Friday, 22 August 2008

Manga images for EFL ESL

Many of our younger and even older students are exposed to and enjoy 'Manga' type cartoon art work. 'Face Your Manga' is a site which enables you and your students to easily create manga type image avatars, so I'd like to explore a few ways we could use this site for EFL ESL development.

The site is quite easy to use and you simply click through a few steps, selecting and adjusting different aspects of your avatar's appearance. Once the avatar is complete, you simply email it to yourself and download it onto you computer as a jpg image.


How can we use this with EFL ESL students?
Here are some activities you could try.
  • You could ask students to work at home and try to create an avatar that looks as much as possible like themselves. Ask the students to email their avatars to you. Print these up and then stick them round the class. When students come to class ask them to try to decide which avatars represent which students in the class. Once they have done this, try to get them to describe the features that helped them guess and which features they feel are different in the images from those of the real people.
  • Create a few manga images. Then put the students in pairs. Give one student the image and ask them to describe it to their partner (not show it). The partner of each pair then has to create the same image using the website.
  • Get students to create their alter ego avatar (someone who is the opposite of themselves). Ask them to bring or email the image to you. You can them print them and ask the students to work in pairs in class and describe the avatar to their partner and explain how the imaginary person is the opposite of themselves in appearance and personality etc.
  • Create a set of images and ask students to work in groups or pairs to create an imaginary profile for each character ( information regarding their job, personality, living circumstances, etc). Then ask students to imagine what the relationships between them are. Lastly, ask them to create a short story or soap opera including the characters. Students can then regroup and tell other students about their characters and the story they created.
  • Ask students to create an avatar of a specific person (yourself or a celebrity) then email you or bring their images to class. The students can then discuss and decide which looks more like the real person. This should produce a lot of comparing and contrasting type language ("His nose is bigger" 'The mouth is too big" etc.).
Here's an image of myself and my avatar as an example:



What I like about the site
  • The ability to create images of imaginary people is really useful for EFL ESL materials creation.
  • The art work is good and the number of different characters you can create is huge.
  • The site is free to use
  • Manga images are part of our learners' culture, so they are likely to find this more motivating
  • The interface is pretty easy to use.
What I wasn't so sure about
  • The site does try to charge users for immediate printing of their images. This isn't really necessary though as the quality of the emailed one is sufficient.
  • You have to submit and email address in order to get the image sent to you. (You could give your students your email address so that all the images are sent to you.)
  • You can create avatars which are making rude gestures! It might anyway be wise to deal with what these gestures mean and in which cultures they can be found offensive.
I hope you enjoy Face Your Manga and find these ideas useful. If you want to use an alterantive site that does a similar thing them you could have a look at my posting on DoppelMe

Related postings:
Best

Nik Peachey

4 comments:

Alicia said...

Nice idea, Nik- BTW have you tried
GoAnimate? It's for animations

I tried these ideas with it:
*
http://english_studio.blogspot.com/2008/08/len-starts-his-e-experience-at-school.html

*
http://english_studio.blogspot.com/2008/08/special-project-f-m-i-l-i-e-s.html

and I am planning to get some students at an elementary level to create videoclips of their favourite songs (like this):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MEST-5KT7HE

Then I also tried flowgram (at a BETA stage, that's why I had to use Voicethread in the end....)

http://english_studio.blogspot.com/2008/08/flowgrams-and-past-tense.html

and....since I'm just sharing thoughts / online discoveries of tools ....may be you like http://www.mystudiyo.com/, a wonderful site that lets you do stuff like this:

http://english_studio.blogspot.com/2008/08/mamma-mia-takes-box-office-crown.html


Well, a pleasure sharing with you!

All the best...

Anonymous said...

Very interesting resource to be used in the EFL classroom, mainly because I believe it may appeal to students since all the involving activities you mention that could be done might be useful to them in order to develop collaborative and sociolinguistic skills.

Anonymous said...

First impressions of this site indicate that the children would enjoy this tool just like they do with voki (www.voki.com). However, when you go through the options it becomes obvious that it really is not suitable for younger children. Take for instance the clothes for females that reveals a little too much and the option of the middle finger or two fingers. This is a great pity that the makers have placed a barrier to a tool that had great potetntial with children.

Sharon Tonner

Nik Peachey said...

Sharon

I agree Sharon, it is a shame. It depends though on the age and maturity of your students and the kind of cultural background they come from, as to how much and at what age you can use this. You could just ask them not to use the hand gestures, or you could actually deal with an explanation of why and tell students that they are offensive. Of course some students will always be more attracted to the things that are forbidden, so if you have students like this, then perhaps it's better not to use activities that give them free hands on use of the site.

Best

Nik

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