The objective of this work is to determine how the creation of comics by students fosters understanding and empathy for people with specific educational support needs. To this end, an activity was organised consisting of the production of a comic focused on issues related to educational inclusion among students in 5th and 6th grade of Primary Education at the “CEIP Parque de la Muñeca” School in Guadalajara (Spain). The study shows that comics can be one very interesting tool to be used in primary education to direct the student to delve into social issues and, in turn, promote the process of reflection and deepening about diversity in a different way. Likewise, the study also shows the need to influence the development of visual literacy and multimodal skills among Primary Education students.
Article Details
How to Cite
López-Prados, S., & Saez-de-Adana , F. (2023). Comics as a tool to raise awareness about the need to attend to diversity: An inclusive perspective. Ocnos. Journal of reading research, 22(1). https://doi.org/10.18239/ocnos_2023.22.1.333
López-Prados and Sáez-de-Adana: Comics as a tool to raise awareness about the need to attend to diversity. An inclusive
perspective
Introduction
This work reflects the confluence of two aspects that are currently of great relevance
in the field of teaching. On the one hand, educational inclusion and the use of visual
methodologies in the classroom in the other hand. Although they may seem to be two
issues that are not directly related, they are two notions with certain vicissitudes
in common. In this work, they serve to rethink educational practices and the organisation
of schools, since education through methodologies that use images is, nowadays, one
of the ways to achieve educational inclusion. However, as this work shows, there is
still a long way to go in this field, as there is a deficit in the visual education
of our students that it is desirable to remedy.
As for the meaning of inclusive education, a series of authors who have worked on
this topic emphasise some aspects over others. Therefore, for example, for Echeita
(), the concept of educational inclusion is a process that serves to progress teaching
practices in all senses, promoting improvement and innovation, encouraging the cooperation
of the educational community to promote the exchange, progress, improvement and effectiveness
of education in schools, but, above all, “it aims at giving them meaning and guidance
(...), to give them a purpose” (). For Susinos (), “inclusion is a worldwide theoretical and practical model that advocates the need
to promote change in classrooms so that they become schools for all, schools in which
all can participate and are welcomed as valued members of the classroom”. According
to Blanco (), educational inclusion is the transformation of education systems and cultures,
as well as of educational practices and the organisation of schools in order to meet
the diverse needs of students and to achieve learning and full participation by all
children.
In any case, it is easy to identify the existence of a diversity of rhythms in the
daily activity in educational centres, since each person needs time to assimilate
knowledge; of a diversity of interests, motivations and expectations, in terms of
content and methods; and of a diversity of capacities and developmental rhythms (). For this reason, educational inclusion is an innovative vision of education based
on diversity, implying the acceptance, valuing of differences, and recognising all
children as full subjects of rights ().
With regard to the concept of attention to diversity, this is understood in a multidimensional
way so it can be approached from different perspectives: it can be considered as a
social situation or as an element that generates opportunities and collective cultural
enrichment. It is from this second conception, from the paradigm of the inclusive
school, that this paper starts. In the research conducted by Bautista-Ochoa et al.
(), inclusive schools go hand in hand with public schools making it impossible to distinguish
between them. The key point is that public schools are common schools for all students
and it is thus redundant to call them inclusive, since the principle of inclusive
schools is that they are a community that lives and learns together. In this school
one has the right to be educated and free to grow and live together with others, i.e.
the school is pointed out as a model of democracy and social inclusion. On the other
hand, the school is understood as a space of coexistence and cooperation, where all
members of the team are involved. Immersion in a research project gives students autonomy,
collaboration and learning development. Schools and teachers must be in constant change
because they are engines of social transformation, so that the teaching staff can
and the education community must act against social injustice, individualistic approaches
that favour student segregation, labelling and discriminatory education policies.
