Quantcast
Channel:     Poetry for Children
Viewing all 446 articles
Browse latest View live

Poetry and Guam

$
0
0
I have spent the last 10 days on the island of Guam and what an experience it has been! This opportunity arose when I attended the International Literacy Association conference in St. Louis last July and one of the members of the audience at my presentation stepped up to help us with our technology, introduced herself, and then afterward, invited me to come to Guam to speak! Thank you, Geri Charfauros!  And thank you, Evangeline Chaco (ILA/IRA chapter President) and Jennifer Berry (author visit coordinator) for ALL your work, time, arrangements, and hospitality!
The leaders of the ILA/IRA chapter of Guam
All told, I have made 22 presentations during this time and it's given me a new appreciation for all you authors and poets who speak in the schools on a regular basis. Whoa, it's exhausting-- and exhilarating! I spoke at the Guam ILA/IRA chapter meeting, led a workshop for teachers, held another workshop for teens at the public library and then spoke at 18 different schools (3 per day) including private (Catholic), public, and even a Montessori preschool. There were K-2 schools, K-5 schools, middle schools, and high schools on the docket. Plus the organizers had arranged for an escort (usually a retired teacher) to shepherd me around each day. (Thank YOU, Rose Castro, Ephraim Ramos, Jane Rayphand, Anne Doi, Sandy Liberty, and Cindy Pruski!) 

What did I find?
 An audience of eager students, kind and respectful, most of them already steeped in poetry! What a treat! They had created huge "welcome" signs and often posted their own poetry on the walls. They welcomed me with a lei (of shells, pods, seeds, flowers or even coral), provided refreshments, presented honorary certificates, and always gave me a lovely gift bag of treats from their schools or the island. As I said many times, I felt like a movie star! 

And their response to my presentations were always enthusiastic and heartfelt. I focused on poetry of course and encouraged them all to visit the 811 sections of their libraries (making all their school librarians very happy) and then led an hour-long performance of selected poems from our Poetry Friday anthologies: The Poetry Friday Anthology for K-5, for Middle School, for Science, and for Celebrations. SO FUN! PFA poets, I can tell you that you are a big hit in Guam! Students loved your poems so much and these in particular were favorites: 

"Underwear Scare" by Terry Webb Harshman-- I started by projecting a giant image of a pair of underwear and invited them all to join in the line, "You're in your underwear," using a giant sign with the words written on it! They loved "Selfie" by Lorie Ann Grover too and we took many selfie photos together, of course!

I HAD to share "St. Patrick's Day" by Esther Hershenhorn-- since it was THIS WEEK-- with everyone chiming in on the word GREEN and "World Water Day" by George Ella Lyon-- since that is NEXT WEEK-- with everyone chiming in on the word WATER when I lifted my water bottle. "Something I Did" and "The Do Kind" by Janet Wong were very powerful and helped students see how thoughtful and quiet a poem could be to get us thinking about how we treat people.

I got them up and moving with the wonderful, energetic poems:
"I Sit on My Bottom" by Michael Salinger and " Let's Go" by Merry Bradshaw and "Recess" by Avis Harley-- they LOVED pointing and jumping and leaning and moving! 

We performed FOOD poems as they said SPAGHETTI when I shared "Ready for Spaghetti" by Carrie Finison and "Waffles Waffles Waffles" by Alan Wolf.

They enjoyed pet poems with "All Worn Out" by Kristy Dempsey and science poems with "Testing My Magnet" by Julie Larios (they loved yelling YES or NO) as well as the fun alliteration of "What is a Foot" by Jane Yolen. 

The preschool kids also loved "Buttons" by Penny Parker Klostermann as we pointed to all the buttons on our clothes and "Baby Tooth" by Amy Ludwig VanDerwater as they showed me their gap-toothed smiles!

The teens were very engaged by "He Was So Little" by David L. Harrison (you could have heard a pin drop) and "The Fear Factor" by Sara Holbrook as they chanted the word "Okay" together as I read the rest of the poem-- as well as "Dracula" by Carmen T. Bernier-Grand where they performed the "Shhhh...." in the poem while I read the rest. 

They were blown away by "The Bully" by Guadalupe Garcia McCall (one student responded, "That's messed up!") and could totally relate to "Who Am I?" by Margarita Engle since we have an island full of Chamorro (native), Filipino, Korean, Japanese, Chinese, and other islanders all mixed together here. "Future Hoopsters" by Avis Harley surprised them with its acrostic form and "How Romantic Can You Get" by George Ella Lyon made them all smile shyly while "Advice to Rapunzel" by Eileen Spinelli made them grin! And they loved the gross-out factor of "Eviscerate" by Michael Salinger. 

