Useful for Kids: 7 Unexpected Reasons to Let Kids Read Comics

What are comics? They are short stories with a simple plot and lots of drawings. We used to think of them as non-serious reading, for many they are associated only with Japan and manga. However, according to experts, comic books have a positive impact on child development!

Comics are a special form of art, just like the process of coming up with a unique CasinoChan login. This art implies a particular way of communication between the reader and the author. Pictures are much more accurate in conveying the overall mood of the story, more nuanced moods, and children’s perception of the story through the language of images and symbols provides much more information than “naked text”. But there are other advantages of comics, too.

Speech Development

As children look at the pictures, they interpret the images in different ways and come up with characterizations of the characters. In comics, there are usually gaps in meaning, gaps that can only be filled by the reader. For some, the character is sad, while others find him aggressive. By making up the story, a child enriches his or her vocabulary and learns to express his or her thoughts more accurately.

Develops Logic

The emphasis in comics is not on description, but on the action, so a child learns to make a kind of storyboard. The picture plus a description of it help trace the storyline and figure out how to make a logical progression through the story.

Motivate Reading

If your child only likes to look at pictures, it won’t work in comics. To understand what the meaning is, you have to find out what the characters are talking about – hence the reading.

Helps With Self-Identity

Almost all children associate themselves with the main character by observing his behavior. And let it be even a bad character – there is also a benefit. In this case, the child, on the contrary, reads the negative features of the hero and opposes him/her.

Develop Imagination

You can not read the entire story from beginning to end, and stop at a few pictures and come up with a continuation. In addition, careful consideration of pictures helps the preschooler to develop attention to detail, learn to focus.

Suggest that the child draw his or her own comic strip! This can be an original story, which he comes up with himself, or a story based on his favorite comics. Who knows, maybe your child will become a famous illustrator in the future?

Motivate to Learn a Foreign Language

If your child likes comics, give him a few books in English. The descriptions in them are usually simple and accessible even to a beginner learning the language, so there shouldn’t be any problems with comprehension. Over time, offer your child comics with more complex text – the interest is already formed, so he will be happy to study a foreign language if it helps him to read more often and more favorite books.

What Else Do Comics Develop?

  • Artistic taste and reading taste. Libraries and bookstores now have editions on different topics and in different techniques. You can acquaint your child with the work of very different artists: it may be computer graphics, watercolor, black and white graphics, and very complex images.
  • Creativity. When we look at something interesting, we want to try to draw and come up with some story of our own. We can try different things – some kids, as they say, “go for” a pencil, and some – for paints and pastels. Often a child finds his or her own visual language when drawing comics, and that’s very cool.
  • Emotional intelligence, empathy. When we see with our eyes how a character lives through a situation, how he or she feels, it’s a good exercise in empathy. After all, you have to understand what the facial expression means and why the artist used a darker color, for example.
  • Narrative skill. A comic book is a clear sequence of shots that is kept to a certain rhythm. And it teaches you to follow the story, its logic, the way events unfold. Thus, the ability to tell stories develops as well, and this is something that children have great difficulty with. The most difficult question you can ask a child right now is, “Tell me what the movie was about”. It is very difficult for children to retell, to keep the sequence of events.

 

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Juan James
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