Poetry
Assignment
Personal
Poetry Writing
For the last several class meetings, you have
been learning about and writing different forms of poetry:
Free verse poems, I POEMS, concrete
poems, acrostic poems, found poems, and haiku poems. You also have read about
other forms of poetry through class readings and web sites.
Based on your personal poetry writing
experiences and your reading about poetry, complete the following assignment with your students. This is the only assignment that you are required to complete in your classroom. If you do not have access to a classroom, talk with members of our class who are practicing teachers.
Assignment:
- Describe a context in which your
students are learning about a nonfiction topic such as a person, place, or
event. For example, students might be studying Pirates, communitities, WWII, or they might be learning about animal life cycles, landforms, or the rainforest.
- Describe the instructional
grouping structure: individual, small-group, or whole-class.
- Create a plan for inviting
students to gather information about a topic (research) and then to transform that
information through poetry writing.You may choose any poetic form.
- You will include a "shared writing" plan where you compose a poem together, with your class, before students engage in independent research and composition.
- Your plan will include a
description of a mini-lesson that you will teach to support students in writing
a poem with precise descriptions and interesting word choices. That is,
your mini-lesson should take place before writing and should help students
become aware of how to choose words thoughtfully in order to create effective
descriptions.
- Develop an invitation and rubric that you will give to your students.
- You will take your students through the writing process. Please describe how you will publish student work and provide evidence of students' published work.
- Be sure to provide a complete reference for the poetry books you
will use as your literary models.
Read this information about the instructional scaffold for writing informational poetry.
Here is an example of a poetry outline. Please note I have not written the "lesson plan" rather included an outline of what took place. For a more specific lesson plan, please check out Kari Harrington's Plan, Invitation, and Rubric.
RUBRIC FOR YOUR POETRY ASSIGNMENT
Aspects of
lesson |
Possible Points |
Lesson context
is specified:
q content area
q topic of study
q grade level and grouping structure |
/4 |
Mini-lesson:
q Provides support for
students by focusing on precise description and interesting word choice
q Is clearly explained
|
/8 |
Lesson plan:
q Provides sequenced set
of activities designed to support students in gathering information and
using it to create, publish, and share a poem including:
q Shared writing completed by students and teacher
q Evidence of student research and published poems
|
/15 |
Invitation to
students:
q Motivating
q Simple, clear directions
q Inviting format: not too
cluttered or too stark
|
/6 |
Rubric for
students:
q Clear and easy to
understand
q Relates directly to what
the invitation described
|
/7 |
Total
|
/40 |
Analysis of Poetry
Assignment
Describe your poetry
project. Share any important details and/or observations that may not have been
included in your original plan.
Discuss the impact on
student learning or the results of the poetry project. You may choose to
reference student scores on the rubric, student writing samples, observations
of, conversations and interviews with students. In other words, you need to
provide some evidence of student learning.
Did your students’
writing improve? How so?
Are the results different
from what you projected? How so?
Will you continue to
explore poetry as a means of integrating other curricula areas?
Describe the impact this
assignment has had on your teaching.
Take digital
photos of your students researching, composing, sharing, and/or publishing their
poems. We will share our projects during our last class meeting!
(15 points)
|