And we filled the room with sound in echo-reading "STOP! Let's Read" by Kristy Dempsey and "How to Love Your Little Corner of the World" by Eileen Spinelli. Plus, we SANG "Sack Lunch" by Charles Waters to the tune of "Row, Row, Row, Your Boat!"

My big finish was leading them in "Photo Op" by Linda Sue Park with the whole audience yelling "FLEAS" as I took their photo with my camera! SO FUN! It was particularly perfect since we nearly always took an organized photo of me and the group at each school, so they were used to getting their pictures taken a lot. Now all the kids all over Guam say "FLEAS" when they get their pictures taken instead of "CHEESE!" Thanks, Linda Sue!


I'm probably forgetting a few other gems, but in one hour, I could only share a handful of poems. And I wanted to show them how much variety of form, feeling, and content they could find in poetry-- something for everyone-- and I hope inspire them to try to write poetry too. It was so lovely to see their responses, hear their questions, get their hugs, and feel this connection through the spoken and written word. What a pleasure and an honor. It was so fun to get to work directly with children and young adults in this way and be reminded of how things are still unfolding for them-- how open they can be-- and how much WE can learn from THEM! 

And did I mention this is a beautiful place? I could post 50 gorgeous sunset photos! ;-)

Now head on over to Robyn's place, Life on the Deckle Edge, for more Poetry Friday goodness!



BOOK LINKS and YPPL Jacqueline Woodson

$
0
0
The new issue of ALA's Book Links magazine features my interview with and article about the new Young People's Poet Laureate, Jacqueline Woodson. What a pleasure to "chat" with her and dig deep into her work through the lens of poetry! Here are a few nuggets from the piece. Once the whole article is available online, I'll add the link here too.

Jacqueline Woodson is the author of more than two dozen books for young readers, a four-time Newbery Honor winner, a recipient of the NAACP Image Award, a two-time Coretta Scott King Award winner and she was recently chosen to deliver the 2017 May Hill Arbuthnot Honor Lecture. Her work includes groundbreaking picture books, novels, and poetry, including the recent National Book Award winner, Brown Girl Dreaming, her memoir in verse. When she was named Young People’s Poet Laureate by the Poetry Foundation in 2015, some people may have been surprised that she was singled out as a POET, but an examination of her work reveals a consistently lyrical use of language, an intentional employment of line breaks and white space, and powerful imagery and intense emotion throughout all her writing. Here, she answers questions about the place of poetry in her life and work and about her plans to “raise awareness” about poetry as the Laureate.

SV:Can you describe the role poetry played in your childhood? When and how did you first discover a love for reading or writing poetry, in particular?

JW: My earliest memory of poetry is Mother Goose of course - my sister reciting various rhymes and my favorite as a child being about the old woman who lived in a shoe. I think I related to the tight living quarters and the tired mom. But somewhere between Mother Goose as a very young child and Langston Hughes as a much older one, I had a disconnect from poetry. Somehow I felt outside of it. I remember hearing Nikki Giovanni’s poetry on an album someone must have owned and thinking “Who and WHAT is that?” but still not making the connection between what Nikki was doing and poetry. When I heard Langston Hughes’ poem “Dream Variations” back in the early 70s, it was a wrap - I got it! I just got it on so many levels  — levels that connected Hughes to Giovanni to Lorde to the Grimké sisters, to Eloise Greenfield — I was on my way.

SV:How would you say your poetry has evolved? What kinds of surprises have you discovered along the way?

Jacqueline Woodson (photo by Marty Umans)
JW: I’ve discovered that I’m not as afraid of poetry as I once was and I’m not afraid to put my work out there and call it poetry — without excuses. I think I struggled with Imposter Syndrome for a long time - thinking my work was poetic but not necessarily poetry. My writing has definitely gotten better over the years — I mean, I *have* been practicing!  I’ve discovered how vast the world of poetry is and how much of it I missed as a child. I find myself trying to read as much poetry as I can as slowly as I can as a way to study the poets who’ve come before me. Right now, I’m revisiting CITIZEN by Claudia Rankine.  It’s phenomenal.

SV:What else would you like to explore in creating poetry for young people?

JW: Everything! I want to do everything! I want to go where people haven’t gone before, create new ways of telling stories, open doors to the historically invisible and silent storytellers and poets in our country, put the voices of young people out into the world, visit places where kids think they’ve never met a ‘real’ writer and hold up a mirror for them.  It would be amazing to bring poetry to every state as YPPL. To walk into classrooms and get young people to believe they have a story, a poem, a voice.

