My
three year old is pretty observant. Even though she can’t read yet, she can
already recognize symbols. She knows what the Target store symbol means. She
knows which door leads to the men’s restroom and which leads to the women’s.
She has learned that the red circle with the slash through it is a symbol for
“no” and likes to ask me things like “why trucks can’t go there” (a no-trucks
sign). She recognizes that the person with the crown in a storybook is a king,
queen, prince or (most likely, sigh) a princess.
Visuals
are powerful. Even the new baby has learned that when he sees a bottle it means
food.
Our
students tend to have a love-hate relationship with visuals, particularly
political cartoons in Social Studies classes. On one hand, kids tend to think
images are easier to read because they don’t have any (or many) words. On the
other hand, kids sometimes think they need to be in a Dan Brown novel to
understand all the obscure symbols in some cartoons.
Understanding
political cartoons is an essential social studies skill. It is an indisputable literacy skill that belongs to us,
not to English/Language Arts or science or math. We know that political
cartoons will appear on our EOCs and AP exams. Our kids need to get better at
interpreting them and feel confident in
using them. It’s a skill needed for civic engagement. It’s something informed
adults do.
And
it’s challenging!
If
you’re looking for a new tool to use with political cartoons, try TACOS. It’s
an acronym, of course, from an AP Institute. Teach your students to look for
the following things in a political cartoon:
· Time -- When was this
cartoon created? Are there any context clues to help me figure out the time?
Are there any actual dates referenced? What do I know about that time?
· Action -- What actions are
happening in the cartoon? What are people doing or saying?
· Caption(s) – What captions are
included? Students need to write down all of the words or text in the cartoon,
including captions, speech bubbles, labels, text boxes, etc.
· Objects -- What THINGS or
objects do we see in the cartoon? Are any exaggerated in size or action?
· Summary or So-what -- What’s the point?
What does this have to do with real life or with what we are learning about in
class? Why is this important?
If
you find your kids are struggling with the very English/Language Arts skills of
symbolism, irony, analogy, and exaggeration, the Library of Congress Classroom
Materials have a wonderful lesson you can use to directly, explicitly teach the
skills needed to interpret cartoons.
Check
out the lesson at goo.gl/63VcS4 (copy and paste if
this link doesn't work correctly)
It
includes practice cartoons, identifying parts of a cartoon, teacher resources,
and a pdf explaining symbolism, irony, etc. It’s very basic, but sometimes
going back to basics is just what our kids need to learn or relearn this skill.
It looks easy to implement as a mini-lesson in the classroom. I love the
ability to digitally match the cartoon concept (like exaggeration) to the part
of the cartoon it explains (like a giant door or huge Uncle Sam or Jay Leno’s
chin). It would be a fun whole-class activity on a Smartboard or projector or
more fun individually on laptops or ipads.
What
do you think about teaching political cartoons? Do you have any favorite,
tried-and-true, successful methods? Are you looking to update your teaching or
reviewing of this skill? If any of you try TACOS or the LOC lesson will you
drop me a line and tell me how it goes?
-Tracy
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