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COMICS IN EDUCATION
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    • Our Philosophy
    • The Challenges
    • Missed a Post?
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      • Cave of Altamira
      • Tutankhamun's Tomb
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      • A Rake's Progress
    • Terminology >
      • Defining the Form
      • The Language of Comics
      • Filmic Language, Part 1
      • Filmic Language, Part 2
      • Language of the Gaze
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COMICS IN EDUCATION
What's new?

Literary Terms Posters Inspired by Pulp Comics

3/3/2015
Glen Downey, Comics in Education, www.comicsineducation.com
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Decorate Your Classroom with Posters that Rock!

Now available in the Comics in Education Store are these bad boys: Literary Terms posters inspired by comics from the 1930s, 40s, and 50s! The posters are Tabloid-sized (11x17") and feature a literary term, its definition, its use in a pulp comic panel, and a brief explanation of how the literary device works!

It's clear that in recent years, comics and graphic novels have been used with great success in the classroom in order to inspire reluctant readers, but here they make a great addition to a poster that your students might otherwise pass by.

Check them out today in our store!
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    Glen Downey

    Dr. Glen Downey is an award-winning children's author, educator, and academic from Oakville, Ontario. He works as a children's writer for Rubicon Publishing, a reviewer for PW Comics World, an editor for the Sequart Organization, and serves as the Chair of English and Drama at The York School in Toronto.


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