SV: What advice do you have for young people about writing poetry, in particular?

JW: Read poetry. Write poetry. #Noexcuse.

SV:As the current Young People’s Poet Laureate, what are your hopes for the future of poetry for young people?

JW: Oh man, I would SO love for young people to read lots and lots of poetry. I would love for them to see and recognize poetry everywhere in their lives, to talk about the poets they love and the ones they don’t, to write songs and spit lyrics and make chapbooks. I would love, love for Social Justice to be a HUGE part of what young people are writing and talking about one day. I’d love for poetry to cross lines so that poets can look up and see a whole lot of young folks in their audience and young people can look up and see more than parents and teachers coming to hear them write about changing the world.

And there is more Q & A in the article, but now we'll turn to teaching activities and strategies based on Woodson's work.

TEACHING AND LEARNING ACTIVITIES
If you check out the “Poetry” link on Jacqueline Woodson’s website, you’ll see that she focuses on the many ways poetry is infused throughout her writing. She shares excerpts that help illustrate the ideas that poetry can be memoir, fiction, in the form of a picture book, sharing history, or building empathy. Let’s consider each of these areas and how we can build learning activities for young people.

1. Poetry As Memoir (Brown Girl Dreaming)
Jacqueline Woodson explores her own upbringing in her memoir in verse, Brown Girl Dreaming. In talking about why she wrote it in this particular format, she noted, “This is how memory comes to me -- In small moments with all of this white space around them. I didn't think this memoir could be told any other way. It felt like it would be untrue to the story to try to write a straight narrative out of lyrical memory.” You can share three excerpts from the book at her website (http://www.jacquelinewoodson.com/books-ive-written/poetry/) and talk with students about similar memories they may have of their own siblings, parents/caregivers, or classroom moments. Then students can work in pairs to create their own poem memoir moments, interviewing each other about a particular memory, taking notes for each other, and then each building a free verse or found poem based on those notes. To take it even further, guide students in noting Woodson’s use of italics to suggest dialogue in a poem. If time allows for further study, compare this memoir in verse with other works that offer a similar focus such as:

Ada, Alma Flor. Under the Royal Palms: A Childhood in Cuba
Ada, Alma Flor. Where the Flame Trees Bloom
Nelson, Marilyn. How I Discovered Poetry
Lai, Thanhha. Inside Out and Back Again
McCall, Guadalupe Garcia. Under the Mesquite
Yeung, Russell Ching. Tofu Quilt
Yu, Chun. Little Green; Growing Up During the Chinese Cultural Revolution

2. Poetry As Fiction (Locomotion)
In her novel, Locomotion, the narrator Lonnie Collins (nicknamed "Locomotion") writes poetry to tell his story and to express his feelings about being apart from his younger sister and living in foster care after the death of their parents. Once again, Woodson uses italics within a poem to indicate when someone is speaking (besides the narrator) which can be very effective when reading aloud. Try readers’ theater performance, so that students can get a sense of character and voice. Select poems with two parts: plain text and italicized text for two or more volunteers or groups to read aloud in turn. Then talk about how that helps us understand the poem and the points of view better. The novel in verse form offers the generous white space, short lines, and conversational tone that young readers who are still developing their comprehension expertise find helpful. Here are more verse novels for kids in the intermediate grades (grades 4, 5, 6) with younger protagonists and problems and issues like Locomotion and the sequel, Peace, Locomotion:

Applegate, Katherine. The One and Only Ivan
Cheng, Andrea. Where the Steps Were
Creech, Sharon. Love That Dog
Engle, Margarita. The Wild Book
Frost, Helen. Hidden
Grimes, Nikki. Planet Middle School
Herrick, Steven. Naked Bunyip Dancing
Zimmer, Tracie Vaughn. Reaching for Sun
Zimmer, Tracie Vaughn. 42 Miles

3. Poetry As Picture Book (The Other Side)
In an interview in School Library Journal, Jacqueline Woodson noted, “My picture books are long poems really—I decide where the lines break and the flow of the story.” Read aloud and show the text of her picture book, The Other Side. After encouraging the students to respond to the story (and the friendship that transcends race), talk about how the words are arranged on the page, particularly in contrast with the usual format for text in picture books. Look at how the line breaks make the reader pause, adding weight to the thoughts expressed. Consider how they fit with the illustrations on the page. Show how it feels when you read the lines and sentences as if they were continuous narrative, then counter by pausing at the end of each line break as written. Examine some of Woodson’s other picture books to see how she arranges words, lines, phrases, and sentences in them: This is the Rope; Each Kindness; Pecan Pie Baby; Coming On Home Soon; We Had a Picnic This Sunday Past; Sweet, Sweet Memory, Our Gracie Aunt; Visiting Day; Show Way.

