From an article by Brigid Alverson, SLJ May 2020
The COVID-19 pandemic has shuttered schools and workplaces. With libraries, bookstores and comic shops mostly off-limits as well, readers are turning to online sources, and publishers and creators have responded with free comics and related resources. Here's a look at those offerings.
Informational comics about COVID-19
Just for Kids: a Comic Exploring the Coronavirus (NPR) is based on interviews with experts and drawn by Malaka Gharib, author of the graphic memoir I Was Their American Dream. Print and fold it into a mini comic;versions are available in Chinese and Spanish.
Comics for Good (Weiman Kow) is a website that publishes a new COVID-19 comic every week. Each includes an introduction to the coronavirus and comics on topics such a hand washing, masks, and staying home. comicsforgood.com
COVID-19 Myths, Debunked (Whit Taylor and Allyson Shwed) tackles some of the misinformation around the coronavirus. thenib.com/covid-19-myths-debunked
The Side Eye: Viruses vs Everyone (Toby Morris) explains how the virus spreads by looking at three levels: individual cells, individual people, and the global population.
Skating on Thin Ice (Robert Ullman) covers the cancelation of the Stanley Cup in 1918 due to the Spanish Flu.
Hand Washing Like a Pro (Ellen Forney) turns hand washing into a fun story. wapo.st/3c6IEem
Graphic Medicine - A collection of online COVID-19 comics as well as links to and reviews of graphic novels about the experience of illness. bit.ly/3ci26Fc
The COVID-19 pandemic has shuttered schools and workplaces. With libraries, bookstores and comic shops mostly off-limits as well, readers are turning to online sources, and publishers and creators have responded with free comics and related resources. Here's a look at those offerings.
Informational comics about COVID-19
Just for Kids: a Comic Exploring the Coronavirus (NPR) is based on interviews with experts and drawn by Malaka Gharib, author of the graphic memoir I Was Their American Dream. Print and fold it into a mini comic;versions are available in Chinese and Spanish.
Comics for Good (Weiman Kow) is a website that publishes a new COVID-19 comic every week. Each includes an introduction to the coronavirus and comics on topics such a hand washing, masks, and staying home. comicsforgood.com
COVID-19 Myths, Debunked (Whit Taylor and Allyson Shwed) tackles some of the misinformation around the coronavirus. thenib.com/covid-19-myths-debunked
The Side Eye: Viruses vs Everyone (Toby Morris) explains how the virus spreads by looking at three levels: individual cells, individual people, and the global population.
Skating on Thin Ice (Robert Ullman) covers the cancelation of the Stanley Cup in 1918 due to the Spanish Flu.
Hand Washing Like a Pro (Ellen Forney) turns hand washing into a fun story. wapo.st/3c6IEem
Graphic Medicine - A collection of online COVID-19 comics as well as links to and reviews of graphic novels about the experience of illness. bit.ly/3ci26Fc
Free comics and activities
Publishers are offering free comics and downloadable activities for homeschooling parents and children.
Andrew McMeel’s AMP Kids imprint, which published “Big Nate,” “Phoebe and Her Unicorn,” and “Stinky Cecil,” is offering a free graphic novel, downloadable as a PDF, every Tuesday to anyone who signs up for its newsletter through at least mid-May. Find teaching guides and activities on the AMP Kids Resources page.
Papercutz has put together a COVID-19 E-Book Care Package of four graphic novels, which are available as PDFs for free download from the website, and are also available for free on the ComiXology platform. The four titles are the first volumes of “Dinosaur Explorers,” “Chloe,” “Geeky Fab Five,” and “The Smurfs.” The books will be available at least until April 15, and Papercutz is also offering 25 percent off on all print graphic novels ordered through its site.
Toon Books has a number of resources on its website. The Professor Garfield Toon Book Reader enables users to read a selection of Toon titles onscreen in English, French, Spanish, Russian, and Chinese, with a read-aloud option. The Toon website also offers a cartoon maker activity, downloadable lesson plans and activities, and, for grown-ups, free access to its guidebook Comics: Easy as ABC!
Retired math teacher Jim McLain is offering his math comic, Solution Squad, as a free PDF for educational use, with daily math lessons to go with it.
John Patrick Green, creator of InvestiGators, which features a pair of goofy alligator detectives, has assembled some InvestiGators activity pages , including a maze and drawing lessons.
The Phoenix is a smart, funny UK comic, offering short stories and activities for readers ages seven to 14. With the advent of COVID-19, the editors have created the Phoenix Q Club (#PhoenixQClub), providing daily activities, puzzles, and short comics.
Gene Luen Yang led a virtual book tour for his new graphic novel,Dragon Hoops, on Instagram, creating a series of short comics discussing his work and answering questions. His current project, also on Instagram, is March Math Madness, a math tournament of sorts in which teams progress by solving math problems. Download the worksheets on Yang’s website.
The folks at Nobrow have put together activity kits based on their graphic novels and the Flying Eye picture books. Look for them on the Nobrow blog.
DC has launched DC Kids Camp, which makes available drawing lessons and other activities on its DC KidsInstagram and Twitter.
Teacher Tim Smyth has posted a list of free online educational comics and resources on a variety of topics on his website, History Comics and Comics in Education .
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