Guest Editors: Dr Damon Herd, Professor Divya Jindal-Snape
and Megan Sinclair (University of Dundee)
Articles are invited for a special issue of Studies in
Comics (STIC) on the theme of Comics and Education. Comics have enjoyed a
resurgence in the classroom as educators, creators and scholars have come to recognize
the diverse ways in which the medium can be used to support literacy,
communication skills and creativity. Significantly, the use of comics for and
as education also promotes cross-medial learning, as readers may use the form
as a starting point for further reading, but also to enhance and supplement
other pedagogical materials.
As Syma and Weiner argue, ‘it is no longer a question of
whether sequential art should be used in educational settings, but rather how
to use it and for what purpose’ (2013). Comics present an immersive, engaging
and memorable tool for communication because they require the reader to
actively participate in the meaning-making process by utilizing verbal, visual,
spatial and gestural modes of understanding, among others (Bakis 2008). Indeed,
comics can help readers of all ages understand complex ideas through these
means and allow teachers and learners to explore, stimulate and enhance
educational outcomes.
In recognition of this, we invite papers that focus on one
or more of the following topics (although this list is not exhaustive):
- case studies of education comics/ comics as education;
- teaching and learning with published comics;
- teaching and learning by creating comics;
- comics and literacy;
- public information comics;
- comics as pedagogy;
- comics and embodied learning;
- comics and emotional development;
- comics and learner-based outcomes;
- comics and adult education;
- the educational mission of networks like Graphic Medicine and Graphic Justice.
Please send complete articles for consideration, along with
any queries, to studiesincomics@ googlemail.com with STIC 11.1 in the
subject heading, along with the type of submission (ARTICLE / INTERVIEW).
Articles should be 4,000–6,000 words long and must be
received by 1 November 2019, along with a biographical note of up to 150 words.
All submissions will be peer-reviewed. Papers must be submitted in English. All
articles submitted should be original work and must not be under consideration
by other publications. This special issue will be published mid-2020.
We also welcome reviews of new publications and exhibits and
short pieces of creative work (1-5 pages in length). Creative work should be
relevant to the theme of the special issue. Please include the type of
submission in the subject header (REVIEW PUBLICATION / REVIEW CONFERENCE /
REVIEW EXHIBITION). Creative submissions should include CREATIVE in the subject
header.
For more information about the call for papers and journal,
click here.
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