4. Poetry as History (Show Way)
Woodson traces her family’s roots in the beautiful picture book, Show Way, a Newbery honor book. After reading the book aloud, talk with students about the stories of each generation portrayed in the book, particularly the power of making quilts to show the path to freedom and literacy. Then focus on the story’s text and how each page and poem works together to “quilt” the story’s narrative. Woodson uses the free verse poem form with distinctive line breaks to make the reader pause and think about each scene, letting the “history” breathe a bit. This can serve as a springboard for students to interview a family member about his/her past, then take their notes and develop a free verse poem, and illustrate the scene in some way (with a drawing or old photograph, for example).

5. Poetry As Empathy (Each Kindness)
I imagine that all authors strive to reach readers’ minds as well as hearts, but I believe poets are particularly adept at moving us with their words—and with very few words, too. That’s one reason we often share a poem at a graduation, wedding, or other celebrations. Poems convey deep emotions that we struggle to express on our own and help us connect with one another in very personal ways. Read aloud Woodson’s picture book, Each Kindness, and talk with children about the story and its challenge to be kinder to one another. If possible, bring a large bowl filled with water and a small stone and reenact the teacher’s exercise with each person dropping the stone into the water while describing an act of kindness they have carried out. Then challenge students to find a poem or story excerpt that makes them feel deeply and invite them to share it with the group. Consider sharing poetry books by some of Woodson’s poet influences such as Honey, I Love by Eloise Greenfield, The Dream Keeper by Langston Hughes, Hip Hop Speaks to Children collected by Nikki Giovanni or Amazing Faces edited by Lee Bennett Hopkins, Lend a Hand by John Frank, This Place I Know: Poems of Comfort edited by Georgia Heard or What the Heart Knows: Chants, Charms & Blessings by Joyce Sidman.

The Book Links article matches each of these activities to appropriate Common Core State Standards (CCSS) and provides a complete bibliography too. FYI.

Source


The Science of Poetry Month

$
0
0
Every year for the last 10 years (!), I have had a different focus for my April posts for National Poetry Month. This year, I'm posting science-poetry connections. Once again, I will be showcasing the work of my wonderful graduate students enrolled in my "Poetry for Children" class at Texas Woman's University-- all of them teachers and librarians. 

We're all starting with the books of Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan, science experts who advocate for the use of children's literature in the teaching of science. Their work puts picture books at the center and they create lessons that teach science concepts through these stories (and nonfiction picture books).  There are three volumes in their popular series published by the National Science Teachers Association: 

Ansberry, Karen and Morgan, Emily. 2010. Picture-Perfect Science Lessons, Expanded 2nd Edition: Using Children’s Books to Guide Inquiry, 3-6. Washington DC: National Science Teachers Association.

Ansberry, Karen and Morgan, Emily. 2007. MorePicture-Perfect Science Lessons: Using Children’s Books to Guide Inquiry, K-4. Washington DC: National Science Teachers Association.

Morgan, Emily and Ansberry, Karen. 2013. Even MorePicture-Perfect Science Lessons: Using Children’s Books to Guide Inquiry, K-5. Washington DC: National Science Teachers Association.

My students each chose one of the books or book pairs highlighted in Ansberry and Moran's resource books (above) and then looked for a poem or poetry book to match with it, along with an additional selection from The Poetry Friday Anthology for Science (edited by yours truly and Janet Wong). They created infographics to integrate the science topic, picture book, and poetry all together. I'll be featuring their work each day of April and I hope you'll find this a helpful resource for infusing poetry across the curriculum. Tomorrow, I'll post my own example to get us rolling. 

Teacher/Librarian Edition                          Student Edition
PLUS
Meanwhile, I'm also excited to report that Janet and I have just published a "refreshed"edition of the Teacher/Librarian edition of The Poetry Friday Anthology for Science with a new cover that makes it clear it is a companion to the student edition, The Poetry of Science-- along with page number designations for all the poems that match up the teacher edition and the student edition for easy cross-referencing. We hope you'll help us spread the word!

