Sunday, January 28, 2018

Poetry 180


   My aim is to plug students into poem power. My middle schoolers and high schoolers read poetry in every class.  Poems can be silly, serious, enigmatic, moody, fantastic. or colorful.  You never know what the students will like; bring an eclectic mix to their attention, and see what happens.
I assign poems as homework the previous week. I ask students to read each poem twice. The first time, they often mumble, “Meh,” or “What?” But the second time, they might understand the gist or a line, or they might feel melancholy, or calm or uplifted. When we read aloud in class, that’s a third time a student is exposed to the same poem, making it familiar. We discuss the poem thoroughly, and I always ask a question or two when we are done with our analysis, a modern query from the poem that relates to the students’ lives. Have you ever been afraid or felt uncomfortable in a new situation? (First Day at School by McGough)  What is the message to today’s world leaders from this poem? (Ozymandias by Shelley) 
    To find poems for middle schoolers, there are plenty on the web. There’s a site for Middle School 180 poems. This mimics US Poet Laureate Billy Collins’ Poetry 180 project for high schoolers (a poem/school day/year). I also like another US Poet Laureate’s project, the Favorite Poem Project by Robert Pinsky. He asked US citizens to send him the name of their favorite poem with a letter explaining why it is their favorite. He also asked for information about the sender, including age, occupation, and town residence. He chose some entries and compiled them into a book, which is in every library. Some of the participants were even videotaped, and you can watch them on this site: http://www.favoritepoem.org
     I send this Favorite Poem Project video to my middle school and American Literature students:
    It was sent in by a teen in Georgia who could relate to this particular Emily Dickinson poem. The teen is candid, and the video is wonderful! I think she speaks for many teens in our busy world today.
    For high schoolers, there are poems in literature textbooks, and I often supplement these with others by the same poet. If there is a parent from another country we are studying, I ask the parent his/her favorite national poem or poet, adding the selection to our collection. Websites such as Cummings and Shmoop offer terrific analyses on the web for your discussion notes.  
    I have learned so much about poetry, poets, and writing by presenting poems to children. I believe this is key to passing them on. I am learning too, and because I love the poems, I am excited about them. Sometimes I don’t understand a poem, but this too is valuable for students to know. We don’t have to understand something to appreciate it or like it. Each poem affects the reader in a different way or provides a different message even.  Think of abstract art, a canvas of color by Rothko or paint smatter by Pollack. We like them; we might not know why.  
I use different handouts to examine poems. My favorite is a method with a ridiculous acronym, TPCASTT. I can never remember it, so I call it Tap Cat. It’s pretty simple if you go through each step in the acrostic. An easy poem to use it on is When Earth’s Last Picture is Painted by Rudyard Kipling. I did find this on the web about 10 years ago.  Here’s the handout:

ANALYZING POETRY

       Read the poem twice. The first time concentrate on understanding the words and what is going on in the poem. The second time you read the poem, begin piecing the information/story/speaker's words together.

      Focus on the SITUATION of the poem.
      -- Who is the Speaker?
      -- Who is the Speaker talking to?
      -- What is going on? What is the setting?
      -- Do you trust the Speaker?
      -- What is the Tone? (how the author feels)
      -- What is the Mood? (how the poem makes YOU feel)

      Focus on the STRUCTURE of the poem.
      --What is the Foot and Meter?
      -- Is there Rhyming? Is there a Rhyme Scheme?
      -- Is there a Shift or Movement in the Poem?
      -- What type of punctuation or grammar does the poem have?
      -- Go back to the title of the poem: Does this clarify the meaning for you?
   
      Focus on the LANGUAGE of the poem:
      --What types of Figurative Languages are there? (metaphor, simile, hyperbole...)
      -- Are there any allusions to mythology, religion, or history?
      -- What kind of Diction is there?

      Ask yourself: SO WHAT? Now that you've analyzed the Situation, Structure, and Language of the poem, what seems to be most important for finding out the poem’s meaning? By asking yourself this question you should come to one or two solid conclusions about the poem you have just read!
  TPCASTT    Method of  Analyzing Poetry:

T = Title:      What does the title mean?

