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This Artist’s Comics Nail What It’s Like To Survive A School Day (29 Pics)
Interview With ArtistIf you’ve ever worked in a classroom or sat through one as a kid, the comics by Bruce Alderfer, the artist behind @chalkdust.comic, will hit way too close to home, even if their creator isn’t actually a teacher. Instead, "Chalkdust" was actually born from a playful experiment: Bruce took characters from different comics he’d created over the years and threw them all together in the same classroom, much to their own dismay.
The teacher, Mr. Phillips, originally starred as the main character in Bruce’s college newspaper comic strip, while students like Grant, Lightbulb, and Molly came from another series Bruce made shortly after graduation. The result? A classroom full of clashing personalities, constant surprises, and classic school chaos.
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“The teacher in Chalkdust, Mr. Phillips, was actually the main character of the comic strip I created for my college newspaper,” Bruce shares with Bored Panda. After graduation, he started another comic featuring students like Grant, Lightbulb, and Molly. “That comic wasn’t really coming together for me,” he admits, “but I realized they needed a straight man to play off of. Mr. Phillips—who was known in my college strip as Jake—fit that role perfectly.”
Bringing them all together under one school roof made sense, and Chalkdust was born. Despite the academic setting, Bruce doesn’t draw from classroom experience. “The gags and storylines don’t come from front-line experience in the classroom. Instead, I let the characters dictate the story.” The current arc, titled Voter Turnout, was sparked by a simple question: “What kind of chaos would ensue if they had to hold an election?” From there, the cast took over, and the plot practically wrote itself.
What makes Chalkdust so relatable, then? It might be Bruce’s knack for channeling the universal chaos of group dynamics through expressive, mismatched personalities. “Once the ball got rolling, it felt less like I was writing the series and more like I was letting the characters tell me what they wanted to say,” he explained.
Even educators have taken notice. “I’ve heard from teachers who’ve read the strip, and while they get a chuckle from the outrageous shenanigans in the comic, they tell me some real-life stories that rival anything I can come up with,” the artist told us. At the end of the day, he hopes Chalkdust brings a little joy to readers, whether you’re teaching a class, sitting in one, or just glad to have made it out.
As a child of 2 teachers. Endless holidays mid term in October ( 1 week) Christmas is 2 or 3 weeks. Mid term for another week in feb. Easter is 2 weeks . Then 2-3 months off in summer fully paid. ( this is Ireland) until me and siblings worked they didn’t really get we work over the summer ..and don’t get little breaks in the morning and lunch and THEN finish at 3/4pm. That’s a half day to most of us. My dad keeps asking me why I have a rucksack. No understanding now ( he’s in 80s) of laptops work and personal phones/ chargers..
As a child of 2 teachers. Endless holidays mid term in October ( 1 week) Christmas is 2 or 3 weeks. Mid term for another week in feb. Easter is 2 weeks . Then 2-3 months off in summer fully paid. ( this is Ireland) until me and siblings worked they didn’t really get we work over the summer ..and don’t get little breaks in the morning and lunch and THEN finish at 3/4pm. That’s a half day to most of us. My dad keeps asking me why I have a rucksack. No understanding now ( he’s in 80s) of laptops work and personal phones/ chargers..