April 2016

POETRY MONTH

WHY?             appreciation of literature, interest in poetry

WHAT?          April is National Poetry Month!

HOW?             Celebrate poetry month in your classroom or in your school with some of these activities:                                                

Visiting Poet - Invite a poet from your community to visit and read poetry. Encourage the children to generate questions to ask the author before her visit.

Poetry Wall of Fame – Decorate a bulletin board in the front hall or lunchroom and encourage teachers to display their students’ poems on it.

Send a Poem – Let children copy poems or write original poems on postcards and mail them to friends and family members.                         

*They could also send poems to each other via the internet.

Poetry Search – Let each child choose her favorite poet and research information in the school library or on the internet.  Where did their author grow up?   What made her want to become a poet?   Do they have pets?  A family?  If they could talk to the poet, what would they like to ask her?

Poetry Detectives - Challenge the children to be “detectives” and locate the poetry section in your school library.  Learn this rhyme:

                                    For an emergency call 911 any time.
                                    In the library 811 for a poem or rhyme.

Poetry Hunt  - Cut out magazine pictures of different objects and glue them on index cards.  Place the cards in a sack and have each child draw one.  Can they find a poem to go with their picture?

Poetry Contest – Create a poetry competition and encourage each child to submit a favorite poem that they have written.  (Make sure everyone wins a ribbon!  You could give awards for the funniest, shortest, longest, or other categories.)

Poetry Workshop – How about a poetry workshop where each child writes a poem that classmates critique?  This could be an excellent way to integrate grammar skills.

POETRY CLUB

WHY?             oral language skills, auditory memory, self-confidence

WHAT?          poster board, glitter, glue, markers, cardstock

HOW?           Write “Poetry Club” on the poster board and decorate with glitter and glue.  Explain that anyone who stands up in front of the class and recites a nursery rhyme or poem can be a member of the poetry club.  (You might want to model reciting a poem for them.)   After they’ve recited their poem, let them sign their name on the poster.

MORE?        Design a membership card for the poetry club and run off on cardstock.                     Present one to the children after they’ve recited a poem for their classmates.

Adaptations:   Trace around a child’s body.  Hang it on the wall and call it the “Poetry Person.”  Use as you would the poster for letting children sign their names after reciting a poem.

POETRY CAFÉ

WHY?            oral language, interest in poetry

WHAT?          poems, snacks

HOW?           Plan a poetry party for your students called the “Poetry Café.”                         Involve children in planning refreshments, making decorations, writing invitations, etc.  Encourage each child to learn and practice reciting a poem.  Explain that in the coffee houses instead of clapping, the audience would “snap” their fingers for the poets.

COFFEE HOUSE FRIDAY

WHY?             interest in poetry, oral language

WHAT?          instant hot chocolate mix, coffee mugs, copies of poems

HOW?             Ask each parent to send in a box of instant hot chocolate and an old coffee mug.   On Friday afternoons let the children make hot chocolate in their mugs.  As everyone enjoys their hot chocolate, the teacher and children read poetry.  Who wouldn’t fall in love with poetry?

A POEM A DAY!

WHY?             interest in poetry, vocabulary

WHAT?          poetry books, anthologies, internet, magazines

HOW?             Choose a poem and read it to your class at the beginning of each day.  You can read it and “let it be.”  Or, you could use the poem to introduce vocabulary or to spark a discussion.

MORE?          Assign each child a different day to be responsible for bringing in the poem.

Hint!  This might be a good activity for children to do with their parents.

Display poems on a wall, add them to your poetry treasure box, hang them on a clothesline in the hall, or have a seasonal tree where you hang the poems. 

Choose a poem each day to read over the school intercom.

POETRY TREASURE BOX

WHY?             motivation to read, reading for pleasure

WHAT?          shoebox, gold spray paint, 5” x 8” index cards, glitter, glue, sequins, copies of poems

HOW?             Spray paint a shoebox or similar box with gold spray paint.  Decorate with glitter, sequins, etc. to make it look like a treasure box.  As you introduce and share poetry with your students, glue copies of the poems to index cards and “save” them in the treasure box. Whenever you have a few extra minutes, invite a child pick a card from the treasure box and read it to the class.

Tell children if they are sad, or lonely, or bored…whatever they might be feeling, they can always go to the poetry treasure box and find a poem to enjoy. 

MORE?          Invite children to write original poems and add them to the treasure box.

Let one child take the box home each night and share it with their families.

Have children create their own personal poetry treasure boxes.

 

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