Don't Drink Bees Educational Ideas

...and other "pearls of wisdom"

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Poetry Unit Wrap-Up Activity 7: Formal Paper

Students could write a formal paper analyzing a poem in detail: form, content, and background.

This could be instead of or in addition to teaching a poem in a class presentation.

Alternative activity: Students could write a paper, a journal entry, or a poem about writing and reading poetry.

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Monday, September 17, 2007

Poetry Unit Wrap-Up Activity 5: Poetry Mugs, Shirts, etc.

Students can create many items with their poetry and artwork:
  • mugs

  • coasters

  • plates

  • greeting cards

  • t-shirts

  • tote bags

  • posters



Here are a few companies where kits can be purchased or where items can be designed online:


Office supply, photography, and department stores often offer similar services.

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Thursday, September 13, 2007

Poetry Unit Wrap-Up Activity 4: "Publishing"

Give your students options. Have them publish their best work by:
  • submitting it to a newspaper or magazine

  • reading it at a coffee house or in another public forum

  • displaying it in a public place

  • giving it as a gift to another person

  • printing it on a shirt or a mug

  • putting it on a website

Show students there are many forms of "publishing."

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Monday, September 10, 2007

Poetry Unit Wrap-Up Activity 3: Class Poetry Compilation

Create a compilation book of your students' best poems. Put a copy in the library for the entire school to check out.

This could also be used as a resource to give next year's students (or another class) ideas for poems they might want to write themselves.

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Friday, September 07, 2007

Poetry Unit Wrap-Up Activity 2: Literary Magazine

Publish a class literary magazine. Make a copy for each student.

If you are feeling adventurous and have a small budget, layout the magazine professionally and make copies available for sale to parents, peers, and members of the community.

Students could be involved in editing, layout, printing, and sales.

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Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Poetry Unit Starter 4: Poetry Free-Write

This activity is done in three parts:
  1. Ask students to take 5-10 minutes to write half a page about poetry.

  2. Instruct them to circle any 10 words. (Don't tell them what the words are for.)

  3. After they have circled the words, ask them to create a poem using the ten circled words. They may add 3 additional words if needed.



Variation: Display one or a few pieces of artwork. Have students do stream of consciousness writing for 5 minutes about one of the pieces of artwork. Have them circle 8 words or phrases in their writing. Then students can create a poem from the circled words and phrases.

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Monday, August 13, 2007

Poetry Unit Starter 1: I Wish Class Poem

Ask each student to complete the sentence "I wish ________________" on a strip of paper. Collect the strips. Shuffle them. Then write out each line on the overhead to create a collaborative class poem.

Other sentence ideas:
  1. I wish...

  2. I am...

  3. I like...

  4. I like to...

  5. I wonder...

  6. I think about...

  7. If I had a million dollars, I would...

  8. If I could change anything, I would...

  9. (pick a color) is like...

  10. I am happy when...

  11. I am (any emotion) when...

  12. If I could go anywhere, I would...

  13. I have learned that...

  14. I like (season), because...

  15. It's (season), so...

  16. If I were an animal, I'd be a ______________, because...

  17. If I were a car, I'd be a ________________, because...

  18. If I were a place, I'd be __________________, because...

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Friday, August 10, 2007

Sharing a Poetry Notebook

Here are a few ideas for ways that students can share their poetry notebooks:

  1. Pass notebooks to the person to the left of them to read silently for 5 minutes. Then the books can be passed again for as many times as the teacher would like.

  2. Visit a school or class of younger students and read poetry notebooks to the kids there.

  3. Read their favorite poems out loud to the class. This could be done as a coffee house or poetry slam.

  4. Place poetry notebooks in the classroom and/or school library.

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Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Creating a Poetry Notebook

A poetry notebook can be made up of poems that the students wrote themselves - or created from poems the students found by other authors - or a mixture of the two.

In any of these cases, it is important to create a rubric that identifies what kinds of poems should be included and how many poems. Do you want students to write or find poems in different forms, such as haiku, sonnet, cinquain? Or should it be a collection of the students' very best writing? Or should it be a collection of poems that mean something to the student? How many poems should be included?

I think it is important to set a minimum for the number of poems in the book. Ask students to include a table of contents at the front of the book, so you can see at a glance what is included.