P = Paraphrase:    Change poet’s words into ones you can understand.

C =  Connotation/Diction: What are the words the poet used in place of an idea, person, object?

A =  Attitude/Tone:  What is the poet’s or speaker’s attitude/mood?  How do you feel?

S = Shift:  How does the poem shift, or character shift into change, or where is there a contrast?

T=  Title Revisited:  After studying the poem, does the title take on a new meaning?


T= Theme:  What is the theme(s) in the poem?

Wednesday, January 17, 2018

Poetry Madness



         Several years ago my husband gave me a compact white G4 Apple iBook. Fear gripped me for two whole years before I opened the electronic beastie. I had some forced experience previously with the formidable desktop monster,  our daughters taunting me to learn how to use a CD-Rom or to load digital photos.  I finally approached the neglected laptop in shame, only to find a world open up. I took classes at the Apple Store, learning how to use the miraculous machine and the word processing program, and I’ve been hooked ever since. My laptop contains my work; it’s the backbone of my classes. It’s such a small contraption that holds so much. 
         Poetry is exactly the same. Folks first contemplate a poem in fear. What does it mean? Why is it so short? Why is it so long? Is it speaking to me?  Why are the words making no sense?  Why can’t it just say what it means?  What’s the point?  But once inside a poem, having slowed down to take in each word, the package offers a gift. With a few tools in the kit, like the recognition of alliteration, figurative language, imagery, and tone, we begin to notice the little piece of writing does indeed have something to convey.  And what a poem conveys is personal. Often a poem touches different readers in different ways. It might be just a mood, like sadness.  It might trigger a memory. It might be humor or wit. It might be an epiphany.
     I was surfing the net on my iBook when I came upon the perfect enticement for subjecting my students to poems. It’s Poetry Madness, named after March Madness in basketball. I altered the game on the net, and I use it all semester-- in fact, every class. I assign two poems for my middle school class to read weekly (and often more to my high school classes). The following class, we read aloud the poems and discuss them. Then I ask the students to vote on their favorite of the two (or the bunch for the high schoolers). Quite quickly, the students begin to own the poems. They have opinions, likes and dislikes, and they are interested in others’ opinions.  We repeat this each week with the weekly poems, and on the second to last class, we have our semester Poetry Madness vote. We revisit, reading aloud, each of the weekly winners, eliminating by vote as we progress through the list, until we come up with our favorite of the entire semester. 

Poetry Madness is infectious. My new students begin fall semester dreading the notion and hassle of reading poems, but by the middle of the semester, about 6 weeks, they begin to actually like poetry.  The more clever a poem, the more interested my students are.  The stranger the format, such as in a sestina or a prose poem, the more fascinated the students. Poems are surprise packages, pocket fortune cookies to unfold and find bits of wisdom or entertainment inside.  Just like a laptop! 

