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Teaching Poetry Writing Chapter 11
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Playing With Words Riddles and Jokes Finger Plays Creating Word Pictures Figure 11-1
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Playing With Words Hink-pinks Form answer to riddle or describe something Hink-pinks – two one-syllable rhyming words Hinky-pinkies – two two-syllable rhyming words Hinkity-pinkities – two three-syllable rhyming words
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Poetic Devices - Rhyme Ending sounds are the same Dr. Suess stories Nursery rhymes
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Poetic Devices - Comparisons Simile – compares something to something else using the words “like” or “as” Ex. The magma draped the sides of the volcano like frosting on a cake
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Poetic Devices - Comparisons Metaphor – compares two things by implying that they are the same Ex. The magma was frosting on the volcano cake
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Poetic Devices - Alliteration Repetition of the initial consonant sound in consecutive words or words in close proximity Ex. Majestic, merciless, meandering magma A My Name is Alice (Bayer, 1992) Tongue twisters Dr. Suess - Oh Say Can You Say?
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Poetic Devices - Onomatopoeia Words that sound like their meaning (crash, slurp) Ex. The crackling, crashing magma oozed from the volcano The Noisy Alphabet (MacDonald, 2003) Crash, Bang, Boom! (Spier, 1972) Comic Strips
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Poetic Devices - Repetition Repetition of words and phrases structure and add interest to writing Ex. The magma scorches nature’s finery, scorches nature’s finery Gingerbread Man (Boy)
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Writing Poems Formula poems “I Wish…” - each line begins with “I wish” Color – each line begins with a color word Five-Senses – write about a topic using five senses “If I Were…” – write about how feel/do if something else
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Formula Poems Comparison – compares something to something else “I Am…” – written from viewpoint of book character or historical figure Preposition - each line begins with preposition Acrostic – lines arranged so first letter of first line spells a word when read vertically
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Writing Poems Free-Form Poems Concrete - poem arranged on page to create picture/image Found - arrange words from other sources to make a poem Two-Voices – written in 2 columns Free Verse – lines do not rhyme
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Writing Poems Syllable and Word-Count Poems Haiku – Japanese, 17 syllables, 3 lines, focus is nature Cinquain – five lines with 22 syllables Diamante – seven lines written in shape of diamond
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Writing Poems Rhymed Verse Forms (most common) The Little Turtle Limericks – popularized by Edward Lear Clerihews – describes a person Model Poems Apologies Invitations
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Teaching Students to Write Poems Introduce to poetry Read first chapter of Anastasia Krupnik (Lowry, 1995) Shel Silverstein Jack Perlutsky Teach minilessons Publish students’ poems Gallery Walk – Step by Step – p. 386 Guidelines for Writing Poems – p. 385
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Teaching Students to Write Poems Read model poems Present a list of characteristics of the poetry form Analyze the model poem for how it reflects the characteristics of the form Write a collaborative poem using the form Children write independent poems
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Assessing Students’ Poems Ask Has student experimented with poetic form that was taught in minilesson? Has student use process approach – writing, revising, editing poem? Has student used wordplay or another poetic device? Have students self-assess
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Assignment Select a science GPS (3rd, 4th, 5th grade) Select 3 poetry formats (p. 374- 383) Write a list of characteristics that could be used for teaching the poetry format
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Assignment Use the content from the GPS to write a model poem for each of the 3 formats Use at least one example of a comparison, alliteration, onomatopoeia, and repetition within the 3 poems.
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