1 / 25

Marvelous Manga

Marvelous Manga. The Power of Manga in a Secondary School Library #604 (Pictures have been deleted). Dr. Elizabeth Lee, Queen’s University Dr. Peggy MacInnis, Sir Robert L Borden BTI. … the story of our Collaboration. 08-09 email; visit Borden 09-10 Research Project

bonnie
Download Presentation

Marvelous Manga

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Marvelous Manga The Power of Manga in a Secondary School Library #604 (Pictures have been deleted) Dr. Elizabeth Lee, Queen’s University Dr. Peggy MacInnis, Sir Robert L Borden BTI

  2. … the story of our Collaboration • 08-09 email; visit Borden • 09-10Research Project Planning; implementation; analysis; presentation Article: Teaching Librarian It’s a Super Sign-Out Day! OLA Conference Proposal Submission • 10-11 Research Project: Part II Planning/design OLA Presentation

  3. Circulation Statistics 25,215 21,727 18,904 Manga 9,937 + 5,745 2,450 1,897

  4. Circulation: TDSB SE Sept-Dec 2010

  5. June 2008

  6. Toronto Star: June 2009

  7. Collection Size: Manga • From 0 – 4,075 in 7 ½ years Then …

  8. “…have you thought about buying…” Now: A-C & Marvel, Bone etc

  9. Now: D-Q

  10. Now: R-Z

  11. Now: other Graphic Novels

  12. New Graphic Novels

  13. Manga Data Base Stars Number Bold

  14. Selection/Shopping: DB • 4) Email Labyrinth: requests in Bold • 5) Dan fills boxes; visits GNC • 6) Students systematically select books

  15. Selection/Shopping cont. 7) Book Talks by Dan Merisanu

  16. Selection/Shopping cont. 8) Students make final choices 9) Book Spines are photocopied 10) Invoice emailed: payment 11) New books processed & added to DB 12) New DB placed by circulation computer

  17. Selection/Shopping cont.Student Excursion • 1) small group of students selected to represent GNC • 2) visit Graphic Novel Store • e.g. The Beguiling or The Labyrinth

  18. Student Excursion cont. • 1) students select books; verify with DB • 2) whole day event: Library is closed • 3) Travel by TTC; shop; load bags and backpacks; lunch location chosen by students; students carry books back to school; arrange new books on trolley by alpha title for photocopying (to create a record)

  19. Shopping: Dr Mac • 1) DB to Chapters • 2) DB to OLA Conference vendors • 3) DB to TDSB Resource Fair

  20. Selection Criteria • No nudity • Durable binding • Quality of drawing • e.g. Naruto

  21. Knowing Your Readers:Sir Robert L Borden BTI • Vocational school • 515 students: 66% male • Applied & Locally-Developed courses • Reading, writing, math & social skills at a Grade 3-6 level • 41% have formal Special Education identification • 65% go directly to work following graduation

  22. Borden: Location • TDSB: Morningside & Kingston Road • Located within a community that has • a high crime rate, • substance abuse issues • low socioeconomic status Correlation? More students reading, more students graduating.

  23. Reading Engagement • Special education and reluctant readers often dislike reading. • The first step in becoming a reader is engagement (Guthrie & Humenick, 2004). • Choice produces engaged readers (Guthrie & Humenick, 2004, Morrow, 2002).

  24. Amount of voluntary reading strong predictor of reading performance and academic success (Fielding, Wilson & Anderson, 1986). • Greater access to books correlates with better reading scores.

  25. What’s Happening with Manga? • Information presented in two modalities. Dual Coding Theory (Clark & Pavio, 1991). • Information that is presented & encoded in verbal memory & visual memory is retained better. (Processed by different parts of the brain).

More Related