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Read Poetry

Read Poetry. And Open Your Imagination. 4 th Grade Communication Arts Created by Julie Pettyjohn. By the end of this interactive presentation, you will be familiar with six forms of poetry and be ready to write two of your own poems as a class assignment. .

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Read Poetry

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  1. Read Poetry And Open Your Imagination 4th Grade Communication Arts Created by Julie Pettyjohn

  2. By the end of this interactive presentation, you will be familiar with six forms of poetry and be ready to write two of your own poems as a class assignment. This exercise builds toward GLE Reading:2. Develop and apply skills and strategies to comprehend and evaluate fiction, poetry, and drama from a variety of cultures and times.Level Grade 4: Recognize the text features of fiction, poetry, and drama in grade-level context.

  3. Directions • On the main menu (next slide), find six forms of poetry. Start with any one you like, but return to the main menu after each section until you have completed all six. • Take the quiz after you have read all six sections. • After the quiz, advance to the Summary and open the Word document to do your writing assignment. Go Back Directions Main Menu Sources Take Quiz Next

  4. Sources • http ://teacher.net • http://www.ahapoetry.com/haiku.htm#issa • http://www.pbskids.org • http://www.toyomasu.com/haiku • International Reading Association. http://www.readwritethink.org/lessons/lesson_view.asp?id=43 • Knock at a Star: A Child’s Introduction to Poetry, X.J. Kennedy and Dorothy M. Kennedy • Los Angeles County Office of Education. http://teams.lacoe.edu • Where the Sidewalk Ends by Shel Silverstein

  5. Main Menu – Poetry Palace Lyric Haiku Limerick Cinquain Narrative Free Verse

  6. Narrative Poems • A narrative poem tells a story. • Sometimes the lines rhyme. Sometimes they do not rhyme.

  7. Example: Narrative The Purist I give you now Professor Twist, A conscientious scientist. Trustees exclaimed, “He never bungles!” And sent him off to distant jungles. Camped on a tropic riverside, One day he missed his loving bride. She had, the guide informed him later, Been eaten by an alligator. Professor Twist could not but smile. “You mean,” he said, “a crocodile.” by Ogden Nash

  8. Limerick Poems • Limericks are usually funny or silly. • They have a rhythm or beat and a rhyming pattern.

  9. Example: Limerick Ickle Me, Pickle Me, Tickle Me Too (Here is one stanza, not the entire poem.) Ickle Me, Pickle Me, Tickle Me too Went for a ride in a flying shoe. “Hooray!” “What fun!” It’s time we flew!” Said Icke Me, Pickle Me, Tickle Me too. by Shel Silverstein

  10. Free Verse Poems • Free verse poems have no real rhythm or pattern. • Sometimes the author places the words of the poem on the page in a pattern to reflect the subject. • Let your imagination soar when you write a free-verse poem.

  11. Example: Free Verse For a Quick Exit For going up or coming down, In big department stores in town. you take an escalator. (They come in pairs.) Or else an elevator. (Also stairs.) I wish storekeepers would provide a s l i d e ! by Norma Farber

  12. Haiku Poems • Haiku poetry began in Japan. • A haiku has three short lines. • Traditional Japanese Haiku had five syllables on line 1, seven syllables on line 2, and five on line 3. This rule is not usually followed in English. • To write a Haiku, think of a subject and write thoughts, not sentences.

  13. Examples: Haiku Poverty’s child – he starts to grind the rice,and gazes at the moon. by Basho, Matsuo Now the swing is still,a suspended tirecenters the autumn moon. by Nicholas Virgilio

  14. Lyrics • Lyric poems express feelings and emotion. • Lyrics put with music are songs.

  15. Example: Lyric Blowin’ in the Wind How many roads must a man walk downbefore you call him a man?Yes, ‘n’ how many seas must a white dove sailbefore she sleeps in the sand?Yes, ‘n’ how many times must the cannon balls flybefore they’re forever banned?The answer, my friend, is blown’ in the wind.The answer is blowin’ in the wind. by Bob Dylan

  16. Cinquain Poems • There are exactly five lines (from the French word “cinq,” which means five) • Line 1: 1 word (subject of the poem) • Line 2: 2 words (adjectives that describe line 1) • Line 3: 3 words (action verbs relating to line 1) • Line 4: 4 words (feelings or a complete sentence) • Line 5: 1 word (that sums up line one or is a synonym of line one)

  17. Examples: Cinquain Studentsboy, girlplaying, studying, growingI like my students.achievers byMrs. Pettyjohn Trianglespointy, edgedrevolving, rotating, anglingTriangles are all different.180 Anonymous Keyboardfun, newreading, laughing, writingYou have new messages.E-mail Anonymous

  18. Are you ready to take a short quiz? YesI am ready to begin NoI’ll go back to the Main Menu and review some more.

  19. Question 1 Read the poem and select the form of poetry that best represents the style in which it is written. That Lovable Old Issaby Earle Joshua Stone Come over with meand together let’s playOh, motherless sparrow. Free verse Haiku Cinquain Lyric

  20. Correct!Way to go!

  21. Oops!Try again

  22. Question 2 Read a selection from the poem, “Paul Bunyan” and select the form of poetry that best represents the style in which it is written. Paul Bunyan by Shel Silverstein He rode through the woods on a big blue ox.He had fists as hard as choppin’ blocks,Five hundred pounds and nine feet tall … that’s Paul. Talk about workin’, when he swung his axeYou could hear it ring for a mile and a half. Then he’d yell, “Timber!” and down she’d fall … for Paul. Free verse Cinquain Lyric Narrative

  23. Correct!Go to question 3

  24. Oops!Try question 2 again

  25. Question 3 Read the poem below and select the form of poetry that best represents the style in which it is written. Oops by Shel Silverstein Down Upside Out Come All Poems My Found I Can’t But Try Do I Around All Them Turn Not Can I Down Upside Out Come All Poems My Free verse Haiku Cinquain Narrative

  26. Correct!Go to question 4!

  27. Oops!Try question 3 again

  28. Question 4 Read the poem and select the form of poetry that best represents the style in which it is written. Magic by Shel Silverstein Sandra’s seen a leprechaun, Eddie touched a troll, Laurie danced with witches once, Charlie found some goblins’ gold. Donald heard a mermaid sing, Susie spied an elf, But all the magic I have known, I’ve had to make myself. Free verse Narrative Limerick Lyric

  29. Correct!You completed the quiz!

  30. Oops!Try question 4 again

  31. Summary You are now familiar with six different forms of poetry. A narrative poem tells a story Limericks are funny or goofy Haiku is a three-line form of poetry from Japan Free verse has no rules and is creative Cinquains are poems with five lines that follow a word number pattern You can sing lyrics Now, you are ready to write a few poems. Click on the Word icon and write one Haiku poem and one Cinquain. Put your name on the page Print your assignment and turn in the printed page

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