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'Highlights' Magazine Sticks To Winning Formula Of Mixing Fun With Learning

One of the more popular features in the magazine is "Hidden Pictures," the visual puzzle that challenges kids to find small pictures inside a larger scene.
Courtesy of Highlights for Children
One of the more popular features in the magazine is "Hidden Pictures," the visual puzzle that challenges kids to find small pictures inside a larger scene.

It can be hard to stay relevant in the ever-changing world of children's entertainment, but Highlights For Children magazine has lasted for generations by sticking to the formula of mixing fun with learning.

As Emily Burkhalter's third grade class at Evening Street Elementary School in Worthington, Ohio, is enjoying a free reading period, a top choice among the students is Highlights.

The kids are quick to list off their favorite parts of the magazine, from the articles to the puzzles. The most popular feature among the students is "Hidden Pictures," the visual puzzle that challenges kids to find small pictures inside a larger scene.

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Christine French Cully, Highlights' editor-in-chief, says it's one of several legacy features that are recurring elements of the magazine.

"They're nonnegotiable, they're in every issue. So for example, we always have a Hidden Pictures in every issue of Highlights, in fact, there's been a Hidden Pictures in every issue of highlights since June 1946," says French Cully, who adds that part of their success is due to these recurring games and stories.

Other legacy features include "The Timbertoes," an illustrated comic centered around a wood-carved family, which debuted in Highlights in 1951.

Then there's "Goofus and Gallant," a comic featuring two contrasting characters: Goofus modeling bad behavior, and Gallant modeling good. They first appeared in the pages of Highlights, as elves, in 1948.

"Part of its appeal to young children is its lack of ambiguity," says French Cully. "I mean it's a little black and white. It's practice for the big, harder moral decisions that are going to come later."

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Kent Johnson, Highlights' CEO, explains more of what Goofus and Gallant are trying to teach children.

"We're always aspiring to be our Gallant, but also if I do something that's a little Goofus how do I make up for it? How do I apologize? How do I make things right?" Johnson asks.

Johnson knows a thing or two about "Goofus and Gallant." His great-grandfather, Garry Cleveland Myers, created the comic and founded Highlights for Children with his wife Caroline just after World War II.

He says the secret to Highlights' longevity is to constantly remain focused on their number one priority: kids.

"I think adults believe that everything's changed for kids, we've got devices and it's busy and all these things," Johnson says. "But what we know is kids still have some of the same issues they've had since 1946. How do I get along with my siblings? What happens when I have a falling out with my best friend? Those things are universal. Those things aren't changing."

Ellen Barrett is a family development specialist with the nonprofit group Family Connections, in the Cleveland area. She says kids face all sorts of fast-paced entertainment with video games and movies. But Highlights found a way to slow things down and still capture kids' attention, with short articles and puzzles.

"Being able to do something, come back to it, seeing where you left off and where your work was, and then pick up where you left off I think is a really important part of how Highlights magazine can help with brain development," Barrett says.

But that doesn't mean Highlights isn't evolving.

The company has mobile apps, websites, a podcast, and a tablet version of the magazine.

"In terms of digital, we definitely bring the same experience that the magazine brings to life in a digital format," said Kerstin Reinhart, the director of digital business for Highlights. "We are creating those deeply engaging and fun, enriching experiences. It just happens to be in a different medium."

Johnson says being around as long as Highlights has means grappling with change without changing the foundation of who they are as a company.

"I often say inside the company...'we're not a magazine company,' and in fact, we never were," Johnson says. "If we keep in mind that we're not committed to magazines, we're not committed to a certain product type or technology, what we're committed to is making a positive impact on children, that frees us up to think, 'what has to stay the same?' Certain values, certain beliefs about children stay the same. Everything else can change."

And Highlights isn't turning away from its paper-based platform. In fact, it has other titles that are also distributed, such as High 5, which is geared for toddlers and Hello, a nearly indestructible book made for babies.

Meanwhile, Emily Burkhalter says getting students to read is a vital part of learning for third graders, and having Highlights in the classroom is a useful tool.

Copyright 2019 WOSU 89.7 NPR News. To see more, visit WOSU 89.7 NPR News.