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Showing posts with label poetic structure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetic structure. Show all posts

Friday, May 25, 2012

USING POETRY IN THE CLASSROOM -- Part 7 -- POETRY LEARNING CENTERS

It's about time, teachers,... to talk about using poetry centers for POETRY!

Depending on the age and stage of your students, you may wish to begin a study of poetic structures with rhyme scheme, meter, and/or stanzas.  The figurative language synonymous with poetry is a rich source of study for centers.  For example, metaphors are an appropriate subject for task cards:


Similarly, assonance, similes, alliteration, onomatopoeia, etc.  can be studied at centers.


Writing responses to poetry are appropriate for centers, 


as is creating original poetry.  I find that elementary students are more comfortable writing poetry when they have a "prescription" for writing.  For example, they love writing haiku.


There are many, many types of poetry that are engaging for students to write, but the "prescription" may be elusive.  At my poetry centers, I place poetry posters with the task cards that ask them to write specific poetry.  For instance, when using the task card for haiku, I put this poster at the center:


My goal at learning centers is for the students to be as independent as possible.  After all, I'm conducting guided reading groups during center time.  By using task cards and posters, I have largely accomplished this goal.  There will always be some children who struggle to work independently, either because of their personality or learning needs. The majority, however, can act independently or find the assistance they need from their peers.  

Please remember that none of this happens overnight.  You must invest time in training your students to use centers of any type.  With poetry centers, it is essential that you model the things you want your students to do and ensure that your students are very familiar with the poetry before you place it in the center.

Next time, I will address some random thoughts about poetry learning centers.


If you are interested in my poetry task cards and the poetry posters I created for poetry centers, you can find both at my TpT Store or in my TN Shop.



Thursday, May 17, 2012

POETRY LITERACY CENTERS -- Part 5

It’s about time, teachers, that we covered poetry literacy centers.  I {heart} centers that have high interest for the kids and low effort for me.  That doesn’t happen overnight, but you can start to establish a poetry center and train you students to use it.  Then all you have to do is swap the poems and a few supplies.

Poems placed at the center must be familiar to the children.  You are just inviting problems if you post an unfamiliar poem.  Through shared reading, your students should have a clear understanding of the poem’s meaning or essence.  During those reads, ensure that your students understand the vocabulary and have sufficient background knowledge.  Ideally, the poem will be one that everyone can read independently.  If that is not possible, and I don’t believe it always IS possible, have a system whereby those who can’t read it can readily find a helper.

Poems placed at the center are in several forms:  individual copies for the students’ anthologies, an enlarged or poster version, and sentence strips with the poem copied on them.  A pocket chart is available for the latter.  Whisper phones are there, as well.

Have supplies available at the center so that students need not travel back to their desks to fetch them.  You will likely need scissors, pencils, erasers, crayons, colored pencils, and/or markers.  I also place a 3 hole punch at my center for students to use since we collect our poetry in 3 ring binders.

There are myriad activities for students to pursue.  As you can well imagine, the activities available at any one time, are limited and variable.  Following is an eclectic list of those activities:
          Read the poem with a buddy (EEKK)        
          Find rhyming words & highlight them
          Illustrate the poem
          Find patterns in the poem
          Identify word wall words in the poem & highlight or make a list
          Highlight words that are hard or tricky
          Complete a poetry Cloze exercise (fill in the missing words)
          Make a bookmark based on the poem
          Read with expression/read the punctuation
          Build poems from sentence strips
Create poetry with magnetic poem kits
          Memorize a poem
Perform a poem

Another set of activities at the poetry center is based on language arts skills.  The poetry center can reinforce skills currently under study or review some previously taught.  Some skill lessons to consider include:
          Rhyming words
          Onsets and rimes
          High frequency words
          Spelling list words
Vowel sounds   
Digraphs
Blends and clusters
Base words
Prefixes and suffixes
Punctuation
Rules of grammar
Parts of speech
Homonyms, synonyms, antonyms, homophones

For higher performing students in the early grades, as well as students in middle and upper grades, additional activities may focus on the craft of poetry.  Such activities include:
          Make text innovations
          Compose a poem
          Identify elements of a poem
          Explore figurative language
          Compare 2 poems using a Venn diagram or a T-chart
          Write a response to the poem
          Conduct an author study on the poet

In my next post, I will explore some of the activities in more depth.




You may also be interested in:




All of these products are available in my TpT Store or my TN Shop.




Monday, March 26, 2012

April Fools' FREEBIE

It's about time, teachers, for April Fools' Day.  Are you bummed that it's not on a school day? Never fear, it will be on Monday next year to start the week off on a celebratory note.  In the meantime, enjoy an April Fools' poem and some teaching suggestions to go with it. 






If you like this poem and the teaching possibilities that accompany it, you may like my product, Poetry Possibilities for Spring.  The poem above comes from that unit.


You can find it at my TpT Store or in my TN Shop.

You can find many more spring units at Mrs. Lirette's Learning Detectives' linky party.


Check it out!  You'll be glad you did.

Many, many thanks to Heather at Beg Borrow & Teach for giving me the One Lovely Blog Award.  You have made this newbie blogger feel very special!  



The rules for this award are to:

  1. Link back to the blogger who gave you the award.  
  2. Pass the award on to 15 other lovely bloggers.
  3. Follow the person who sent it to you.
If you haven't discovered Heather's blog, go there now.  Her blog title surely speaks to teachers everywhere.  We're all beggars, borrowers & underpaid teachers.   (I only crossed out the "underpaid" to be p.c.)   Her blog is filled with wonderful ideas and, right now, she is offering a FREE Reading Comprehension bookmark. 


It gives me pleasure to pass this award on to:
  1. Ms Emily @  My Crazy Life in Kindergarten
  2. Delighted @ First Grade Delight
  3. Ashlyn @ The Creative Classroom
  4. Roaming Around 4th Grade
  5. Katie @ Queen of the First Grade Jungle
  6. Wendy @ One Happy Teacher
  7. Katherine @ Third Grade Teacher Files
  8. Ms Winstead @ Fabulous Fourth Grade
  9. Mark Lyons @ readingwarmupsandmore
  10. Susan Hardin @ 3rd Grade Grapevine
  11. Mrs. K @ The Teacher Garden
  12. HoJo @ HoJos Teaching Adventure
  13. Mary Bauer @ The Artistry of Education
  14. Mrs. McCumbee @ Mrs. McCumbee's Class
  15. Felicia @ Adventures in Teaching: Learning as I Go
Many of these blogs are new, like mine.  Do them a favor and check them out.  They represent a treasure trove of new ideas.





Friday, March 2, 2012

March Poetry Freebie

It's about time, teachers . . . to add some March poetry to your students' portfolios.  My series of Poetry Possibilities on TpT now includes March themed poetry.  


Here is a free preview:



These poems each come with a teaching point and an eclectic collection of mini-lessons and activities.  The readability of the poems makes them appropriate to both primary and intermediate classrooms.  The skill lessons allow for remediation of older students or differentiation for younger ones.  Concepts and skills included in this 33 page unit are described here:


Stop by my TpT store to check out Poetry Possibilities for March.  I think you will like them.