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Teaching Poetry

Teaching Poetry. By Drew Lawson. Introducing Poetry. Have students bring the lyrics of their favorite (appropriate) songs to class, read them and discuss the poetic value of each song. Is a song “poetry?” What is “poetry” anyway?

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Teaching Poetry

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  1. Teaching Poetry By Drew Lawson

  2. Introducing Poetry • Have students bring the lyrics of their favorite (appropriate) songs to class, read them and discuss the poetic value of each song. Is a song “poetry?” What is “poetry” anyway? • Introduce a few simple poetry terms in a mini-lesson and have the students immediately begin composing their own poetry.

  3. Introducing Poetry • Have students choose three of their favorite words. Then have the students write a short poem using their favorite words.

  4. Student Examples • Using the word “unicorn”: Unicorn How strange a name. One would think it more proper To Say Uni-Horn. Why isn’t this so? I don’t know. I’ll tell you when I see one (Barton 3).

  5. Student Example • Using the word “arteries”: The coffee’s getting cold. A city travels out from my window, Stalls on concrete arteries, Hardens under the highway sun (Barton 4).

  6. Teaching Poetry • Begin by sharing examples of poetry to which students can easily relate. Then paraphrase the poems, either line by line or stanza by stanza, as a class. • Begin with a song that prepares the student for the ensuing poem and deal with literary techniques in the song first.

  7. Teaching Poetry • Have students discuss poetry in speculative group activities focusing on students’ personal responses to a particular poem. • Group discussions should culminate in class presentations. • Students should then write individual essays on the same poetry discussed in group activities.

  8. Teaching Poetry • Use literary criticism to show students how poems can be viewed in vastly differing ways. Encourage students to respond to and speculate about the meaning of a poem. • Read a poem aloud several times as a class so students can feel the rhythm of the poem. • Use examples from original student poetry to introduce new poetry terms.

  9. Teaching Poetry • Read a series of words to students, having them compose a poem using each word as soon as possible after they hear it. • Use works of art and discuss how poems and visual images echo one another. • Using poetry portfolios focusing on reader response, assess student achievement.

  10. Encouraging Written Response to Poetry • Have students write journal entries using the categories Literary Critic, Personal Response, and Comparative Critic. • Have students write a “Poetry Opinion Paper” agreeing or disagreeing with a certain aspect of a poem. • Have students write in-class essays analyzing the poetic techniques in a poem that they have never seen before

  11. Encouraging Original Student Poetry • Have students write an original poem that mimics a famous poem such as “Hope is the thing with feathers” by Emily Dickinson. • Have students keep an observation notebook where they write descriptions of people, sounds, animals, nature scenes, dreams, etc. and then have students write poems based on these observations. • Have students create a pastiche poem blending the works of great poets and Mother Goose rhymes.

  12. An Example of a Pastiche Poem The Spider Once upon a turret dreary sat I feeling wan and weary Over a boring bowl of curds and whey. While I gobbled, nearly slurping, suddenly there came a burping From the creature who haunted me night and day “’Tis the spider belching by the door,” I muttered, “only this and nothing more.” (Polette 3)

  13. Encouraging Original Student Poetry • When studying Imagist poetry, have students write an Imagist poem describing an exact image. Then have students pass up their poems. Pass the poems back to the students – making sure that no student gets his or her poem. The students must then draw the image.

  14. Encouraging Original Student Poetry • Encourage students to freewrite by using different pictures, phrases, and music. Then have students re-read their freewriting, bracketing favorite images. Students will then take a group of related images and make each image a line of their poem.

  15. The End

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