Under the LOMLOE, inclusive education becomes a fundamental principle. It is the commitment of the
education system to facilitate learning for all students, with the same rights and
equal opportunities. According to Sáez-Carreras () educating for diversity is:
A teaching-learning process based on democratic pluralism, tolerance and acceptance
of difference, through which it seeks to promote the development and personal maturity
of all individuals, a type of education based on human rights, maximum respect for
difference, overcoming barriers and openness to globalism as a response to the type
of man and society needed today (p. 31)
In this sense, the literary education model allows us to link the teaching of literature
with attention to diversity from an inclusive perspective, including the ethical,
aesthetic, cultural and linguistic dimensions (). Both Ibarra-Rius and Ballester-Roca () and Llorens-García et al. () address the issue of the use of literature for diversity. Particularly () devotes attention to how comics can be useful in this regard.
In any case, inclusive education and its implementation in our teaching environments
require reflection for which the use of visual methodologies is very useful. In this
respect, such methodologies have already been used in teacher training to promote
reflection on pre-university educational experience (; ). These visual productions have been an instrument both to initiate the student to
reflection and to promote deliberation on a specific process. There are a number of
initiatives that have used visual images in teacher education, such as Phillipson
and Forlin () who use them as a strategy to increase understanding of diversity and inclusion
in the classroom. Others have used them to encourage prospective teachers to reflect
on their socio-professional positions during the internship (). This paper aims at bringing this idea to students themselves and not only to trainee
teachers as in the previous studies.
Within this use of visual methodologies, the creation of comics in the classroom is
undoubtedly an interdisciplinary activity that serves as a great motivation for students
(Guzmán, 2012). The production of graphic narratives, even if they are short, triggers
a wide range of components that affect the different areas of any educational action
and makes the students, being the producers of the stories, more aware of inclusion,
facilitating communication with the other classmates and teachers, because it is easier
to express what we feel and think through images sometimes.
According to Moya (), it is important to foster empathy in educational centres as it is one of the basic
foundations of any good education professional when it is understood as the ability
to put oneself in the place of the students, to understand them and to be sensitive
to their needs. Those who educate in empathy are much more likely to be successful
in the teaching and learning process, in the transmission of content, in the process
of guiding the acquisition of the necessary competences and in the assessment of learning
outcomes. Unfortunately, the way teacher selection is set up, both in pre-school,
primary, secondary and university education, empathy is not considered as one of the
basic skills to be professionally engaged in education. The use of images in the form
of comics can help to improve this empathic capacity (). Moreover, by making a comic, we are triggering several educational areas such as
language, mathematics or ethical values that favour the teaching-learning process
as they are based on meaningful learning. Pomares-Puig () stresses that one of the main objectives of the network “Comics as didactic elements”
is the promotion of reading in the educational sphere and the reflection of their
pedagogical possibilities from different perspectives.
It should be noted that, although comics have long been linked to counterculture and
have therefore traditionally occupied a marginal position in terms of how they are
viewed by the public, they are increasingly gaining a greater level of social and
cultural acceptance. This increased acceptance is based both on the growing expansion
of the medium as an art form (with recognition at a social level such as the establishment
of the National Comic Prize or its increased presence in the university environment
()) and on the recognition of its complexity, due to the range of semiotic and temporal
resources available to the comic creator and the possibilities offered by such tools
as a form of expression. They can also offer engaging and demanding reading experiences,
as readers are challenged to interpret spatio-temporal relationships. One of the main
characteristics of comics is that they require the reader to engage his or her imagination
in order to fully experience their message. For that reason, the deceptively simple
first appearance of a comic masks the complex interplay between words and images and
the intricate messages they can convey ().
In this context, the inclusion of comics within a pedagogy for understanding helps
students to understand complex concepts and ideas by promoting reflective and critical
learning through their reading (). Reading and making comics involves understanding visual, verbal and spatial semiotics
from multiple perspectives (; ; ) and, in many instances, the use of images facilitates the ability to store information
in long-term memory (). Therefore, comics are an ideal medium for the development of visual literacy skills.
For all these reasons, it seems clear that the use of comics as an educational tool
has many advantages in the field of education.
