I am a huge fan of poetry and I love to find new ways to use it the classroom. Here are two templates that I came across that I thought I would share:
1. Diamonte Poem
______________________
(noun)
______________________________________
(two words, nouns or adjectives, describing the subject)
________________________________________________
(three verbs ending in "ing" telling about the subject)
_________________________________________________________
(four words, the first two describe the subject the last two describe its opposite)
________________________________________________
(three verbs ending in "ing" telling about the opposite)
_____________________________________
(two words, nouns or adjectives, describing the opposite)
________________________________
(opposite noun)
______________________
(noun)
______________________________________
(two words, nouns or adjectives, describing the subject)
________________________________________________
(three verbs ending in "ing" telling about the subject)
_________________________________________________________
(four words, the first two describe the subject the last two describe its opposite)
________________________________________________
(three verbs ending in "ing" telling about the opposite)
_____________________________________
(two words, nouns or adjectives, describing the opposite)
________________________________
(opposite noun)
2. Bio Poem [this poem template would be great for the first week of school]
(first name)
(first name)
(four words that describe you)
Relative of (list three close family members)
Resident of (place where you live)
Who reads (four books)
Who likes (three things you like)
Who loves (three things you love)
Who wishes (three things)
Who admires (three people)
Who needs (three things you need)
Who aspires to (at least two aspirations)
(last name)
check out this site to find more poetry templates and ideas for lessons: http://www.cape.k12.mo.us/blanchard/hicks/Poetry/Poetry.htm
To close, here are some fun poems that I found:
I've Been Sitting in Detention
by Bruce Lansky
(Sing to the tune of “I’ve Been Working on the Railroad”)
I’ve been sitting in detention
since the end of school.
I’ve been sitting in detention
just because I broke a rule.
Throwing meatballs in the lunchroom
wasn’t wise, I fear.
I was aiming at the trash can,
not my teacher’s rear.
Teacher let me know
when you’ll let me go.
Please don’t keep me here all ni-i-ight.
I apologize— throwing food’s not wise.
Don’t keep me here all night.
I am going to sneak out of detention
if you will not let me go-o-o-o.
I am going to sneak out of detention,
so, teacher, let me go.
My Class Has Got a Know-It-All
by Ted Scheu
My class has got a know-it-all— the kind who likes to tell the proper way to sit and walk and count and speak and spell.
My class has got a know-it-all— the kind who always knows the stuff that happened yesterdays or even long agos.
She’s constantly correcting me if I’m a little wrong, like when I bring a bug to class or when I sing a song.
You wonder why a rooster crows? Exactly how a flower grows? And who invented radios? Or even if a glowworm glows? (I can't believe it, but she knows.)
You wonder why the sky is blue? And how your paper airplane flew? Just if a fact is false or true? Or when our book report is due? (I can’t believe she knows that, too.)
You might think I’d be angry with this showy, knowy creature. But someday I will be like her: I’m going to be a teacher.
1 comment:
Thanks for the insight into poetry. I feel that it is a great way to get students to think in a more creative way. I too enjoy poetry, so I think that it would be neat to try the sample format that you laid out...its a great help.
Have you or your classroom teacher tried any poetry techniques in your Tuesday experience? If so, how did it go? What are your ideas on teaching poetry, any certain way you think that it should be approached?
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