Happy Poetry Month, everyone. Now don't forget about Poetry Friday today hosted by the lovely Amy Ludwig VanDerwater at her Poem Farm


Science + Poetry = Life in the Pond

$
0
0
For the month of April (National Poetry Month), I'm featuring science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate students (in my "Poetry for Children" class) are each selecting a science-themed picture book (or pair of picture books) from the series of professional resource books,"Picture Perfect Science Lessons" by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here's the first example (created by me) and centered around the food web of the pond. The focus picture book pair is:

  • White Owl, Barn Owl by Nicola Davies 
  • Butternut Hollow Pondby Brian Heinz

The poetry book that works perfectly with this book pair is Song of the Water Boatman by Joyce Sidman. Plus Pond Circleby Betsy Franco is a great "bonus" selection to connect with this topic too. Below is a graphic featuring those books, followed by a featured poem from Song of the Water Boatman and Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem, "Alligator with Fish" by Jane Yolen, from The Poetry of Science. Here's heaps of science + poetry fun. Enjoy!




Copyright Sylvia Vardell 2016

Science + poetry = The human heart

$
0
0
Here’s the next installment in my series of science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate student, Maria Alvarez-Vaquez (in my "Poetry for Children" class) selected the focus on “the human heart” from the series of professional resource books,"Picture Perfect Science Lessons" by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here are her three infographics centered around the human heart. The focus picture book pair is:
  • Hear Your Heart by Paul Showers 
  • The Busy Body Book: The Kid’s Guide to Fitness by Lizzy Rockwell
The poetry book that works perfectly with this book pair is The Blood Hungry Spleen by Allan Wolf, and in particular, the poem “You Can’t Beat Your Heart.” Below are the graphics featuring all these books, followed by the featured poem and Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem, "Cancer" by Mary Lee Hahn, from The Poetry of Science. Enjoy!




Science of poetry graphics created by Maria Alvarez-Vazquez

Science + Poetry = Symbiotic Relationships

$
0
0
Here’s the next installment in my series of science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate student, Maria Arvisu (in my "Poetry for Children" class) selected the focus on “symbiotic relationships” from the series of professional resource books,"Picture Perfect Science Lessons" by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here are her three infographics centered around symbiotic relationships. The focus picture book pair is:
  • What’s Eating You? Parasites, the Inside Storyby Nicola Davies  
  • Weird Friends: Unlikely Allies in the Animal Kingdomby Jose Aruego and Ariane Dewey
The poetry book that works perfectly with this book pair is Animal Partners by Scotti Cohn, and in particular, the poem “Full Service Fish.” Below is a graphic featuring all these books, followed by the featured poem and Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem, "A Dog’s Hypothesis: Zoey’s Guide to Getting More Goodies" by Susan Taylor Brown, from The Poetry of Science. Enjoy!





Science of poetry graphics created by Maria A.

Science + Poetry = Designing and Engineering Cars

$
0
0
Here’s the next installment in my series of science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate student, Jeannine Birkenfeld (in my "Poetry for Children" class) selected the focus on “designing and engineering cars” from the series of professional resource books,"Picture Perfect Science Lessons" by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here are her three infographics centered around designing and engineering cars. The focus picture book pair is:
  • If I Built a Car by Chris Van Dusen
  • Inventing the Automobile by Erinn Banting
The poetry book that works perfectly with this book pair is Poem-mobiles: Crazy Car Poems by J. Patrick Lewis and Douglas Florian, and in particular, the poem “Giant Bookmobile of Tomorrow.” Below is a graphic featuring all these books, followed by the featured poem and Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem, "The Engineer" by Stephanie Calmenson, from The Poetry of Science. Enjoy!






Science of poetry graphics created by Jeannine Birkenfeld.

Science + Poetry = Chemical Changes and PANCAKES!

$
0
0

Here’s the next installment in my series of science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate student, Sarah Blan (in my "Poetry for Children" class) selected the focus on “chemical changes and cooking from the series of professional resource books,"Picture Perfect Science Lessons" by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here are her three infographics centered around chemical changes and cooking. The focus picture book is:
  • Pancake, Pancakesby Eric Carle
The poetry book that works perfectly with this book pair is the classic poem, often voted a favorite by children, “Mummy Slept Late and Daddy Fixed Breakfast” by John Ciardi from Hot Potato: Mealtime Rhymes compiled by Neal Philip.Below is a graphic featuring all these books, followed by the featured poem and Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem,"Breakfast Alchemy" by Mary Quattlebaum, from The Poetry of Science. Enjoy!