Tuesday, January 9, 2018

Ice Breakers



        If you were stuck in an elevator, who would you like to be stuck with?  My mom; Aristotle; a firefighter; my BFF; my dad; my dog; Spiderman. 
  I start every class with an ice breaker. I give out small pieces of scratch paper, all the same size, on which the student writes an answer to my question of the day. This is then folded in fours and placed at the end of the desk to be collected. It’s important they all are folded alike. A volunteer collects all these, mixes them up, and deals them out to everyone. One student is selected to start, opens the new ice breaker, reads it aloud, and has 2-3 guesses who wrote it.  If the guesses are incorrect, the writer confesses, and this writer opens her new ice breaker, reading aloud and guessing, continuing on.
The students love ice breakers so much that I can’t skip a single class ice breaker. Sometimes I’d like to. They take at least 10-15 minutes, and I have so much to cover each class. But the ice breaker is important for several reasons. 
  First, the students know what to expect when they arrive in class. They slide into their seats, whip out their pencils, and contemplate what to answer for the ice breaker. What would your license plate say in 7 characters? If you had a million dollars, what would you do with it? If you could have an extra body part, which one and where would it be?   I always give them a model answer: an extra eye on the back of your head; an extra ear on the top of your head; or an extra thumb on each foot to grab with. Sometimes they use a variation of my suggestions, but often they come up with some fantastical, hilarious, or deep answers.
   Second, the students bond quickly, becoming acquainted through their ideas. Often, ice breakers reveal thinking styles, such as scientific or logical, zany or quirky, maybe even a combo of these. By the end of the semester, students easily guess who wrote what by the style or idea offered.  
This leads to the main reason I use ice breakers: the sharing value of writing. My own daughters who were homeschooled attended high school for one year. They wanted to discover if they were as smart as peers who attend school. It took them about a week to find out they were. Using the ice breaker, it takes 10-15 minutes. A student learns his ideas are indeed similar to his peers’ ideas. Sometimes they are even the same. Often they are unique. The student experiences the validity of his own idea. Students also learn how others think, and they can learn new patterns of thought and cleverness, expanding their own. For example, What is something you really don’t like?  Usually the answer is a food, such as broccoli or seafood. But there is an occasional social issue: hunger or bullying. And once in a while there is some silliness: pickle popsicles
            It’s very important to create a safe place for ice breakers, so I set these three rules. 
                1. We don’t comment or care about spelling. We are all learning. 
                       2. No negative comments on others’ ideas. 
        3. No pointing to people when guessing. Use a person’s name. 
One ice breaker is to  rename the ice breaker. Here’s a few favorites: brain cracker, snow melter, super starter,  brain booster, get-to-knower, guessing machine, and (a prize to this portmanteau:) anonymaguess,

I always ask my students as an end-of-the-school-year ice breaker, What’s a good ice breaker?  I’m able to add to my store with this one. I have tried to keep a list of ice breakers for the most part. Again, I have snitched some online, some from a card deck called Chat Pack: Fun Questions to Spark Conversations, and some from friends. Here is my list to date, a bit messy but a massive amount.

ICE BREAKERS

Describe each day of the week as if it’s a person.
What one invention would you uninvent if you could, and why?
What is a good ice breaker?
What is not a good ice breaker?
Create a season.
If you could name a fruit, what would it be?
If you could live within a novel for a day, which book would you choose, what would you tell the characters, and how would your presence alter the story?
If you could be transported into any novel, which one would you travel into, and what would you do/how would you change the story?
Create a new career that would help the world somehow.
Name a new cheese.
If you could see the future, what would you want to see?
You’re in a dark alley, running from a flaming Zamboni. What happened, and what happens next?
Create a new word.
If you could make any inanimate object animate, what would it be and why?
What task would you want to be done by a machine for you? (not homework, school, learning machines)
If you were a car, which would you be?
If you were a plant, what plant would you be?
How do you plan on obtaining a unicorn?
What’s the weirdest way you’ve become hurt?
Where are you going/went for the summer?
Where is your favorite place to do homework?
If only one animal existed on the planet, what would you want it to be?
If you were a polygon, which one would you be, and why?
What is the best way to eat a watermelon?
If you could have an unlimited amount of body parts, this body part would it be?
What is the meaning of life?
If you could have one superpower, what would it be and what would you use it for?
If you could fly to any planet, which one would it be? 
If you had to choose to look like one person in the world, who would you choose? 
What is your favorite type of rain? (monsoon, hail, etc.)
If you have to teach a class, what would you teach? 
If you could live in any time, when would it be? (1600s, 1900s, 3000s, etc.)
Create a food. (desserts ok)
Imagine an enchanted animal and name it.
Which other state would you want to live in?
If you had to name a day that started with the letter, Q, what would the name be? 
If you could be any fictional animal, what would it be? 
What is your favorite emoji?
What is your favorite cartoon character?
What is your favorite ugly color?
If you could travel anywhere in the world, where would you go? 
If you were a shoe, what shoe would you be?
What is your favorite Olympic game?
What is your favorite TV character?
If you could only have one emotion, what would it be? 
What is a goal you have for your future?
If you could create any object with a clap, what would it be?
If you could go back in time for one year, what year would you go to?
If you had to choose a job that you would have for the rest of your life, what would it be?
What word would you get rid of?
If you had to live off one type of food what would it be? 
What is your favorite time of day and why? 
What is your favorite flavor of muffin? 
What did you eat for breakfast?
What is your favorite mode of transportation? (boat, plane, etc.)
What are Saturdays for? 
If you had a choice to be any type of fruit, what would you be? 
If you can turn into any animal, what animal would you turn into? 
If you had a horse, what would you name it? 
Where does Mrs. Erin come up with her ice breakers?
If you can change a part of your body, what would it be? 
What magical power would you like? 
What’s your favorite food?
If you could create your own hot sauce, what would it be called and what’s it made of? 
If you could own an illegal pet, which would you own?
Create a new animal.
If you had one day to do anything, what would you do? 
Create a new instrument.
Name a new element. 
What is your favorite color/
If you had control over the weather, what would be the first thing you would do? 
If you could create a new language, what would it be called?
If you had to give yourself a new name, what would it be? 
Where would you go once and never again?

