1 / 10

September 18/19 – Introduction to Poetry

September 18/19 – Introduction to Poetry. Take out: Notebook Pen/Pencil Homework: Complete TPSFASTT analysis for “First Grade ”. Agenda: QW: Did I M iss A nything Poetry Unit Intro Notes: TPSFASTT Practice - First Grade. Quick-Write.

lauren
Download Presentation

September 18/19 – Introduction to Poetry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. September 18/19– Introduction to Poetry • Take out: • Notebook • Pen/Pencil • Homework: • Complete TPSFASTT analysis for “First Grade” • Agenda: • QW: Did I Miss Anything • Poetry Unit Intro • Notes: TPSFASTT • Practice - First Grade

  2. Quick-Write • The first poem we will look at is called “Did I Miss Anything”. What does the title bring to mind? What do you think that the poem will be about? • Follow along as I read the poem

  3. What is Poetry? • Poetry (ancient Greek: ποιεω (poieo) = I create) is an art form in which human language is used for its aesthetic qualities in addition to, or instead of, its notional and semantic content • Poetry as an art form predates literacy • In preliterate societies, poetry was frequently employed as a means of recording oral history, storytelling, genealogy, law and other forms of expression • Also often closely identified with liturgy in preliterate societies • makes it easier to remember priestly incantations or prophecies • The greater part of the world's sacred scriptures are made up of poetry rather than prose

  4. Intro to Poetry • Today we will begin our introduction to poetry • During this short unit you will learn how to understand, analyze, respond to and write about poetry, and you will learn and practice techniques that you will use for the rest of the school-year • During this unit, you will… • Practice the above-mentioned skills • Write responses to AP-style poetry essay prompts • Practice multiple choice questions • Complete a dialectic journal entry for each poem read • Write a process essay based on a poem of your choice • Prepare and present a detailed analysis of a poem to the class • To begin, we will be looking at a strategy for analyzing poetry called TPSFASTT, which will be the basis for your dialectic journal entries

  5. Analyzing Poetry: TPSFASTT • Title: • Determine the literal meaning of the title. • Complete this before reading the poem. • In some cases the title will give you a clue about the content of the poem, and in others it provide crucial information to assist in understanding. • Paraphrase: • Read the poem, and then determine what it literally means in your own words (This can be very difficult when a poem has abstract meaning.) • Don’t jump to interpretation – a failure to understand the literal meaning may lead to an interpretive misunderstanding.

  6. Analyzing Poetry: TPSFASTT • Speaker: • Identify the speaker of the poem. • Remember, always distinguish the speaker from the poet – they are not always the same. • Figurative Language: • Examine the poem for language that is not used literally. • This includes, but is not limited to literary devices such as imagery, symbolism, metaphor, allusion, litotes, the effect of sound devices (alliteration, consonance, assonance, rhyme, onomatopoeia), and any other devices used in a non-literal manner

  7. Analyzing Poetry: TPSFASTT • Attitude (Tone): • Determine the feelings or attitudes expressed by the speaker. • Watch punctuation, word choice and sound usage for clues. • Shift: • Note shifts in speaker and attitude. • Shifts can be indicated by the occasion of the poem (time and place), turn words (but, yet) , punctuation, stanza divisions, changes in line or stanza length, etc. • Look for any indication that something has changed. • There should be a break, when the speaker ends one manner of speech, changes point of view, or pauses to consider something other than the subject. This is known as the shift, referring to the shift in thought.

  8. Analyzing Poetry: TPSFASTT • Title: • After unlocking the puzzle of the poem itself, return to the title. • The connotations you uncovered before analyzing the body can now be matched up to your interpretation of the title to see if they apply, or add any fresh perspectives. • Theme: • Identify the subject(s) of the poem, and determine what the poet is saying about the subject(s). • Interpret the meaning of the poem. • Make connections.

  9. Analyzing Poetry: TPSFASTT • When you finish the individual TPSFASTT entries, your final task is to write at least a paragraph, using evidence that you found in the poem, in response to the following question: • WHAT IS THE AUTHOR’S MESSAGE ABOUT THE THEME OF THE POEM?

  10. TPSFASTT Practice:First Grade • “First Grade” by Ron Koertge • Until then, every forest • had wolves in it, we thought • it would be fun to wear snowshoes • all the time, and we could talk to water. • So who is this woman with the gray • breath calling out names and pointing • to the little desks we will occupy • for the rest of our lives?

More Related