Here is a sample rubric that I wrote for an assignment for a poetry notebook of my students' original writing:

Dialogue Poem (5 points)
Emotion Poem (5 points)
Environmental Poem (5 points)
Dada or Found Poem (5 points)
Color Metaphor Poem (5 points)
Concrete Poem (5 points)
Being the Thing Poem (5 points)
Narrative Poem (5 points)
Now & Then or Mirror Poem (5 points)
Haiku, Cinquain, or Limerick (5 points)
Your Choice (5 points)
Your Choice (5 points)
Your Choice (5 points)

Effort (5 points)
Cover (10 points)
Table of Contents (10 points)
Neatness (10 points)
Total

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Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Then & Now Poem

Directions: Think about your life now and how it has changed since you were younger. In a "Then & Now" poem, you write one line that describes a part of your life now; then, the next line describes what that part of your life used to be like. I recommend at least 4 stanzas for this poem.

Example:
I can write stories and poems confidently
I used to scribble in my mother's notebook and think I was writing

I can score points in tennis
There was a time when I was too little to hold up a tennis racket

I understand everything in my math book
Once I had trouble with math and had to ask my mother for help

I don't know how to play any instruments now, but
I used to play a flute in the school band

My brother and I get along really well today, but
we used to call each other names and hit each other every day

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Monday, July 30, 2007

Sense-sational Poems

You can make your poetry come alive by using all your senses. What does your subject look like? Sound like? Smell like? Feel like? Taste like?

Use all your senses that make sense to describe your subject. You can use the format below which uses similes, or you can use a format of your own.

Format:

Line 1: Your subject
Line 2: Looks like ________________.
Line 3: Sounds like ________________.
Line 4: Smells like ________________.
Line 5: Feels like _________________.
Line 6: Tastes like ________________.
Line 7: Another name for your subject

Example:

Goldfish
Looks like a yellow submarine
Sounds like rippling water
Smells like food flakes
Feels like a sequined broach
Tastes like Friday dinner,
but I’ll never eat
My pet, Sharkie

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Friday, July 27, 2007

Season Poem

Follow the following format to create a poem about one of the seasons:


Line 1: (season) is (adjective)

Line 2: Like (another thing that can be described by this adjective)

Line 3: It feels like (What does the season feel like?)

Line 4: It sounds like (What does the season sound like?)

Line 5: It smells like (What does the season smell like?)

Line 6: It tastes like (What does the season taste like?)

Line 7: (What else can you say about this season?)

Example:

Winter is white
Like a blank sheet of paper
It feels like being wrapped in blankets
It sounds like holiday music
It smells like chimney smoke
It tastes like hot chocolate
I love the first snow fall, but I am happy when Spring comes

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Thursday, July 26, 2007

Noisy Poem

Read the poem "Noise" by Jessie Pope. All the words in the poem that sound like their meaning are examples of onomatopoeia. (whoop, thud, rattle, boom, etc.)

Think of a rain storm. What are some of the words associated with a rain storm? A clap of thunder, rain drops, sprinkles, dripping, splashing.

Pick a topic to write about that has a lot of noises associated with it. Write a poem about this subject, including as many sounds as you can.

Example:

Too Noisy to Study

I'm trying to study. I really am.
I must do well on my next exam.

But what is that dripping and dropping and plinking?
It really is affecting my thinking!

And what is that buzzing and humming and drone?
Those sounds are really making me moan!

And what is that ticking and tocking and gonging?
For some silence, I really am longing!

And what is that crunching and munching and slurping?
I think it's the dog. Oh no! Now, he's burping!

Everyone quiet! Not one more sound!
How can I study with this noise all around!

Hmmmm.....now, it's too silent without even one peep.
It's too quiet for thinking. I think maybe I'll sleep.

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Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Narrative Poem

Narrative poems tell stories. They can be long epic stories that fill a book or they can be short stories that fill a page. They can be serious thought-provoking tales, silly fun tales, or something in-between. What you absolutely have to have in a narrative poem, though, is all the elements of a story.