Fall 2016:
Week 1: Alliteration- how many in a sentence.
Week 1 Writing: favorite word
Week 2: If you could do something an animal could do that humans can’t , what would it be?  e.g. fly like a bird, swim like a fish, sleep upside down like a bat. etc.
Week 3: What is the best and worst thing that happened yesterday?
Week 4: If you were invisible, where would you go? what would you do? 
Week 5: Create a name for a plant that sings.
Week 6: If you could own a pet mythical creature, what would it be?
Week 7: If you could have a lifetime supply of something what would it be?
Week 8: What is the most beautiful thing in the world?
Week 9: New name for a bar of soap.
Week 10: Two words that rhyme. Or Think of a rhyming pair e.g. mellow jello:  Describe so that person can guess it: e.g. relaxed low-calorie jiggly dessert.
Week 11: What is your favorite thing to do?
Week 12: Create a season: name and describe.

Spring 2017:
Week 1: Name of a Movie Star
Week 2: “Oops,” muttered Miss Klinkfelder. Why did she say oops, describe what led up to Miss Klinkfelder’s oops. 
Week 3: ***If you could be transported into any novel, which one would you travel into, and what would you do/how would you change the story?   (Phoebe)
Week 4:  If you could make a puzzle, what would the picture be of?
Week 5: If you could create a company what would its purpose and name be?
Week 6: New name for a candy and what is it?
Week 7: Name of a pirate.
Week 8: Favorite 1,2,3,4 syllable words.
Week 9: If you were a plant, which would you be? venus fly trap, 4 leaf clover, spiny cactus, towering oak 
Week 10: What is your favorite animal sound?
Week 11: If you could do anything you want in the morning, what would it be? sleep, read a book, watch TV
Week 12: Why did the chicken cross the road?
Week 13: If you could choose to dream about something at night, what would it be?
Week 14: New name for a car.
Week 15: If you could become a god, what would you be a god of?
Week 16: If you could ask a dog or a cat one question they could answer, what would the question be?
Week 17: What is the best reason for doing nothing?
Week 18: If you could create an island all to yourself by breaking a chunk off an existing continent, what would you call it and where would if be?

ICE BREAKERS, fall 2017
If you could travel anywhere in the world, where would you go? 
What is your favorite ugly color?
If you were a shoe, what shoe would you be?
How do you plan on obtaining a unicorn?
What are Saturdays for? 
Name a dance move.
If you could fly, where would you fly to?
What do you have to do to make a wish come true?
Make up a mneumonic...planets in order, Central American countries.
Make up a new god, god of what and what’s the name?
If you were a pirate, where would you bury your treasure?
Create a name for a fast food joint.

