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Today we are going to learn how to:

Today we are going to learn how to:. analyse and compare concrete poems.  To continue a concrete poem using the features that we have learnt. You will know that you have succeeded when you have a concrete poem that:. Has the rhythm scheme (ABCBDEB)

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Today we are going to learn how to:

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  1. Today we are going to learn how to: • analyse and compare concrete poems. •  To continue a concrete poem using the features that we have learnt.

  2. You will know that you have succeeded when you have a concrete poem that: • Has the rhythm scheme (ABCBDEB) • The same rhythm (4 or 5 syllable lines, shortened to two or three for the end ‘steps’) • Uses at least three ‘new’ words.

  3. And… something’s … stirring in the dark in the dust boxed Christmas lights Big tooth from a shark Sad rocking horse a model of Noah’s Ark Cobwebby comics Doll’s house painted green A bust of the Queen Leather bound books Old sewing machine Up in the attic… By Wes Magee

  4. And down in the cellar … Down in the cellar brown boot box remains of a cot two brass mantel clocks buckets and brushes and misty old socks damp pile of coal and a splintered pine door rusty rat trap and a snaggle- toothed saw six mildewy blankets piled on the stone floor (and… something’s… breathing)

  5. Today’s activity • Write your own verses for ‘Up in the attic and down in the cellar’, using the writing frame. Remember to include: • 4-5 syllables per line • The rythem scheme from the original poem.

  6. Dark Mirky Pitch-black Darnty Dim Unenlightened Gloomy Overcoloured Overcast Sooty Mysterious ebony Cold Cold-blooded Glacial Bleak Misty Perishing Chilly Shivering Nippy Bitter Wintery floe Scary Uncanny Cold-blooded Dence Terrifying Sobre Petrifying Eerie Grim Frightening

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