390 likes | 635 Views
Personification. Poetry . Warm Up: Vocabulary Quiz. Personification . List everything you have learned about Personification so far in your interactive journal. Listen to the Sea. Use the guide and follow all of the directions to write a poem using personification.
E N D
Personification Poetry
Personification • List everything you have learned about Personification so far in your interactive journal.
Listen to the Sea • Use the guide and follow all of the directions to write a poem using personification. • Final copies should be on computer paper. Please write neatly and decorate. • Take pride in your work • Poem will be graded.
Share poems • Share your poem with the class. • Please be respectful of each other. • Listen respectfully.
Homework • Vocabulary Square • ONOMATOPOEIA
Warm uP: Hyperbole • Review the definition in your notes and list five examples of hyperbole.
Hyperbole Meanings • What are the meanings of the following hyperboles? • I could sleep for a year. • This box weighs a ton • I've told you a million times not to exaggerate. • Your mother is so small she does chin-ups on the curb.
aLLITERATION/ ONOMATOPOEIA/ hYPERBOLE • Travel to the posters around the room and list examples of figurative language for a review. • Alliteration: Repeated beginning sounds • Onomatopoeia: Sound Words • Hyperbole:: Exaggerations
Put it in writing! • Independently write a funny story or poem using examples of hyperbole, alliteration, and onomatopoeia.
HOMEWORK • Read anything you want for 30 minutes. Then write a one paragraph summary of what you read.
Warm Up • Brainstorm: • List everything you know about SENSORY LANGUAGE and the FIVE SENSES.
Poets use sensory words to help their readers see, hear, smell, touch and taste what the poem or story is about.
Sensory words are words that remind us of our five senses: -sight -sound -smell -touch -taste
How can we add sensory words to make it better? Let’s look at this poem: In the morning while I eat my oatmeal I can smell the scent of toast coming from our toaster.
Think about how it might sound if sensory words were used in different places: In the chilly morning while I eat my warm and pasty oatmeal I can smell the sweet scent of cinnamonraisin toast coming from our tiny, tin toaster.
practice • With your partner, look at the photos and describe them using words that appeal to your senses. • List them in your interactive notebooks.
Warm UP- fiND THE SENSORY LANGUAGE IN THIS POEM • When the Frost is on the Punkin • BY JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY When the frost is on the pumpkin and the fodder’s in the shock, And you hear the kyouck and gobble of the struttin’ turkey-cock, And the clackin’ of the chickens, and the cluckin’ of the hens, And the rooster’s hallylooyer as he tiptoes on the fence; O, it’s then the times a feller is a-feelin’ at his best, With the risin’ sun to greet him from a night of peaceful rest, As he leaves the house, bareheaded, and goes out to feed the stock, When the frost is on the pumpkin and the fodder’s in the shock.
In groups w/ Butcher paper • Each of you will think of a place where you have been. You will describe the five senses of that place on your quadrant of the paper. • What did it look like? Smell like? Sound like? Taste like? Feel like? Try to describe the place so that your group members can guess where it is but do not tell them.
On your own… Fall Song- Read and Notate • Read the poem and underline all of the sensory language. • Then complete the chart and answer the questions.
Look at this familiar Fall poem! Sensory Language? Figurative Language? The ribs of leaves lie in the dust, The beak of frost has picked the bough, The briar bears its thorn, and drought Has left its ravage on the field. The season’s wreckage lies about, Late autumn fruit is rotted now. All shade is lean, the antic branch Jerks skyward at the touch of wind, Dense trees no longer hold the light, The hedge and orchard grove are thinned. The dank bark dries beneath the sun, The last of harvesting is done. All things are brought to barn and fold. The oak leaves strain to be unbound, The sky turns dark, the year grows old, The buds draw in before the cold.
You will be writing a fall poem today! • Outside sensory hunt • Take your chart from the warm up outside. • We will walk around in the school yard and find things from the fall that appeal to our senses. • You will use the chart to write an original fall poem that appeals to all five senses AND has examples of figurative language.
OUTSIDE • 1. Fill the chart up so that it is over flowing with information about the fall and the seasons • 2. Keep on task we will be out for about 15 minutes. • 3. Line up at the door when we are ready to go in. • 4. Please keep hands to yourself • NO HORSEPLAY
Welcome back • Now use the information on the chart to develop figurative language from your walk. • Use the figurative and sensory language to write your poem.