Science of poetry graphics created by Sarah Blan

Image credit: dialoguealumninews.wordpress.com

Science + Poetry = Birds and Beaks

$
0
0
Here’s the next installment in my series of science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate student, Chazley Dotson (in my "Poetry for Children" class) selected the focus on “birds and differing beaks” from the series of professional resource books,"Picture Perfect Science Lessons" by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here are her three infographics centered around birds and differing beaks.The focus picture book pair is:
  • Unbeatable Beaks by Stephen R. Swinburne
  • Beaks! by Sneed B. Collard III
The poetry book that works perfectly with this book pair is “Martín Pescador” by the late Francisco X. Alarcón from his book, Animals Poems of the Iguazú / Animalario del Iguazú.Below is a graphic featuring all these books, followed by the featured poem and Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem, "Discovery / Descubrimiento" by Margarita Engle, from The Poetry of Science. Enjoy!




Science of poetry graphics created by Chazley Dotson

Image credit: dialoguealumninews.wordpress.com

Science Friday meets Poetry Friday

$
0
0
[I'm pausing in my series for a moment to feature a new venture. But don't worry, there are lots more picture books + poetry + science coming!]

When Janet (Wong) and I attended the NSTA (National Science Teachers Association) conference last fall, we strolled the booths and were pleased to discover an exhibit featuring Science Friday. SCIENCE Friday? We immediately thought that we should introduce them to POETRY Friday! 


Now, we're so pleased to report that Science Friday is featuring a poetry post this week in celebration of National Poetry Month-- and our work in The Poetry Friday Anthology for Science is the focus. What a thrill! 

You may already be familiar with the amazing resources available at Science Friday, but I hate to say that I was not. I have certainly enjoyed them since! They bill themselves as "brain fun for curious people" and that is exactly right. Their by-line: "Covering the outer reaches of space to the tiniest microbes in our bodies, Science Friday is the source for entertaining and educational stories about science, technology, and other cool stuff." They feature TONS of podcasts and boast 1.5 million listeners on public radio weekly. It all started as a radio show in 1991, but now they also produce awesome videos and original digital content and offer lots and lots of rich educational resources ready-to-go for classroom or family fun. 

Janet and I worked with the lovely Xochitl Garcia, Education Program Assistant, and Ariel Zych, Education Manager, to create the educational resources that are up right now here:






And be sure to subscribe to their excellent Science Friday newsletter too. 

Now for more focus on POETRY Friday, head on over to Writing the World for Kids where Laura is hosting our party!

Science + Poetry = Phases of the Moon

$
0
0
Here’s the next installment in my series of science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate student, Vanessa Flores (in my "Poetry for Children" class) selected the focus on “phases of the moon” from the series of professional resource books,"Picture Perfect Science Lessons" by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here are her three infographics centered around phases of the moon. The focus picture book pair is:
  • Next Time You See the Moonby Emily Morgan
  • Papa, Please Get the Moon for Meby Eric Carle


The poetry book that works perfectly with this book pair is “The Moon” by Douglas Florian from his book, Comets, Stars, the Moon, and Mars.Below is a graphic featuring all these books, followed by the featured poem and Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem, “Queen of the Night,” by Terry Webb Harshman from The Poetry of Science. Enjoy!





Science of poetry graphics created by Vanessa Flores

Image credit: dialoguealumninews.wordpress.com

Science + Poetry = Phases of the Moon

$
0
0
Here’s the next installment in my series of science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate student, Tamara Hammer (in my "Poetry for Children" class) selected the focus on “insects and invertebrates” from the series of professional resource books,"Picture Perfect Science Lessons" by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here are her three infographics centered around insects and invertebrates. The focus picture book trio is:
  • The Perfect Pet by Margie Palatini
  • Bugs Are Insectsby Anne Rockwell
  • Ant! Ant! Ant!by April Pulley Sayre

The poem that works perfectly with this book pair is “Dragonfly Lights” by Jane Yolen from her book, Bug Off: Creepy, Crawly, Poems.Below is a graphic featuring all these books, followed by the featured poem and Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem, “Pollination,” by Margarita Engle from The Poetry of Science. Enjoy!





Science of poetry graphics created by Tamara Hammer

Image credit: dialoguealumninews.wordpress.com


Science + Poetry = Fossils and Understanding Prehistory

$
0
0
Here is the next installment in my series of science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate student, Corey Haynes (in my "Poetry for Children" class) selected the focus on “fossils and understanding prehistory” from the series of professional resource books,"Picture Perfect Science Lessons" by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here are her three infographics centered around fossils and understanding prehistory. The focus picture book pair is:
  • Fossilby Claire Ewart
  • Fossils Tell of Long Ago by Aliki
Haynes focuses on an excerpt from “Fossil” by Claire Ewart for her poem selection. Below is a graphic featuring all these books, followed by the featured poem and Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem, “Trilobite,” by Mary Ann Hoberman from The Poetry of Science. Enjoy!

















