Twa kɔ nsɛm atitiriw so
Log in
Sign up for FREE
arrow_back
Laabri

National Comic Book Day: Character Reveal & POV Remix

star
star
star
star
star
Last updated 26 days ago
11 Nsɛmmisa
Day 1 focuses on planning your story, characters, and point of view before you draw full pages.
Ɛhia
4
Ɛhia
4
Ɛhia
1
Ɛhia
1
Ɛhia
1
Ɛhia
1
Ɛhia
1
Day 2 is your rough draft. Focus on getting the full story down first.
Ɛhia
5
4
Ɛhia
1
Day 4 is your artist statement and reflection on craft choices.
Ɛhia
4

**National Comic Book Day Activity (Grades 3–12 ELA)** Create a short comic **right here in Formative** using a mix of **drawing + typing** (captions, dialogue, thought bubbles). **Choose ONE pathway:** - **Option A: Character Reveal Comic** — Your comic should reveal character traits through actions, dialogue, and choices. - **Option B: POV Remix** — Retell the same event from a different point of view (first-person, third-person limited, or third-person omniscient). **Success criteria (both options):** - Clear narrative structure (beginning → middle → end) - Characterization (traits revealed through actions, dialogue, and choices) - Theme (a message about life, people, or society) - Point of view (POV) is intentional and consistent - Conventions: spelling, punctuation, and readable lettering **Choose your challenge level:** - **Grades 3–5:** 3 panels; simple problem/solution; theme as a lesson; mostly captions - **Grades 6–8:** 4–6 panels; dialogue + captions; theme + 2 supporting moments - **Grades 9–12:** 6–8 panels; add subtext/irony or motif; consider an unreliable narrator in the POV remix When you finish, double-check your work and submit.

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
1.

Day 1 — Thumbnail Plan (Story Map)

Create quick thumbnail sketches (tiny drawings) to plan your comic.

Directions:

  • Draw simple stick figures/shapes—focus on sequence and pacing

  • Add quick notes for captions/dialogue under each thumbnail

Choose one track:

  • One-scene comic: plan 6–8 panels for one complete scene

  • Multi-page comic: plan Page 1–3 (each page can have 3–6 panels)

Must show:

  • Beginning → middle → end

  • Where the problem starts, where it gets worse, and how it resolves

  • Where your theme is revealed (at least 2 moments)

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
2.

Day 1 — Thumbnail Plan (Story Map)

Create quick thumbnail sketches (tiny drawings) to plan your comic.

Directions:

  • Draw simple stick figures/shapes—focus on sequence and pacing

  • Add quick notes for captions/dialogue under each thumbnail

Choose one track:

  • One-scene comic: plan 6–8 panels for one complete scene

  • Multi-page comic: plan Page 1–3 (each page can have 3–6 panels)

Must show:

  • Beginning → middle → end

  • Where the problem starts, where it gets worse, and how it resolves

  • Where your theme is revealed (at least 2 moments)

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
3.

Day 1 Checkpoint — POV Choice:

What point of view will you use for your comic? (first-person, third-person limited, or third-person omniscient)

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
4.

Day 1 Checkpoint — POV Choice:

What point of view will you use for your comic? (first-person, third-person limited, or third-person omniscient)

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
5.

Day 1 Mini-Lesson Check — Showing Character Traits

Which detail BEST shows characterization (a character trait revealed through actions or words)?

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
6.

Day 1 Mini-Lesson Check — Theme

A story can have a theme even if the theme is never stated directly.

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
7.

Day 1 Checkpoint — Theme in 3 words or less:

In three words or less, name your comic’s theme/message.

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
8.

Day 3 — Final Comic: Page/Scene 1 (Clean Copy)

Create your final, polished version of Page/Scene 1.

Revision targets (do these):

  • Improve lettering (clear, consistent size)

  • Tighten dialogue (sounds like the character)

  • Add visual clarity (expressions, actions, setting details)

Publishing checklist:

  • Panels are easy to follow

  • Bubbles point to the speaker

  • Spelling/punctuation is edited

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
9.

Day 3 — Final Comic: Page/Scene 2 (If multi-page OR if you continued)

Create a final, polished version of your next page/scene.

Must show at least one:

  • Turning point

  • Resolution

Craft move (pick one):

  • Add subtext (what is meant vs. what is said)

  • Add a motif/symbol that repeats with meaning

  • Use panel size/shape to control pacing

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
10.

Day 3 Checkpoint — Biggest Revision:

Name one change you made from your draft to your final that improved the story (not just the art).

Asemmisa {{asɛmmisaAhyɛnsode}}
11.

Day 4 — Artist Statement (1 short paragraph):

Explain your theme, point of view, and characterization choices.

Cite at least two specific moments from your comic (actions, dialogue, captions, or visuals) and explain how they support the message you want readers to take away.