"I am not a teacher, but an awakener."
– Robert Frost
Wake up! Wake up!
It's time for Poetry Friday!
We're focusing on poetry in the classroom this month at Today's Little Ditty.
Last Friday I interviewed Nikki Grimes about how best to incorporate poetry into middle and high school classrooms. Today I'd like to talk about elementary classrooms, as well.
Many thanks to Renée LaTulippe for featuring me
at No Water River last week! I'm honored to be included in her extensive
Poetry Video Library, reading two poems from
The Best of Today's Little Ditty, Volumes 1 and 2. Besides being great little collections, however, I
wonder if people realize how useful these books can be in the
classroom.
Available in paperback ($9.95) and Kindle ($5.95) editions at Amazon.com.
The 2016 edition even has a separate section called "Using Poetry in the Classroom." It includes information about Poetry Friday, plus a few websites that are particularly helpful when it comes to incorporating poetry into lesson plans. Along with
No Water River, there's Sylvia Vardell's
Poetry for Children, Amy Ludwig VanDerwater's
The Poem Farm, Laura Purdie Salas's
Writing the World for Kids, and Margaret Simon's
Reflections on the Teche.
I quite like this recommendation that
Janet Wong gave me for the back cover of the 2016 edition:
How to build your skills as a children's poet? Read anthologies! The Best of Today's Little Ditty is a great tutorial because each section contains several poems written from the same prompt. Maybe you'll find the best thing of all: that you write like no one other than yourself.
Janet's words apply equally well to student poets! Since I've become more active as a poet-teacher, I realize first
hand how useful— and
versatile the DMC challenges are. During last week's Poetry Friday rounds, I came across
Jone MacCulloch's post about student revision. The form she was using with her elementary students (some as young as kindergarteners) was adapted from
Helen Frost's March 2017 challenge to write a specific type of ode poem. Wouldn't you know, I used the same challenge when I was working in a
high school classroom the week before!
Here's the group poem the high schoolers and I worked on together:
Fog
You feel hazy today,
yet crisp like winter air.
I hear your suffocating silence.
When I look, you disappear
into the pea soup thickness of memory.
What secrets are you keeping?
But enough about
my experience in the classroom. Today I've invited a number of more experienced teachers and poet-teachers to contribute their own simple and practical tips for successfully engaging, inspiring, and otherwise connecting students with poetry in fun and meaningful ways. (The tips are for teachers of all age groups unless otherwise noted.) With National Poetry Month right around the corner, it's a terrific opportunity for all of us to refresh our tool bags with some new approaches to poetry education.
From Ed Spicer:
If you want students to love poetry, you have to read poetry to them regularly. Tuesday was my poetry day in first grade. We wrote poetry, read poetry, figured out patterns, counted syllables, and more. Every Tuesday! The whole year! But poetry and rhyming words and alliteration and word rhythm, etc. snuck their way into Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays too. I cannot imagine teaching writing without poetry, but the reasons why are too many to include here. My first graders loved poetry, in part, because I love poetry. Part of the reason I love it so much is because it accelerates the learning and thinking process in young minds. It builds flexibility, empowers students, and fosters empathy, which is essential for instilling kindness.
From Christie Wyman:
Poetry Tip for Kindergarten (could be PreK through 1st Grade, though)
Select a “Poem of the Week” that the class studies in-depth. In addition to a large shared reading copy on a chart to interact with all week, provide an individual copy for their poetry notebook with space for illustrating and writing a response sentence or two. Ask students to draw the image created in their head when listening to and thinking about the poem.
While this "tip" isn't anything original, I think it's a powerful language routine of sorts. Many teachers have a poem of the week, but they often ask students to circle sight words and/or sounds. While we can certainly focus on these skills in a whole group setting, I love to keep the integrity of the poem as a whole. This imagery-focused task isn't often done, from what I've seen. The conversations that stem from this work are amazing!
From Heidi Mordhorst:
Here's my list of "beginner poetry concepts" and a couple of poems that help kids K-2 grasp each idea.
1) Poets choose to write about one small thing.
"Rain Song" by Langston Hughes or "Ode to Watermelon" by Pablo Neruda
2) Poets choose words that sound good together.
"Hey, Bug" by Lilian Moore or "Fish" by Mary Ann Hoberman
3) Poets choose where to put their words.
"My Mouth" by Arnold Adoff or "Balloon" by Colleen Thibaudeau
4) Poets create strong feelings.
"Night Comes..." Bernice Schenk de Regniers or "Keepsake" by Eloise Greenfield
From Margaret Simon:
Read a lot of poetry. Find the ones you love. Collect words, mimic form, write, write, write. Then share. Poetry is meant to be read aloud and shared with people you trust. (This could be written in a poem form. Ha!)
From Linda Baie:
Using previous years' student poems, encourage students to read what others wrote in the past, to see they could do it, too. Then read published poems from all kinds of books. Sharing their favorites—poems and sometimes just a line—and why, helps students "see" the poetic in all its variations. They read and explore, begin to choose what they like and want to attempt themselves.
From Mary Lee Hahn:
Ask yourself, "Can I accomplish this (task, standard, teaching point) with poetry?" Such a question gave me and one of my teaching partners the perfect Black History Month project: Our students have studied the poetry of 8 Black poets, 2 per week for 4 weeks.
From Sylvia Vardell:
And I would offer a corollary to Mary Lee's mantra.... when you plan a lesson or unit or gather a list or set of books, ask yourself, "Did I remember to include poetry?" Adding a poem or book of poetry is always a good idea and broadens the literary models kids experience and enabling cross-genre connections. Plus... FUN!
