Saturday, April 30, 2016

Asterios Polyp



This comic is brilliant, the main character is Asterios Polyp and this comic is darkly humorous.  Asterios is a genius intellectual 50-year-old man who has a twin brother, or had, that died at birth. The story is told from his dead twin who shadows his life. The text can be psychological and there are different theories that can be brought about.

Besides the beautiful panels, well executed with detail and colored minimally, everyone in the comic talks distinctly. They have a different style of speech and characterization in the drawing. Points come back into the story that you may have thought you have missed making the comic clever.

Though the characters are all interesting and unique Asterios is the most unique. He sees the universe in a different way and we are stepping into his own analysis of the world.

This story is smart, witty, and extremely well thought out. It will make you think and rethink, in even a perhaps philosophical way.  Bravo Mazzucchelli.

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Sunday, April 10, 2016

Performance and Performativity in Classrooms- Elementary

The idea of performance and performativity can carry itself through many ideals and genres, such as the way children act and interact in a classroom setting.  A project that I addressed that concept with passionately was when I worked at an Elementary School co-teaching art and communication skills, fairly recently. The classroom scenario was quite unusual.  We combined 1st through 3rd grade (ages 6-8) autistic  students with 4th and 5th grade (ages 9-10) gifted (High IQ)  students into the same classroom.

The typical scenario for autistic children is to be separated from the others and have their own space and boundaries. But why not mix these students in one group to observe personal development and growth?

We did just that. It was an astonishing result. The performance of both the autistic and gifted children working together was successful. The gifted students took on the role of a helper, immediately teaching their autistic classmates simple art productivity skills by giving thorough examples with care. The autistic children picked up art assignments quicker. The communications skills developed between both groups, and they all became confident speakers and were able to execute art in a bolder way without hesitation.

I learned that classroom boundaries must be expanded for the development of others. Separating gifted and autistic children based on their abilities is not a good idea because performativity will not be effective. The performativity of the communication skills and art skills when integrating these students expanded in such a short period of time.  Friendships were also formed and the bonds between the students matured. I would like to see this effective collaborative strategy occur in other schools and classrooms to improve the performance of young minds.