Science of poetry graphics created by Corey Haynes

Image credit: dialoguealumninews.wordpress.com

Book launch: THE LAST FIFTH GRADE OF EMERSON ELEMENTARY

$
0
0
[I'm pausing again in my science + poetry celebration to do something a bit different.]

I'd like to toot the horn for a brand new book out today:

The Last Fifth Grade of Emerson Elementary by Laura Shovan (published by Random House) and illustrated by Abigal Halpin. Check out Laura's blog here and Abigail's blog here.


This is a new novel in verse for the middle grades (gr. 3-7) and I was fortunate to read an advance copy and create an educator's guide for the book. You can find a link to the whole guide here. (The activities are even correlated with the CCSS, if that's helpful to you.)


Here's the publisher's blurb that describes the book: Is the pen mightier than a bulldozer? Fifth grade poets stand up to save their school in this delightful debut novel. This year, Ms. Hill’s fifth graders are writing poems to put into a time capsule. This year, the school board plans to tear down their school to build a supermarket. They might be the last fifth grade class of Emerson Elementary. No way! Inspired by Ms. Hill’s 1960’s political activism, the students decide to save their beloved school. As they circulate petitions, stage sit-in, and test the waters of democratic action, personal questions, triumphs, and sorrows find their way into their poems.


Here are a few nuggets from the guide to whet your appetite!

Timeframe
This novel in verse is broken into four sections using the idea of “quarters” of the school year and months and days of the calendar. Before each section, stop and talk about what usually happens during this time of the school year (e.g., seasons, holidays, special events). Then after each section, review those highlights and how they affected the fictional students and what readers anticipate might happen next. Use the poem titles to help guide the discussion about the big topics, themes, and ideas along the way.

Before sharing this book, display a copy of your class roster and invite students to consider what a book might be like that features a cast of characters as big as a class. If you have a group photo of the class, show that, too. Or show a vintage photo of a class from years gone by available at Shorpy.com. Talk about how this book offers a verbal “snapshot” of one class across a whole school year—all told through poems written as if by 18 children in one fifth grade class.

Characters
There are 18 fifth grade students featured in Ms. Hill’s class in THE LAST FIFTH GRADE OF EMERSON ELEMENTARY and the story unfolds from their multiple points of view. In addition, the students are portrayed in tiny portraits on the cover of the book. Challenge students to visualize each of the student characters in the book as they read, making notes about the unique personality and situation of each character using the “class seating chart” sheet below. They can decide where each student sits on the chart and what key words they would use to describe each student and add those words to each student’s desk. They might even consider which of these fictional students they may want to be for a readers’ theater performance.
And there's heaps more in the guide itself and in the book to explore! 

Related Books
Plus, if you'd like to link this verse novel with other related books of poetry, here you go. For further reading, here are other books of poetry told through multiple (fictional) student perspectives:
Cheng, Andrea. 2008. Where the Steps Were. Honesdale, PA: Boyds Mills/Wordsong.
Frost, Helen. 2014. Room 214: A Year in Poems. (10th Anniversary Reissue of Spinning Through the Universe, 2004). New York: Macmillan.
Herrick, Steven. 2008. Naked Bunyip Dancing. Honesdale, PA: Boyds Mills/Wordsong.
Sidman, Joyce. 2007. This is Just to Say: Poems of Apology and Forgiveness. Ill. by Pamela Zagarenski. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

And for a collection of poems that features one poem for every day of the school year, counting down from the first day of school to the last, look for:
Lewis, J. Patrick. 2009. Countdown to Summer: A Poem for Every Day of the School Year. Ill. by Ethan Long. New York: Little, Brown.

Science + Poetry = Coral reefs and ocean animals

$
0
0
Here is the next installment in my series of science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate student, Carole Hensleigh (in my "Poetry for Children" class) selected the focus on “coral reefs and ocean animals” from the series of professional resource books,"Picture Perfect Science Lessons" by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here are her three infographics centered around coral reefs and ocean animals.The focus picture book pair is:
  • Over in the Ocean: In a Coral Reefby Marianne Berkes
  • Coral Reef Animals by Francine Galko
The poem that works perfectly with this book pair is “Coral” by Kate Coombs from her book, Water Sings Blue.Below is a graphic featuring all these books, followed by the featured poem and Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem, “Moving to Atlantis City 2112,” by Steven Withrow from The Poetry of Science. Enjoy!