With this conviction, Universidad de Alcalá has been working for some time on the
inclusion of comics in the classroom. This work involves not only their inclusion
through reading, but also through the creation of graphic narratives that allow students
to express themselves through a multimodal medium that combines text and image. In
this sense, the works presented in Gavaldón et al. () are particularly interesting, as comics were used precisely for the development
of students’ multimodal competences; in McGarr et al. () which shows the interest of creating autobiographical comics to reflect on the construction
of memory and the vision that students have of the educational environment and in
Gavaldón et al. (), which explores how the creation of comics can be an interesting tool to raise awareness
among students of the need to create an intercultural society. Although there is also
some experience in secondary education (), all these activities are framed within university education. In all of them, a
problem that has been detected in () is the fact that there is a part of the student body that not only is not a regular
reader of comics but has never read them. This means that, although they are influenced
by visual messages on a daily basis, when it comes to creating their own, at least
in the form of comics, they have certain difficulties, an issue that will be important
in this work.
Method
Context of the study and participants
The study was conducted in the “CEIP Parque de La Muñeca” with students (n=40) in
their fifth and sixth grade of Primary Education, a teacher from the Faculty of Education
and another from the Franklin Institute of Universidad de Alcalá. The aim of the study
was to determine how the creation of comics by students would foster understanding
and empathy for people with specific educational support needs and, in turn, foster
interpersonal relationships based on tolerance, empathy, solidarity and commitment
to others. A secondary objective is to test the students’ ability to communicate through
images.
It should be noted that in the 6th year class there is a student with specific educational support needs associated
with Down’s syndrome. This is not the case in the 5th grade class, where there are no students with educational needs. In this class they
have worked with the inclusive story “A special day for Laila and her friends” where
different special educational needs appear, including Down syndrome, blindness, autism
or people who need a wheelchair.
Development of the study
Although the final result of the activity was the production of a comic book, prior
thereto, activities were designed to encourage debate and discussion on how to carry
out the inclusion of a new student who arrives in the classroom or school with some
kind of educational need. The aim of these discussion and debate groups was to stimulate
prior reflection on the issues and how schools adapt to the diversity of students
and to analyse how they provide support to each student in order to achieve an education
according to individual learning needs.
Subsequently, various activities were carried out aimed at providing students with
some basic knowledge to enable them to produce a comic. Specifically, a session was
set up to learn what a comic book is like and its parts. A theoretical class was also
designed to go deeper into the characteristics and creation of comics, working on
concepts such as visual metaphors, planes, approaches, sketches, onomatopoeias, etc.
The scheduling needs meant that this part only had one session, which is obviously
not enough time given the complexity of the language of comics. However, this is also
useful for the secondary objective of the activity as it allows us to see the students’
ability to communicate through a multimodal medium such as comics.
After the theory sessions, an activity was designed with the aim of awakening emotions
of empathy and assertiveness, so that the students put themselves in the place of
the new students arriving at the school, so that they understand how they feel because
they do not know anyone, in addition to the fact that they have special educational
needs. The aim is to enable them to understand the difficulties they may face and
how to solve them, so that newcomers feel welcomed, understood and integrated, and
thus achieve full inclusion. To that end, they were asked to create comics reflecting
any of the following themes:
A comic that reflects the feelings, problems or fears of a child with needs when he
arrives at a new school and has to adapt to the rules of a school, a society and an
environment that is not his own. The relationship of school rules can be reflected
upon. They can be asked the following question: How will this new student with educational
needs be integrated into the school and the classroom?
A comic reflecting the situations that a new student faces on arrival at a school
or classroom. E.g. type of disability, situations of refusal, learners’ prior knowledge,
inclusion, etc.
Data analysis
The comics made by the students were analysed by the two teachers, first individually
and then jointly discussing the findings. We also analysed how inclusion issues were
dealt with in schools; if problems were raised, how they were shown to the reader;
what kind of conflicts were portrayed and what kind of stereotypes were present. The
analysis was conducted using conceptual metaphor theory, which focuses on interpreting
discourses, regardless of the medium used, and which in turn draws on cognitive theory.
Conceptual metaphor, in cognitive linguistics, makes it possible to understand and
experience one thing through concepts related to another (). This type of metaphor seeks to understand human thought, emotions and action using
strategies that allow us to draw on the construction of mental models of how the world
works. The use of this type of metaphor in the field of comics () and is key in the field of graphic medicine, a field in which great advances are
being made to create empathy towards different diseases through the use of comics
and other visual resources. In this regard, see (González-Cabeza, 2016; ) among others. Another important element was the appropriate use of comic language
in conveying ideas to test the need to improve students’ multimodal skills.