spring 2016 suggestions:
name of a planet
name of a musician or rock band
name of a fruit
create a season
if you could go to space, what one thing would you bring with you?
If you had to be transported into the past where and when would you go?
If you could combine any 2 animals what would they be?
If you could change your age to any age you wanted, and you would stay that age, what would it be?
If you could name a mountain, what would it be?
If you could have a lifetime supply of something what would it be?
What’s your favorite animal?
If you could go anywhere, where would it be?  live anywhere?
If you could create an atom (element) what would it be? and do?
If you could have whatever you want what would it be? get ears pierced, a dog
If you were a fantasy creature, which one would you be?
If you could own a pet mythical creature, what would it be?
If you were to invent something what would it be?
If you were an alien what would your species be called?
If you could have 3 superpowers, what would they be?
If you wanted to name the earth something else, what would you name it?
If you wrote a book what would it be called?
What ice breaker did you dislike most?
What is your favorite movie?
What would you name your pants?
How would you like to die?
If you could live in someone else’s body, who would it be?
Name a new color.
If you could name a new sports team, what would it be?
Name a dance move.
New name for a pencil. or anything else.
If you could name a sailboat, what would its name be?
If you could name a fruit, what would its name be?
Your nickname.
Create a name for a new dog/cat breed.
If you could only say one sentence for the rest of your life what would it be?
Name your autobiography.
Create a word and its meaning.
Create another word for birdhouse.
If you could fly, where would you fly to?
If you were a pirate, where would you hide your treasure?
Name for a pet dragon.
Create a name for a plant that sings.
New name for a fast food joint.
3 best things that happened to you yesterday
Make up a secret handshake

If you chewed the color blue, what would it taste like
name of a flying car
common name of a new species (spitfire mole)
tweet in so many chars
video game name  or board game  or setting or plot
emoticons, 
What's a name of a new Superhero
If you were a dog, what would you bury?
If you could ask a dog or a cat one question they could answer, what would the question be
If you were an ocean animal, which one would you be?
If anything could grow on trees, what would you have grow on trees
What does a thinking cap look like?
If your friend was an alien, what would you do together?

Tuesday, January 2, 2018

AWE



       I am retiring in 2-3 years. I love my job as an English teacher, because I love reading and writing and children. I’ve been lucky enough to be touched by the lives and inner words of many children over the past years. I’ve received papers on muscle cars, Minecraft, best friends, pets, a first scuba dive, summer camp, baby brothers, hunger, second hand smoke, and the best method to pick up dog poop. I am constantly blown away by amazing poems, passionate persuasive essays, and clever short stories crafted by my students. 
  It takes about 2 years for a young writer to really take off in writing with solid skills and confidence.  I’d like to take credit for that, but really it’s simply all the practice. Laid out mathematically, it takes 26 in-class writing activities plus weekly homework per year, times two years, to attain a fine level of mastery. (I meet with homeschooling students in a classroom setting once a week during the school year. ) So that’s 52 weeks in all, concentrating on writing, to begin to feel very confident.  I’d say that 75% of that is playing with language.  Play with sound, rhythm of words, vocabulary, figurative language, etc. And play with voice: Who are you, writer? Who are you today? Who have you become as a writer? How do you tell your stories?  
My goal in writing this blog weekly is to pass on my teaching materials and enthusiasm. Not every skill or suggestion works for every child. I can throw crazy assignments at kiddos, and some run with them. Others don’t, but something else will inspire them. The goal is not the product but the process. I never comment on content, only on the writing itself.  Even with literary analysis, the students are learning, and it’s not as important if their answers are right in their essays as the clear, strong presentation of ideas.
For my weekly assignments and handouts, I have snitched from all over. To name a few: the internet, books of course, The Writer magazine, my daughter’s college creative writing assignments, Natalie Goldberg’s quintessential Writing Down the Bones, and my college literature anthology, Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama by XL Kennedy.  I will give credit where I remember. Please excuse when I cannot recall where my information originated from.  I’ve created my own handouts from compilations of several sources over many years, and my documentation is spotty at best. The main purpose is to teach children with the knowledge and suggestions of ones wiser in the field. 

Last, my advice to all teachers is to have fun yourself! If you are enthusiastic about the assignment or the subject, you exude the highly contagious AWE virus. (AWE = art, wonder, excitement. ) Learn beside your students, and you are subtly passing on the love of learning. Be as clever as you can, and allow your students to be clever too. One kudos for cleverness jettisons a student to new heights of aplomb, trust, and courage.