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This warm-up activity reviews narrative poetry, figurative language, and poetry collection vocabulary by completing a self-awareness chart. Includes definitions of narrative poetry, simile, metaphor, extended metaphor, and personification. Helps students understand the role of the speaker in poetry.
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WARM UP—Review(Don’t forget to copy your agenda and learning goal!) Define the following: Narrative Poetry Figurative Language Simile Metaphor Extended Metaphor Personification
Today’s Learning Goal I will review poetry terms and learn the selection vocabulary for Poetry Collection 1 by completing a vocabulary self-awareness chart.
Figurative Language Review • Simile: A comparison of two unlike things in which a word of comparison (as or like) is used. • Metaphor: A comparison of two unlike things in which no word of comparison (as or like) is used. • Extended Metaphor: A metaphor introduced and then further developed throughout all or part of a literary work especially a poem • Personification: A literary device in which the author/poet speaks of or describes an animal, object, or idea as if it were a person
Speaker • In poetry, the speaker is the voice that says the words of the poem. • The speaker may be the poet, or • The speaker may be a character the poet invents to give the poem a particular viewpoint • All poems have a speaker, but some poems have qualities that set them apart giving them a distinct form
Narrative Poetry and Speaker • Narrative Poetry tells a story using figurative language and imagery • The Speaker in Narrative poetry is the one telling the story
Lyric Poetry and Speaker • Lyric poems include types of figurative language and imagery to create a single unified impression or feeling • In lyric poetry, the speaker’s thoughts and feelings create that single, unified impression
Poetry Collection #1 • “The Bridegroom” by Alexander Pushkin • Narrative Poem • “The Guitar” by Federico Garcia Lorca • Lyric Poem • “The Fish” by Elizabeth Bishop • Narrative Poem • “Danny Deever” by Rudyard Kipling • Lyric Poem
Exit Reflection Write a complete sentence that uses one of your vocabulary words and a prepositional phrase. *Make sure to underline the vocabulary word and underline the prepositional phrase in your sentence.