April is National Poetry Month, but the art of language is to be celebrated all year long. When my students first hear that we are going to study poetry, many groan, unsure of what is to follow. Thankfully, after these engaging and creative ideas, they change their perspective to one that celebrates the various forms and topics that one can express through the art of language.
Shape or Concrete Poems: a poem that takes the shape of its subject matter. Some books that help illustrate this are:
First, we read several concrete poems and students form the definition for a concrete poem. Then I take them through a group writing experience where we brainstorm a list of items they generate. Then we take one and I loosely sketch an image that is associated with that. Then we come up with descriptive words, feelings, similes, metaphors, and analogies to write our ideas in the borders of the shape. Students who are able can try this out on their own, or for those who need scaffolds you can provide the outline of various shapes along with vocabulary for students to cut out and glue to form their concrete poem.
Blackout Poetry: this is when writing that has already been published is used as inspiration for carving out a poem from those words already printed. The poet can circle those words they wish to use and black out the rest of the words through patterns, other colors, or by blacking them out.
Rather than use books for this I like to use images from Google to show examples of blackout poetry and ask students to tell me what they notice about the poems.
Note: I used to use newspapers for this, however, I had to be careful about the subject matter, vocabulary and layout of the articles in comparison to the advertisements, so ever since those experiences I have turned to using pages of discarded or weeded books to give to students for this type of writing.
Homophones, homonyms, idioms, puns: poetry doesn't have to be lyrical or rhyme. Poetry can be the juxtaposition of words with multiple meanings and clever sayings explained in literal terms. My students enjoy exploring this aspect of language because it is in small bites rather than long poems to analyze or just rhyming poems meant to entertain. Some books that we study during this topic are:
A video that my students like to watch and sing along with is below:
Poetry Slam: lyrics of songs and poems are meant to be heard aloud, therefore, I invite students to read or recite poetry or songs aloud in front of an audience or if they'd rather, record and edit a video of their poem or song on a video production application, like Apple CLIPS or iMovie. Students should be given time to find a poem or song with which they connect and choose to share it with others. For the Poetry Slam experience, I hang twinkle lights up, spread out picnic blankets and a variety of flexible seating options around as the lights dim and we can enjoy one another's love of language.
Book Spine Poetry: this is one of my favorite types of poetry to share with students. First we look at a variety of examples and students form a definition for what is included in a book spine poem. Then students are sent in partners or small groups to a certain part of the library to create their own book spine poem. I ask students to take a photo of their poem on their device so that I may project it for the class, but they also like to display their book spine poems for others to read. The best part of this experience is that students always find books that they want to read that they may have never even chosen if not for this opportunity to look for interesting book titles.
An extension of this is to add music or other effects to the mood of their poems using a collage of photos or a technology application, like iMovie, FlipGrid, Seesaw, or Apple CLIPS.
Although some librarians hesitate to use book spine poetry with students due to the large amount of shelving that will follow the experience,
Mike Rawls, a.k.a. The Book Wrangler, suggests using paper spines with book titles already on them or you can photocopy.
Novels-in-Verse: a story written in verse is one of my favorite formats to share with students. Much like a chapter book or graphic novel or picture book format, a novel-in-verse is another way that writers tell a story, but in lyrical form.
Do you have a favorite way to share poetry? Please leave a comment below!
No comments:
Post a Comment