One more thing: OBVIOUSLY, I would want to recommend the "Take 5" approach for sharing poetry! It's a simple, pedagogically sound approach that teachers can lean on and children participate in. In a nutshell, first (1) the teacher reads the poem aloud with a bit of pizzazz (a prop, movement, visuals), (2) then the students join in to read the poem aloud with the teacher (e.g., chiming in on a key word, repeated line, or final line), (3) then you pause to chat about the poem (e.g. what does it remind you of or make you wonder), (4) then you focus on one key skill (e.g., rhyme, alliteration, similes or connect with a related picture book), and finally (5) follow up with ANOTHER poem that is similar in some way or for contrast or just for fun. Voila! Instant poem lesson in five minutes!
From Buffy Silverman:
Bring a little nature inside. It can be something as simple as tree leaves, a fallen stick, shells, a feather, a stuffed animal, or photos that you clip from a magazine. Use your nature items to brainstorm a list of words, memories, sensory items. Have students "steal" strong verbs, nouns from a poem that you read aloud (I've done this with Joyce Sidman's "Welcome to the Night.") Choose some words/memories from your list. Borrow some words from a classmate's list. Start to write.
From JoAnn Early Macken:
Inspiration
is all around us. You can find it in two simple steps: Slow down and
pay attention. And if your senses are sharp, the second one might be
enough!
From Laura Purdie Salas:
Write poetry WITH your students! It's intimidating, but SO valuable. Talking through your process aloud as you write in front of students gives kids tremendous insight and courage. It also can help create a real feeling of trust, exploration, playfulness, and authenticity in writing. (Also, they will soon suggest ways to improve your poems, so it leads naturally into the next step of them writing their own poems.)
From Irene Latham:
I like to start with a poetry acrostic—
and then we look at examples to illustrate each line. After we write together, I ask students to use the acrostic as a checklist to prompt revisions. When we share our poems, the acrostic also gives students a framework for providing feedback to peers.
From Amy Ludwig VanDerwater:
To encourage students, here is a little tip that has always helped me.
If
you write a poem, read it out loud. Then ask someone else to read it
out loud. Listen deeply to your words in the air, and you will know
where to revise.
From Janet Wong:
When teaching revision, I tell students just to try to make Draft 2 “different, not better.” For instance, if Draft 1 rhymed, use zero rhyme in Draft 2. If Draft 1 didn’t use repetition, pick a favorite word to repeat a few times in Draft 2. If Draft 1 was 10 lines, cut it in half for Draft 2. Then take your favorite parts from Draft 1 plus your favorite parts from Draft 2, and add a few more words here and there to make Draft 3. Poetry is the best genre for teaching revision.
From Kathryn Apel:
Play with words, for the sheer joy of it. No rules—just creativity. What
sounds good when read aloud? Write a stream of alliteration, or rollicking rhyming words. Stretch the reader’s imagination with similes and metaphors. Surprise yourself—and have fun! (Shape poetry is a perfect springboard for this.)
From Laura Shovan:
Similes are a powerful tool!
There is a big difference between saying, "It was cold outside" and "It
was as cold as an Antarctic ice skating rink." A simile creates a
specific picture in your reader's mind.
|
April Halprin Wayland
– dressed for success! |
From April Halprin Wayland:
Repetition is another powerful tool in the poet's toolbox.
Ask your students to choose one poem they have written and add repetition.
This might mean their first line and last line are the same (this is an envelope poem), or they may choose to repeat one line just once, as Robert Frost does in
Stopping By the Woods on a Snowy Evening, and Langston Hughes does in
Dreams, or they may repeat just one word, as Gwendolyn Brooks does in
We Real Cool.
Have them read the first version and then the second version aloud and discuss.
From Jone MacCulloch:
To tag onto what others have said, I have students research animals, places, and people and then use the notes to create poems. Of course, they choose one, not all. And sometimes it's tied in with classroom curriculum. I also model for students, and show students other student work.
From Linda Mitchell:
As a school librarian, my influence is different than that of a classroom teacher. However, I have some poetry go-tos at the ready for teachers and students always. For teachers, loan out our professional and my personal copy of
The Poetry Friday Anthology for Celebrations (Pomelo Books). Whenever pertinent poetry articles pop up on my twitter feed or Library of Congress e-mail subscription, I send it to teachers in as a link and as a document they can print. For teachers and students, I have a resource list of every novel in verse in our catalog. National Junior Honor Society students prepare poems in pockets for the school in April. Poetry is something my students and colleagues associate with me, so I enjoy being their resource with my passion.
Updated 3/29/18:
These tips are now available in a downloadable/printable format by clicking on the "Teacher Tips" graphic in the right sidebar.
THANK YOU to this generous bunch of educators for sharing tried-and-tested tips, activities, and methods for teaching poetry in the classroom. I do know there are more of you out there, however! If you have a tip to suggest, would you please share it in the comments?
And now, without further ado . . .
For those with links to share, please leave them below.
Our golden shovel challenge is off to a great start! This week's daily ditties included work by
Margaret Simon,
Angelique Pacheco, and
Donna JT Smith. Molly Hogan shared two golden shovels this week at
Nix the Comfort Zone, and others were shared today by
Linda Baie and
Carol Varsalona. To participate in this month's challenge, add your poem to the
March 2018 padlet. At the end of March, one lucky participant will win a copy of Nikki Grimes newest novel in prose and poetry—
Between the Lines (Nancy Paulsen Books, 2018)