The human race has a history that is as colorful as it is deathly. Heroes and villains have existed throughout, but the gritty truth behind many events is lost in translation when a student is listening to a lecturing professor. Perhaps young people could be better served if they are educated via historical fiction graphic novels.
These are basically comic books that utilize all the details historians and researchers know about certain events in history. Some details must be improvised, which is why they are regarded as fictional recollections. However, considering how our text books are written now, no amount of artists license could possible bend the truth any further than we already have.
Sometimes kids are inspired to become writers, but just as often comic books ignite their minds in a way that encourages them to be physicists, pilots, or astronauts. Science, math, and astronomy have always been part of comic book stories. When the young mind learns that how much of the colorful fiction they read is based in fact, it becomes their goal to pursue degrees in such fields.
If we can make the future seem so interesting to young readers, then is it such a crime to bring the same light and color to stories of the past. Many history teachers might get their feathers ruffled a bit, but their complaints really should be ignored at this point. The men and women who teach history are often as dry as winter grass themselves, and are less interesting than the classes they purport to teach.
If we want young people to get excited about learning their history, then it needs to be more than lists of names and dates to be memorized then forgotten. The illustration of events from the past need to show the reality of battle, and the passion of love in a way that our textbooks deny them. Kids today are not nearly as naive as we were.
No one would suggest that our history be taught in such a manner that one would give it an NC-17 rating. However, the watered-down, hoarse-dry version being taught in schools today teaches them very little about how mankind has arrived to this point. It fails them by failing to give them the information they need to connect history with current events.
Modern historians are becoming much more radical in their research, and they have opened wide the doors of discussion on human history. If shows like Ancient Aliens can go on for more than seven seasons, then it is a clue that our time to rethink history class has come. Rewriting the disinformation and denials that have been the forefront of education must occur.
It is not simply not knowing the past which condemns mankind to repeated patterns of behavior. You can memorize all the dates, names, battles, and events you want. If we cannot teach in a way that connects this random stream of data to where humans are now, explaining why the world is in the state that exists, then go ahead and get ready for the next Dark Age.
These are basically comic books that utilize all the details historians and researchers know about certain events in history. Some details must be improvised, which is why they are regarded as fictional recollections. However, considering how our text books are written now, no amount of artists license could possible bend the truth any further than we already have.
Sometimes kids are inspired to become writers, but just as often comic books ignite their minds in a way that encourages them to be physicists, pilots, or astronauts. Science, math, and astronomy have always been part of comic book stories. When the young mind learns that how much of the colorful fiction they read is based in fact, it becomes their goal to pursue degrees in such fields.
If we can make the future seem so interesting to young readers, then is it such a crime to bring the same light and color to stories of the past. Many history teachers might get their feathers ruffled a bit, but their complaints really should be ignored at this point. The men and women who teach history are often as dry as winter grass themselves, and are less interesting than the classes they purport to teach.
If we want young people to get excited about learning their history, then it needs to be more than lists of names and dates to be memorized then forgotten. The illustration of events from the past need to show the reality of battle, and the passion of love in a way that our textbooks deny them. Kids today are not nearly as naive as we were.
No one would suggest that our history be taught in such a manner that one would give it an NC-17 rating. However, the watered-down, hoarse-dry version being taught in schools today teaches them very little about how mankind has arrived to this point. It fails them by failing to give them the information they need to connect history with current events.
Modern historians are becoming much more radical in their research, and they have opened wide the doors of discussion on human history. If shows like Ancient Aliens can go on for more than seven seasons, then it is a clue that our time to rethink history class has come. Rewriting the disinformation and denials that have been the forefront of education must occur.
It is not simply not knowing the past which condemns mankind to repeated patterns of behavior. You can memorize all the dates, names, battles, and events you want. If we cannot teach in a way that connects this random stream of data to where humans are now, explaining why the world is in the state that exists, then go ahead and get ready for the next Dark Age.
About the Author:
Read the interesting historical fiction graphic novels that are published by our acclaimed author. Order your copy now through this website http://www.albertnoyernovels.com/biography.
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