Results
This may be due to the age of the students but, above all, probably to the low use
of comics in school curricula and the decrease in the reading of comics by children,
as shown in the study presented in () mentioned above. However, the results show that this activity has allowed students
to put themselves in the shoes of their potential peers with specific educational
support needs and to create feelings of empathy towards them. This is clear from the
point of view of the construction of history, as most of the works follow a similar
pattern. In most stories we have a child who comes to class with some kind of disability.
Thereafter, there is a process of integration by the students, sometimes mediated
by the teacher, in which there is generally a happy ending in which the new student
is integrated into the dynamics of the class and the class in turn adapts to his needs.
This evidently shows that students understand inclusion as UNESCO defines it as “a
process of addressing and responding to the diversity of needs of all learners through
increasing participation in learning, cultures and communities, and reducing exclusion
within and from education. It involves changes and modifications in content, approaches,
structures and strategies, with a common vision which covers all children of the appropriate
age range and a conviction that it is the responsibility of the regular system to
educate all children” ().
What is interesting about the comics produced is that they show that this process
described by UNESCO is carried out by the students themselves, who are the ones who
carry out the integrative process. Therefore, these creations show an involvement
on the part of students at these levels in the last years of primary school in facilitating
all that is related to educational inclusion.
This activity promotes student reflection because there is a need to understand and
go deeper into the subject they want to show in the images in a different way than
a simple essay, as it requires the use of visual metaphors to understand how the new
student feels, which facilitates the process of empathy on the part of the author
of the comic. For example, in the comic in figure 1, in the fourth panel, it is perfectly
shown how the character of the blind girl perceives her companions who are represented
by their conversation in the form of speech bubbles, which is the only information
that the protagonist receives. This way, the author of this comic has had to try to
empathise with the situation and, above all, to transmit it to the reader. In this
case, the author plays the role of a blind person. So when the blind girl is escorted
to her seat, she exclaims “How cool it (the desk) must be!” showing how her perception
of her surroundings is different. It is also interesting that the other children ask
him how she learns, which suggests that there is an understanding that as a blind
person, learning is different. However, at the end of the comic, the process of inclusion
is emphasised, highlighting that she is not different, showing a clear example of
educational inclusion. We all have our shortcomings and our difficulties, but we are
similar to the others, we are all different to some extent and this is reflected very
well in figure 1.
Figure 1Comic made by a 5th grade Primary School student
As for special educational needs or different abilities, it is interesting to note
that in the comics of 5th grade primary school students, only physical disabilities are shown, with blindness
or the use of a wheelchair standing out (both issues appear in 33% of the comics presented).
This is because the text used to address this issue deals primarily with this type
of special skills. However, in the 6th grade class, who have a classmate with Down’s syndrome, the appearance of intellectual
disabilities is present. “They laughed at him for having Down’s syndrome” is said
in the comic in figure 2, showing this mockery as something evidently negative. But it is not only Down’s
syndrome that appears among the intellectual disabilities, but there are also other
stories in that class where autism is also mentioned. In this respect, the comic in
figure 3 where depression is mentioned as a disability is curious. Although it is true that
this is an isolated case, it may be due to the fact that intellectual issues may be
confused, at this age, with certain mental problems due to their less representable
nature. This would also explain the absence of intellectual disabilities in the 5th grade comics, as this difficulty in representation is not compensated for by living
with a classmate with Down’s syndrome.
Figure 2Comic made by a 6th grade Primary School student
Figure 3Comic made by a 6th grade Primary School student
It is interesting to highlight the comic shown in figure 4 for its exceptional character
as it is not narrated from the point of view of the pupils who receive a classmate
with a disability, but from the point of view of the child who is in a wheelchair,
where we can see in figure 4 that being in a wheelchair (or having a different ability)
does not prevent him from carrying out a normal daily activity and practising sport.
