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Poetry

Poetry. was created to communicate history and news. was a way to communicate long before people used written language.. Poetry Today. is

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Poetry

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    3. Poetry Today is “best enjoyed when read aloud because of its musical sound, rhythm, and language.” brings together sounds and words in unique ways that create pictures, meaning and emotions. Fountas, I.C. & Pinnell, G.S. (2001). p. 410

    5. Writing Workshop 8-10 min. mini-lesson 40 minutes writing - guided writing - independent writing 10 min. share time

    6. Problems Teaching Poetry Rhyme: meter and rhyme patterns can be difficult for struggling writers Poetry Forms: (haiku and diamantes) often take priority over the message Free verse is a good choice of expression

    7. Poetry Warm Up Activity Write A Name Poem Right Brain Assignment A - alert L - likeable, lean L - lucky, lazy, light A - amiable, active N - nice

    8. Acrostic The title of the poem is the subject. The letters in the title are written vertically down the side of the page and are used to begin the lines. Soup Soothing on a winter morning Oh, so good with fresh baked bread Usually chock full of veggies Please, can I have some in my bowl?

    10. Cinquain This poem has the following structure: 2-syllable word (subject) 4 syllables describing subject 6 syllables expressing action 8 syllables expressing feeling 2 syllable ending Storm front Forbidding, dark Blowing, cooling, raining Leaving destruction in its wake Rain storm

    14. Diamante Topic Two adjectives Three action verbs A four word emotion packed phrase Three action verbs Two adjectives Topic Storm Gray, windy Rolling, blowing, raining Frightening the children home Pouring, flashing, rumbling Scary, exhilarating hurricane

    15. Autobiography Allan Son of Andrew and Cheryl Lover of bats, spiders and snakes. Who feels that a month is too short, that a year is shorter, and all people are funny. Who would like to see Disney Land, Sea World, and Bible Hill. Who fears the dark, heights,and unknown waters. Resident of Nova Scotia, Lake Village Road Smith.

    17. Poetry Starters Students choose an emotion and a color they think symbolizes that emotion. Model: (an emotion) seems (a color) Like ( a comparison) I see I hear I smell I touch I taste

    18. Starter Model Loneliness seems golden yellow Like the hazy colors fall days bring. I see the leaves of red and orange. I hear birds announce themselves. I smell burning leaves that signal the end of something. I touch no one for I am alone I taste the salt of my tears.

    19. Rhythm I’ve Got A Dog I’ve got a dog as thin as a rail. He’s got fleas all over his tail; Every time his tail goes flop. The fleas on the bottom all hop to the top. Anonymous p.66 Prelutsky, J. (Ed.). (1983).

    20. Strategies Making connections between: ideas images figures of speech.

    21. Strategies: Making Connections Use A Double Focus Example: Poem: Grandpa’s Shoes Resource:

    24. Poetry Web Pages

    25. After English Class By: Jean Little Internet poem http://www.uleth.ca/edu/currlab/handouts/poetry_ideas.html

    26. Snow Poems Snow I love snow It makes me glow Even when I feel low.

    28. Snow Poems Making Snowmen Making snowmen is best of all But we have to make it really tall. We’ll roll the snow all around We’ll have to roll it big and round.

    29. Figurative Language Poets use language in ways that effect our sense of touch, sight, smell, hearing, or taste. “Analogies, metaphors, and similes are excellent ways to help the brain find links…” Westhaver, A.& Wolfe, P. ( 2000). p.50

    30. Figurative Language Figurative language defines one thing in terms of another. Similes make comparisons: You are as quiet as a mouse. Billy looks like a gladiator in those clothes.

    31. Figurative Language Metaphors are stronger, more concentrated comparisons: “The cat's eyes were jewels, gleaming out of the darkness.”

    32. A Metaphor: Jealousy Jealously creeps within me A spider spinning its web Threading a trap To capture and confuse. (free verse)

    34. Metaphor: The Fog The fog comes on little cat feet It sits looking over harbor and city on silent haunches and then moves on. By Carl Sandburg

    35. Dead Metaphors A dead metaphor has been so overused that it has lost its power to surprise, delight, or effectively compare.

    36. Dead Metaphors A cliché is a dead metaphor, a phrase so often repeated that it no longer has force: He hit the nail on the head. She was cool as a cucumber. Jump out of the frying pan and into the fire.

    37. Simile My life is like A garbage truck Saturdays and Sundays off Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday They haul you away. written by a student in grade 3 Fletcher, R. (1993). p.14

    38. Simile First Snow Snow makes whiteness where it falls, The bushes look like popcorn-balls. And places where I always play, Look like somewhere else today. By Marie Louise Allen, p. 31 Prelutsky, J. (Ed.) (1983).

    39. Personification: Tree Tree Swaying in the wind I catch people’s attention I begin to wave, They never wave back to me. Grade 5 student (Tanka Poem, p.248 ) Province of Nova Scotia, Crown Copyright. (1998). Atlantic Canada English Language Arts Curriculum Guide: Grade 4-6. Nova Scotia Department of Education.

    40. Poetry Terms: Onomatopoeia the sound of a word imitating meaning and sense “Bees go buzz and flies go splat” The Practice of Poetry.ppt from The Writing and Reading Program, Western New England College

    41. Alliteration The repetition of initial consonants

    42. Alliteration: Hyperstudio http://www.mackiev.com/hyperstudio/hs_reviews.html

    43. Science Owl The diet of the owl is not For delicate digestions. He goes out on a limb to hoot Unanswerable questions And just because he winks like men Who utter sage advice, We think him full of wisdom when He's only full of mice. by X.J. Kennedy http://readinglady.com/Poetry/Owls/owls.html

    44. Social Studies: Explorers In the year 1001 A.D. Leif set out on the sea. Even though he was a Norse, He was blown off his course. He was looking for America, But soon found Canada. ……

    45. Social Studies: Explorers Leif then found a land where vines grew, And then he found that there were grapes there, too. Like his father who discovered Greenland, Leif discovered a land named Vinland. When Leif returned to Norway, He decided never again to go away. http://www.kathimitchell.com/explpoe.htm

    46. Art: Africian History Month http://ssrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/lindamac/visual/pages/afcanada.html

    47. Art: Alliteration Ted Harrison Canadian/ Nova Scotian Places ABC Album http://ssrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/lindamac/visual/pages/present.html

    48. Technology Integration Poetry Graphic Organizers Internet Site: http://ettcweb.lr.k12.nj.us/forms/newpoem.htm

    49. Internet Activity Open Up the Internet Type In URL Click : Go Choose a Poem to write. To Print: Under Apple:Chooser, Under File: Page Set up, Letter, Print 1 to 1

    50. References Fountas, I.C. & Pinnell, G.S. (2001). Guiding Readers and Writers Grades 3-6 Teaching Comprehension, Genre, and Content Literacy. Portsmouth, New Hampshire: Heinemann. Prelutsky, J. (Ed.).(1983). The Random House Book of Poetry For Children. New York: Random House. Province of Nova Scotia, Crown Copyright. (1998). Atlantic Canada English Language Arts Curriculum Guide: Grade 4-6. Nova Scotia Department of Education and Culture. Westwater, A. & Wolfe, P. (2000). The brain-compatible curriculum. Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, 58(3), 49-52. Massingale, L., Poetic Forms.ppt

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