
To make Japan liked, what should we do? It’s the direction of Japan’s market opening and trade liberalization! The mindset of “as long as my own country becomes prosperous” is already outdated! It is essential for countries around the world to join hands and move forward together.
I don’t remember.
Ninja training thing.
It’s some sort of red Doraemon.
>>3
Market liberalization is not necessarily related to communism.
>>9
It’s true, but it seems that the current U.S. president and the White House think the same way, which is why they are raising tariffs.
>>53
As expected of Nameless.
More foolish than Trump!
>>3
If you see an unusual Masaharu stance, everything looks red, like McCarthy or something.
>>3
It was an idealistic theory that the United States had been advocating until just a few months ago.
Those who talk about globalization.
>>3
Isn’t this just stupid like Yeah37?
>>141
Regrettable.
It’s the one that teaches you mysterious calculations like turtle and crane problems or distribution problems.
>>4
Is it the one that goes to space?
>>4
Isn’t that the one where the final boss gets scolded by their mother?
The truth about dinosaur extinction!
Dinosaurs were aliens and they all escaped from the meteorite in a spaceship (not everyone could be saved)!!
Proverb thing.
The thread image has a pretty strong ideology.
Nobita eventually learns to do a handspring.
A thing that teaches you how to jump over a vaulting box.
In the story, the only ones who could perform something called a handspring were minions of the enemy, like frogs.
A giant native person’s nose enters the body to learn about its structure.
There were underground people studying space, right?
The one where Gian has become a greengrocer with mixed settings.
Fractions and Decimals
Someone doing unusually advanced things with norimaki (seaweed sushi rolls) and juice.
>>14
I remember that the old snacks and juice made me have an upset stomach.
I have a strong memory of being particularly drawn to the idea of Spaceship Earth.
It’s like a secret about the body.
I was curious about why the mascot that guides you through the body is sometimes depicted with a horror aesthetic.
There was also a hardcover version, but it’s uncertain whether that was part of Gakken’s educational manga series.
I had everything from dinosaurs to animals, the Earth, and insects.
It’s probably a different series because it was excerpted from the original manga, not the original.
A guy who teaches proverbs in four panels.
You could say that I developed most of my Japanese language skills with that.
The one where four people enter Gian.
My eyes are quite something, huh?
I only remember the part where they mention suki-nabe or sukiyaki.
The expression of losing sanity and having crossed eyes is also in the original work…
The image in the thread is not about red but about globalization.
Someone who becomes Gian’s poop.
Globalism is like the ultimate form of radical liberalism, so it’s actually something that is in opposition to socialism.
I wonder if there are still educational comics that have manga characters discussing political topics.
>>28
It’s Tanjiro talking about the post-war regime…
I hardly remember, but it’s the one where Gian’s stew appears.
There is much to learn from the main Dragon Ball series.
React with a “Whoa!” feeling.
A sequel to something like a dragon knight intertwined with oneself and geological layers.
Banho’s best friend was an enemy, but while Nobita’s family was napping in Doraemon’s pocket, I thought it was a bit questionable from a child’s perspective to steal it and leave without doing anything to Doraemon himself.
The ideal of education is to provide sufficient knowledge and leave the interpretation to the student, but without interpretation, it doesn’t make any sense.
Understanding the first problem was good, but the second one somehow didn’t feel right.
Ta-da!
Nobita becomes a mosquito and is driven by the desire to suck everyone’s blood.
Soon, a teaching manga will appear where Freiren says something like, “I’m an elf, so I don’t really understand politics…”
>>39
I think it would be a good match because they seem to show understanding for policies related to children born this year becoming adults and public works that will be completed in 50 years.
I remember reading a fair amount of math-related things.
I feel like there were two series: one with a regular cover and another that was unusually metallic…
Looking at it now, I wonder why this was a historical explanation manga for elementary school.
Did it slip past some sort of check by Shogakukan?
>>42
They’re bringing in scholars for supervision on this kind of thing.
From Shogakukan’s perspective, it’s not a case of oversight, but rather that the scholars’ ideologies were stronger than expected, and they couldn’t stop it.
In other words, it’s highly likely that the editors at Shogakukan were the ones promoting this idea.
>>47
Historical and social learning comics fundamentally start with an ideology, don’t they?
Ignoring basic dissent and presenting this as correct to children as if it’s a matter of course.
>>47
When I researched the supervision of educational manga like Doraemon and Conan,
There are some unfortunate volumes that are supervised by nothing more than kindergartens or schools that aren’t even scholars.
It’s like a secret of the body.
Let me explain.
Let’s do that.
