenge, they would often read more by that author.
Those two things really got them over the hump, and now at 10 and 12, they both read a lot of chapter books, especially the 12 yo. I see the 10 yo getting there soon. Graphic novels are still big too.
Oh - a third thing we do is watch the movie after all reading a book. If someone hasn't finished when everyone else has, there is some peer pressure to finish up so we can have the movie night.
Are you saying they never read chapter books in elementary school?
Alan Gratz writes great books. He also does graphic novels too because as a former 8th grade teacher he knows his audience.
Anonymous wrote:Looking at our library account, my daughters have read hundreds of graphic novels over the past few years (along with e-graphic novels, graphic novels in school, etc.) There are so many great ones - we will sometimes read them together. I am an avid reader and am mostly just happy that my kids enjoy any kind of books/magazines.
That said- I agree they do need to learn reading stamina. Around 3rd grade I noticed my kids really never read chapter books. What helped was (1) finding a series to start on as a read aloud that they would then get hooked on (for dd1 this was Warriors, dd2 got hooked on the Kate DiCamillo books); and (2) school reading competitions. We are in Missouri, where they have nominate 12 or so books for an award every year, and kids who read 8 of them get a special field trip. Then if they'd read an Alan Gratz or Gordon Korman book in the reading challenge, they would often read more by that author.
Those two things really got them over the hump, and now at 10 and 12, they both read a lot of chapter books, especially the 12 yo. I see the 10 yo getting there soon. Graphic novels are still big too.
Oh - a third thing we do is watch the movie after all reading a book. If someone hasn't finished when everyone else has, there is some peer pressure to finish up so we can have the movie night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All reading is good reading.
Many adults don't read at all. Reading graphic novels would be an improvement. Let your kid read what they want.
The bolded is just not true. Reading is a (minor) factor in character formation.
I'm with the posters who compare reading diets to food diets. There are junk books and they are treats.
OP I would take the first or second response's suggestion of a read-aloud. Or just require your kid to read a relatively short non graphic novel before you provide another graphic novel. Done.
This is a fabulous way to kill your kid's love of reading.
I do that sort of thing to my kids all the time and they are avid readers. Turns out I'm pretty good at knowing what they'll like.