It clearly shows that the student can not only watch sport behind the screen, but
that there is a sport adapted to everyone, and if you want to, you can do it. As in
the previous cases, the final message is one of self-improvement, a process of self-improvement
that demonstrates a great empathetic capacity on the part of the author of the comic,
since in the general message of integration that is presented, one of the main problems
is that the situation of disability is still presented in the “other”, in the student
who comes back to the class and to the educational centre and, despite the desire
for integration that the comics present, on too many occasions there is no display
of the point of view of the person who is the object of the process of inclusion.
It is true that this may have been given by the statement of the assignment which
asked to show the problems of a new student in class, but it is also true that it
was not only asked to show these problems, but also the feelings of the new student,
something that does not appear in all the stories. Although some achieve this objective
with an external point of view, the transmission of feelings is better achieved in
those comics where the point of view of the student with a disability is adopted,
either because the story is told in the first person (as in figure 4) or because there are some panels that try to express the student's perception of
the world (as in figure 1).
Figure 4Comic made by a 5th grade Primary School student
Discussion and conclusions
The research shows how comics can be a tool for the process of inclusion in the classroom.
Readers, especially children and young people, should understand that the focus of
comics is not always linked to heroes/heroines and anti-heroes, but can also serve
as social criticism or moral reflections, and in many cases even as funny or humorous
stories with a reflective undertone, and also as visual material for educational inclusion.
This is something that many readers are familiar with thanks to the so-called “Young
adult” comic market (), but which is sometimes lost in the ocean of manga and superhero comics.
Given the wide range of situations and the dynamics of the educational environment
in which our students find themselves, it is logical to think that it is not enough
to provide them with theoretical knowledge in order for them to develop competences
related to educational inclusion. It could be more useful to implement flexible methodological
strategies that allow them to inquire into the problems they may encounter in the
classroom, reflect on them and look for possible solutions. Class discussions are
a good tool, but often these discussions remain in the air without being captured
in some form for further analysis. Using comics as a strategy to stimulate the learning
process and as a vehicle to encourage critical reflection is an innovative methodology.
Tackling this type of story through comics, as well as getting them to look at the
issue of diversity in the classroom, has facilitated reflection on the role of the
school in society and how the students themselves are key agents of integration. From
a communication point of view, they have been able to develop multimodal competences
by having to use a different medium from the predominant one based on textual writing.
When the learner finishes the story by solving the problem in an easy and simple way,
they are reflecting themselves within the story and show that they have the capacity
to solve the problems associated with educational inclusion on their own. Use of comics
is a methodology that should be explored in depth since, in addition to encouraging
critical reflection, it can be a strategy that helps to visualise how the student
sees him within the various situations of a classroom.
That said, challenges remain. The first relates to the perception of comics, both
within some educational circles and in society at large. Despite El Refaie’s () assertion that comics are gaining a level of social and cultural acceptance as legitimate
and credible forms of expression and communication, there seems to be a way to go
in this regard, as evidenced by some shortcomings in the development of visual literacy
in storytelling through images. The growing recognition of the importance of more
visual forms of literacy and the contribution that comics can make to addressing these
literacies is likely to accelerate their acceptance in education in the future, but
there is still a long way to go in this respect.
Another potential limitation of this medium as a tool for reflection may be related
to the author’s difficulty in portraying negative aspects of the problem, especially
unpleasant situations. The fact that there is always a positive resolution and that
no traumatic situations arise may not so much be due to students trying to show their
view of the problem in the most positive way possible but may reflect their inability
to express these challenging experiences in a visual way. It is also possible that
it is the novel task of creating comics that has influenced the nature of the students’
comics.
In any case, moving towards more powerful forms of communication and expression in
reflective practice offers enormous opportunities and, as this article has highlighted,
comics are a particularly good medium in this regard. The study has highlighted that,
despite students’ initial reservations and limited experience with the medium, they
are able to express their feelings about the situation. However, the work presented
herein shows that there is still a lot of work to be done to standardise the introduction
of visual media in the classroom, as the use of metaphor is not fully developed. For
this reason, this work also demonstrates the need to focus on this aspect, to include
visual literacy as a key element in the training of our students if we want them to
take advantage of all the benefits inherent in multimodal communication.
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Notes
[1] Pre-primary and Primary School
[2] Organic Act Amending the Organic Act on Education.