Let’s stop.
Let’s do that.
A conversation like that.
I think it was about cotyledons… probably science.
Doraemon had a comic that introduced robots.
I read something about how to swim and do the vaulting horse.
The result is this.
I remember there was something where you got attacked by a robot that was like a time management clock because your time machine license expired.
Mom, Dad, and Doraemon drop it on the floor, step on it, and let the cockroaches feast on the fried chicken covered in insecticide, feeding it all to the clueless Nobita.
>>55
I vaguely remember something…
It’s about entering the world of an RPG and studying math while adventuring with the usual five people.
The enemy characters looked just like the moms and teachers, but it turned out that they were actually inside the game to make Nobita study.
I was puzzled as to why Doraemon had already entered the game world with the tools he took out of his pocket… but the manga itself is quite funny with a lot of parodies.
Doraemon Mystery Exploration Series
It’s the one that occasionally leads to the theory about avoiding high heel poop.
Well, regardless of the merits of the ideology itself, you can’t write an educational book without an ideology you want to convey.
Having both arguments is the best, but it confuses the children.
>>59
It can stand on its own with just the facts; there is no need to inject ideology or interpretation into it.
If you say that children are confused, putting ideology into them will lead to greater chaos in the future, right?
Yes! It was very helpful. I’m glad it was worth teaching. I’ve been studying Japanese constitution and politics so far, how about you? The constitution is also something created by people. Regardless of what it is, it can be good or bad depending on its application. Democratic politics is a wonderful system because the citizens can participate in politics and decide the direction of the country’s politics themselves. I want to spread a wonderful system to the universe, using the Japanese Constitution and democratic politics as references. (190)
F also leaves behind message columns that are relatively aimed at children, like “What is Spaceship Earth?” so, well…
I had a vegetable stir-fry with garlic chives and liver, but thinking about it now, that was definitely Dr. Hokura’s dish.
There are many people who, while pretending to be politically neutral, lack the awareness that their belief of not recognizing extreme and biased ideologies is, in itself, an extremely biased ideology.
>>64
The bulletin board is the last bastion of internet right-wingers who have lost their place in reality.
>>65
Scary
I miss that math stuff.
The Wake alien and the Demon King alien and their moms showed up, right?
“Crime is not good, but is it really the ideal human condition to advocate for suffering through committing sins rather than silently dying? Do you want to present this kind of dual argument to kids?”
>>67
Isn’t that kind of argument normally found in children’s anime or something?
>>73
The understanding is just too immature…
I liked the small booklet that came as a supplement to the grade-level magazine, teaching camping and survival knowledge.
By the time this manga was drawn, free trade was probably already in place.
Let the guest characters say things like “Hmm” or “I see” in shows like Doraemon and Nobita.
I’m doing this knowing that, so it’s too much.
>>74
You idiot.
This thread clearly shows that Japanese people are an inferior ethnic group that doesn’t even understand the basics of modern society.
In the first place, educational manga is a biased creation made with the intent of teaching children about society using popular characters in a comic medium.
The ideology embedded in that manga’s content is already a trivial issue.
I think saying that presenting both sides will confuse children is seriously underestimating them.
>>79
“If there are thoughts like ‘there is this kind of perspective, but on the other hand, there is also this kind of perspective,’ it may not be so difficult for children.”
Since it takes the form of a manga, there needs to be a resolution in the story regarding which ideology the characters support.
“It says on the last page, ‘Nobita and the others have come to support this theory, but that doesn’t necessarily mean it is correct,’ but then you have to wonder what this story was all about.”
There was a series where Nobita was unusually confident and proclaimed himself a genius at every opportunity, right?
I remember being told in a manga or something about idioms to make sweet red bean soup just right, and I added double the amount of salt to the red bean paste.
I was laughing like an idiot at the scene where something entered the body, poked the intestinal wall, and then it was like “ouch…” while licking my finger and also licking poop.
I had a dictionary of funny sayings and quotes from Doraemon on hand, so I decided to open it up.
Isn’t the use of proverbs full of mistakes, making it unsuitable for educational purposes?
>>87
Because it makes money.
To treat ideas from influential theories to absurd and strange claims put forth by obscure scholars on the same level for the sake of true dual listing, excluding ideology…
Well… the moment they are lined up in the same order, ideology intervenes in the sequence…
>>91
Is it really okay to speak ill of Nobunaga like that…?
You turned the Black Yasuke into a samurai, right? That’s impressive.
>>97
It’s clear that those spreading Japan hate like UBI are practicing neoliberalism.
In other words, neoliberalism is basically communism.
