Happy Poetry Friday! Mary Lee is
hosting over at A Year of Reading today.
We got a head start on Poetry
Month at our library with a three-session BUILD A POEM workshop in March. The
children were so receptive and shared their deep wells of creativity. We
probably didn’t change any lives, as Ms. Mirabel did in Word After Word After Word, but spending this time with six kids
from my town was a gift to me. I encourage other poets to step out and share
your love of writing poetry with kids. Here are some photos and samples poems
generated by 4th and 5th graders. Our focus was strong
verbs and words that feel good on your tongue.
We started with a mask poem,
becoming the tree that was living before it became the wood we wrote on.
William Carlos Williams’ poem “This is
Just to Say” was our model for apology poems.
I’m
sorry I ate the last I’m
sorry for stuffing you
piece
of strawberry pie in
your cat carrier
which
was probably for dessert, and
leaving you for an hour.
but
the crust was so flaky I’m
sorry for forgetting you
and
the inside so red and
for missing your dinner.
and
juicy.
Please
forgive me.
We experimented with the Six Room
Poem exercise from Georgia Heard’s Awakening
the Heart to write about a special place.
At each session, we wrote on wood
and boxes and built a Poem
Center for display.
The culminating activity was a
cupcake poem about spring!