Science of poetry graphics created by Carole Hensleigh 
Image credit: dialoguealumninews.wordpress.com

Science + Poetry = Seeds and seed dispersal

$
0
0
Here is the next installment in my series of science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate student, Kristin Hill (in my "Poetry for Children" class) selected the focus on “seeds and seed dispersal” from the series of professional resource books,"Picture Perfect Science Lessons" by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here are her three infographics centered around seeds and seed dispersal.The focus picture book pair is:
  • Flip, Float, Fly: Seeds on the Moveby JoAnn Early Macken
  • Who Will Plant a Tree? by Jerry Pallotta
The poem that works perfectly with this book pair is “Bye, Bye, Berries” by Carole Gerber from her book, Seeds, Bees, Butterflies and More.Below is a graphic featuring all these books, followed by the featured poem, and then the Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem, “Pumpkin Experiment” by Mary Lee Hahn from The Poetry of Science. Enjoy!




Science of poetry graphics created by Kristin Hill

Image credit: dialoguealumninews.wordpress.com

Science + Poetry = Trees

$
0
0
Here is the next installment in my series of science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate student, Amy Horn (in my "Poetry for Children" class) selected the focus on “trees” from the series of professional resource books,"Picture Perfect Science Lessons"by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here are her three infographics centered around trees. The focus picture book pair is:
  • Our Tree Named Steve by Alan Zweibel
  • Be a Friend to Trees by Patricia Lauber
The poem that works perfectly with this book pair is “Leaves” by Douglas Florian from her book, Poetrees.Below is a graphic featuring all these books, followed by the featured poem, and then the Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem, “Photosynthesis” by Marilyn Singer from The Poetry of Science. Enjoy!










Today is also Poetry Friday, so don't miss all the other wonderful poetry sharing hosted by Michelle at Today's Little Ditty. See you there! 


Science of poetry graphics created by Amy Horn

Image credit: dialoguealumninews.wordpress.com

Science + Poetry = Constellations and the night sky

$
0
0
Here is the next installment in my series of science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate student, Elizabeth Jackson (in my "Poetry for Children" class) selected the focus on “constellations and the night sky” from the series of professional resource books,"Picture Perfect Science Lessons"by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here are her three infographics centered around constellations and the night sky. The focus picture book pair is:
  • When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer by Walt Whitman (ill. by Loren Long)
  • Spots of Light: A Book About Stars by Dana Meachen Rau
Elizabeth focused on the classic Walt Whitman poem in one of the featured books, “When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer.”Below is a graphic featuring all these books, followed by the featured poem, and then the Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem, “Orion Nebula” by Mary Lee Hahn from The Poetry of Science. Enjoy!






Science of poetry graphics created by Elizabeth Jackson

Image credit: dialoguealumninews.wordpress.com

Science + Poetry = Constellations and the night sky (2)

$
0
0
Here is another installment in my series of science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate student, Nicole Sportsman (in my "Poetry for Children" class) also selected the focus on “constellations and the night sky” from the series of professional resource books, "Picture Perfect Science Lessons" by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here are her three infographics centered around constellations and the night sky. The focus picture book pair is once again:
  • When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer by Walt Whitman (ill. by Loren Long)
  • Spots of Light: A Book About Stars by Dana Meachen Rau
Nicole also focused on the classic Walt Whitman poem from the featured book, “When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer.” Below is a graphic featuring all these books, followed by the featured poem, and then the Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem, “Looking at the Sky Tonight” by Janet Wong (a different poem) from The Poetry of Science. Enjoy!




Science of poetry graphics created by Nicole Sportsman 

Image credit: dialoguealumninews.wordpress.com

Science + Poetry = The sun and sun safety

$
0
0
Here is another installment in my series of science poetry tied to science-themed picture books. My graduate student, Amy Kennedy (in my "Poetry for Children" class) selected the focus on “the sun and sun safety” from the series of professional resource books,"Picture Perfect Science Lessons" by Karen Ansberry and Emily Morgan (and published by the National Science Teachers Association). Here are her three infographics centered around the sun and sun safety.The focus picture book is:
  • Sunshine on My Shouldersby John Denver, ill. by Christopher Canyon
The poem that Amy has matched with this book is “The Sun” by Louise Fabrice Handcock from her book, The Sun, the Moon, and the Stars.Below is a graphic featuring all these books, followed by the featured poem, and then the Take 5 activities to accompany the poem along with a "bonus" poem, “What I Know About the Sun” by Eileen Spinelli from The Poetry of Science. Enjoy!




Science of poetry graphics created by Amy Kennedy

Image credit: dialoguealumninews.wordpress.com
Viewing all 446 articles
Browse latest View live