Bitstrips offer lagging writers fun setting to explore written word
Bitstrips app lets users generate 鈥 and star in 鈥 their own comic strips. One mom found that the program helped her 9-year-old son get excited about writing.
Bitstrips app lets users generate 鈥 and star in 鈥 their own comic strips. One mom found that the program helped her 9-year-old son get excited about writing.
Parents who want to help boys who are reluctant writers may want to learn more about聽Bitstrips,聽the new free interactive comic strip app sweeping the Facebook landscape.
The聽app called Bitstrips聽launched its 1.1.7 version for iPhone, iPod, and iOS users this week as well as on Google Play for Android users. According to the International Business Times, it currently has more than 10 million users.
Bitstrips is a customizable avatar-creation tool on the Web that lets users create and share comics of themselves and others with personalized messages.
As a parent I saw two opportunities in this new app: 1. Connect with my teens in the cutting edge technosphere via adding them to my playlist of avatar/characters for the strips. 2. Connect our youngest son, Quinten, age 9, to writing.
Quin is mainly an A student with the exception of writing, which is a steady C.
I can tell you firsthand that difficulties in writing can be devastating to a child's education and self-esteem. Despite all his successes, what he sees as 鈥渆pic failure in writing鈥 and communicating his ideas on paper hurts Quin鈥檚 learning.
In a meeting before the start of the school year here in Norfolk, Va., I was lucky to find we had a new principal,聽Dennis Fifer,聽who has a keen understanding of boys and writing issues.
He listened to the teacher describe my son鈥檚 inability to put his thoughts onto paper and suggested to the teacher that Quin be allowed to make his own comic strips instead.
Mr. Fifer explained that most boys lag behind girls in both handwriting and story writing. It鈥檚 sometimes called 鈥減encil anxiety鈥 because the coordinative lag in handwiring in boys leads to reluctance to use that pencil to write. He suggested a keyboard in place of a pencil and a comic strip in place of an essay.
Quin loved the idea of drawing his own strip in place of his regular essay for school.
However, this was not a perfect system. Quin鈥檚 first essay on the assigned theme, 鈥淏elieve in yourself, dream big, inspire others,鈥 ended up featuring him as a Minecraft character creating a portal from our world to the game world to defeat pollution and coastal flooding via the Lego League of Justice.
I realized Quin couldn鈥檛 get the hang of it by simply reading the聽Sunday聽funnies or a comic book because he is so literal in his thinking that he could not make the leap from someone else鈥檚 imagination to using his own.
Enter Bitstrips and a daily example of how mom and his favorite big brother, Zoltan, are living in an alternate comicverse on Facebook.
You can either download the free app to your mobile device or access the app on聽Facebook, or on聽Android, or on iOS via app stores or Google Play.聽Bitstrips for Schools offers teachers the program for classroom use.
Then create an avatar of yourself based on your appearance with customizable hair, clothes, facial features, and body type. Next, choose from numerous pre-made scenes and scenarios.
You can also create avatars for friends who haven鈥檛 already signed up for Bitstrips, which Quin did with great glee for his brothers, me, and his father to include in his adventures.
Kids can add the script by typing in his own dialogue and captions or see them randomly generated.
You could almost hear an audible 鈥渃lick鈥 when Quin saw the first strip generated.
鈥淥h! I get it,鈥 Quin said looking at a comic of a cartoon me and Zoltan on a see-saw. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 actually get the jokes, but I get it. Can I try?鈥
It鈥檚 actually good that he doesn鈥檛 have his own Facebook account because it鈥檚 forcing him to think outside himself when writing stories.
It鈥檚 a relief that Quin is engaged in writing and storytelling. Perhaps it鈥檚 a greater relief to see that the avatar he made of me represented more of his ideal than my reality. Win-win.