Example:

Big Girl

(introduction)

When I was a little girl
I wanted to show everyone
I was finally a big girl
So I walked beside
Daddy
His legs were longer than
My little, short legs
But I kept up with him to show
I was a big girl

(rising action)

It was hard
And I got tired
But I made sure
My little legs
Kept up with
Daddy's

(climax)

Then, one day
I stopped
And turned around
And saw Mommy
Behind us
She was tired
And it was hard for her to
Keep up with
Daddy and Jeffrey and me
She wasn't as big as us
She was small
Way back there
So, I stopped racing
And trying to show how big I was
And I walked with Mommy

(denouement)

And maybe we were way back
And small
But I felt bigger

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Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Name Poem

Create a name poem by writing the letters that spell a name vertically and using each letter to begin a line of your poem. The subject of this poem is the person whose name you've spelled. Your poem can rhyme or not.

Examples:

Jokes around
Always moving
Makes drawings
Easy talker
Smart


Maria likes to dance and sing
And she wears a pretty ring
Rarely does she ever frown
I don't think she's ever down
And her favorite season's Spring


Variation: Use a word, not a name, to create a poem in the same way.

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Monday, July 23, 2007

Mirror Poem

Directions: Mirror Poems are composed of two stanzas. In the first stanza, you describe what you look like on the outside, what you would see if you looked in the mirror. In the second stanza, you describe what is inside you, feelings and thoughts that can't be seen.

Example:

On the outside,
I am petite
My hair and eyes are brown
I have freckles
I like to dress in black
I love to eat dark chocolate

On the inside,
I am quiet and sensitive
I am afraid of heights and snakes
I miss my family
I feel guilty that I live so far away
I wish I were a writer

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Friday, July 20, 2007

Metaphor Mystery Poem

How to write a metaphor mystery poem:

  1. Pick a thing to describe. This is the title of your poem.

  2. Brainstorm. Write down as many things as you can that are like your subject in some way. Think about how the things are similar.

  3. Pick at least 5 of the things you wrote down during the last step.

  4. Create the lines of your poem from the five things.

  5. Now, you can read the lines of your poem to people and see if they can guess the mystery subject, the title of your poem.


Examples: (See if you can guess the subject of each poem. The answers are below, written backwards.)

Poem 1:
Cotton balls
Fuzzy rabbit tails
Grandfather's whiskers
Spun sugar
White paint spattered on a workman's blue jeans


Poem 2:
Heartbeat
Steady drummer
Metronome
Ticking bomb
Rooster crow


Poem Example 1: SDUOLC
Poem Example 2: KCOLC

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Thursday, July 19, 2007

Limericks

Limericks are a fun, silly form of poetry. They are 5 lines long. The first, second, and fifth lines are longer and rhyme. The third and forth lines are shorter and rhyme.

Examples
There was a young man with a jeep
Who drove across a river quite deep
He was swept off his course
By the river's strong force
And he now sails the oceans in that jeep

There once was a camel with three humps
Who came down with a case of the mumps
When the doctor arrived
He said with a sigh,
"That beast didn't need some more lumps."

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Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Haiku

Haiku is a poetry form that began in Japan hundreds of years ago.

Haiku is always three lines long and has a total of seventeen syllables. The topic of the poem should be something in nature like animals, trees, or seasons.

Here is the format:

First Line: 5 syllables
Second Line: 7 syllables
Third Line: 5 syllables

Examples:

Maples in Autumn
Trees dancing in a cold wind
Colorfully dressed


Catfish in the pond
Whiskers brush the mud bottom
Eluding the hooks


See more of my haiku:http://www.blogger.com/img/gl.link.gif

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Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Fortune Cookie Couplets

Couplets are a pair of lines in a poem. Rhyming couplets are what their name describes: two lines of poetry that rhyme.

Write at least 5 different rhyming couplets. The topic for each couplet should be a future prediction someone might get in a fortune cookie. An example might be "I'm happy to say / You'll have a great day" or "If you cheat on that test / You'll end up in a mess."

Once you've written your rhyming fortunes, cut them into small strips of paper that could fit inside a fortune cookie. (One recipe I read suggested 3 1/2 inches long and 1/2 inch wide.)

Then make a recipe for fortune cookies, placing one of your rhyming couplets inside each one.

Here are a few Fortune cookie recipes I found on the net:

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