>>93
Strong ideology, anonymous participation!
The character Fukuruma-sensei that appears in the swimming learning manga is definitely a moving Dutch wife, no matter how you think about it…
At home with Doraemi~
Every day you can learn happily with DoraDoraDoraAcademy~
I have a memory of laughing so hard my stomach hurt when I saw Doraemon getting stuck after doing a front flip with his feet on the horizontal bar.
Something about math.
I remember studying about a very cold-sensitive underground person and celestial bodies.
I learned that the time it takes for light to travel from the Earth to the Moon is just a little over 1.2 seconds.
>>101
I have a memory of Doraemon appearing while talking about the nice last quarter moon.
Both America and China are completely opposite to the narrative of Doraemon in the image.
>>103
With this ideology, if a war breaks out, you’ll become a disliked person.
It is very inconvenient if it assumes to wake up.
It’s a bit different, but the character column occasionally features cutouts from the original work or from the Minotaur’s plate.
I had a book where a teacher who loves plasma taught me various science trivia.
I think there were about two books featuring the original enemy character called the Calculation Demon.
“But isn’t there such a problem? There are also opinions like this.”
“Well, being extreme isn’t good…”
Let’s wrap it up nicely like that.
The thread image is exactly that, but it’s filled with a scent of imitation art and it’s fun, right? The world of educational manga about dragons.
>>110
It seems like it was drawn by Professor F’s assistant, but when I was a child, I didn’t understand what this was and felt confused.
>>111
It was mostly like a supplementary book similar to the “Doraemon Secret Gadget Encyclopedia” or something like that.
A person who practices the proverb “test the stone bridge before crossing” but ends up breaking the stone bridge.
Depending on the content of the lesson, I feel that the setting of coming from the future might significantly hinder progress.
The one who competes against Bahamut in calculations.
Considering the movements in post-war Japan, the thread image is more like an ideology or premise.
I liked the one where you make a space shuttle with a straw that blows out a wind strong enough to lift the body.
>>116
That’s not a manga for learning, it’s the original work, isn’t it…?
>>117
Maybe there are some stories based on original works that are aligned with the theme in the series of educational comics, is that it?
It’s the one with a space theme that also features Harry’s tail.
>>116
Isn’t it the main story, not a study manga?
I’m grateful to the guy with the horizontal bar because he has been able to do various tricks thanks to that.
Since I read it to elementary school students, I don’t know if I can do it now.
It’s a bit different, but the “Doraemon” textbook about internet manners covered cutting-edge content for its time, and looking back now, I think it’s an amazing book.
I remembered what was said in the thread, but I think the Doraemon books about fractions, decimals, time, and distance are masterpieces that children who don’t understand math well should definitely read.
>>122
Is the one that helps with fraction studies called BaiBai?
I’ve read things like turtle and crane problems and four-character idioms, and I had about 20 books, but I don’t recognize any of the ones posted.
Was the ideology that strong…
The thing about the turtle and crane math is that if you calculate it according to the rules, the spaceships end up colliding with each other! That’s something that leaves a strong impression on a child’s heart.
It’s not important that the calculations are correct; what matters is whether you can anticipate what will happen based on the results of the calculations. That was a thought-provoking question that went a step further.
This is one of the manga series that can be legally read in libraries alongside Barefoot Gen and Phoenix.
The part about the turtle and crane calculation, where the gorilla that helped at the end comes to the rescue, was an exciting development…
Doraemon~!
I want to create a country where all citizens can live happily.
There are various books being published, but didn’t Doraemon used to be this knowledgeable?
It’s not an educational comic, but it’s Doraemon’s invention class.
I remember there were very few people who gave compliments sincerely.
If it includes any political context, calling it “red” or saying it has strong ideologies is just too much of an allergy.
I liked the science guy’s drawings because they were stable.
The quality varies quite a bit depending on the assistant who is drawing.
When you think of Doraemon as a robot from the future with the technology to easily do that, it really makes you feel the harshness of it.
There are also history mangas about Doraemon that are not in the thread.
Nobita becomes friends with a great person who meets a tragic end, but since he can’t change history, all he can do is watch when that person dies.
>>135
What a harsh story to tell…
>>137
Moreover, Emperor Antoku and Toyotomi Hideyori.
The Toyotomi clan is falling! I’m sorry, Hideyori, that I can’t help you. Responsibility, what do you mean? That’s not how it will go. I have a responsibility too. It can’t be helped… History cannot be changed, after all. Farewell, Nobita-kun, Doraemon. Nobita-kun, it’s dangerous! Hideyori-san!
Seriously…