Showing posts with label Baseball Poems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baseball Poems. Show all posts

Thursday, April 2, 2015

Day 2 - National Poetry Month 2015 - Sing That Poem!

Happy National Poetry Month!
Welcome to Day 2 of this Year's Poem Farm Project!

Find the Complete April 2015 Poem and Song List Here

First, I would like to welcome all old and new friends to The Poem Farm this April. Spring is a busy time on all farms, and this one is no exception.  Each April, many poets and bloggers take on special poetry projects, and I'm doing so too.  You can learn all about Sing That Poem! and how to play on my April 1st post, where you will also find the list of the whole month's poems and tunes as I write and share them.  If you'd like to print out a matching game page for yourself, you can find one here, and during April 2015, you'll be able to see the song list right over there in the left hand sidebar.

Yesterday's poem was Let's Play Ball.  Here is the tune that goes along with it. Did you figure it out?



And here, below, is today's poem.  Look at the song list in the sidebar or on your matching form to see if you can puzzle out which tune matches this one.

Concrete Whales in Pittsburgh, PA
Photo by Amy LV


Students - Today's poem is a poem of joy, of remembering and of longing too.  If you have been here to The Poem Farm before, you  know that I like imagining that I am or have been all kinds of animals and things.  This verse matches the tune of one of my most favorite songs, and I like to think that the words pair well with the feeling of the song.

When I first wrote today's poem, there was only one verse.  But I just felt that it needed a second verse, so I came back and added one.  And you know what?  I may add a third.  Perhaps I really was once a whale...

Jama is keeping a wonderful list of all kinds of poetry projects and happenings all around the Kidlitosphere this month.  You can check this list out at Jama's Alphabet Soup.

Tomorrow I will be hosting Poetry Friday here at The Poem Farm.  Please come back to learn about about all of the wonderful poems and poetry ideas that everyone will be sharing on this first Poetry Friday of National Poetry Month!

Please share a comment below if you wish.

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Day 1 - National Poetry Month 2015 - Sing That Poem!

Happy National Poetry Month!
Welcome to This Year's Poem Farm Project!
Find the Complete April 2015 Poem and Song List in This Post!


(Introductory Poem - Sing this verse to the tune of Mairzy Doats!)



First, I would like to welcome all old and new friends to The Poem Farm this April. Spring is a busy time on all farms, and this one is no exception.  Each April, many poets and bloggers take on special poetry projects, and I'm doing so too.

This month at The Poem Farm, you will find a game called Sing That Poem! Every day I will post a new poem written to match the meter of a well-known song....but I'm not telling which song.  You can print the Sing That Poem! PDF below or just look at the song titles in the sidebar here to match each day's poem with the song it was inspired by.  I'll post a recording each next day with the answer to the previous day's poem/song match, and you can sing right along if you wish. My goal in this project is to stretch my writing muscles into new meters and to have some fun too. 


Each day, I'll keep a running list below of the whole month's poem/songs in case you miss some or join us late.  I'm glad you're here.

SING THAT POEM! Answers

April 1 - Let's Play Ball - Words Here (Below) / Let's Play Ball - Tune Here
April 2 - Blue Soul - Words Here / Blue Soul - Tune Here
April 3 - At Night - Words Here / At Night - Tune Here
April 4 - Sharing - Words Here / Sharing - Tune Here
April 5 - Winterspring - Words Here / Winterspring - Tune Here
April 6 - I Will - Words Here / I Will - Tune Here
April 7 - Greefee Wumpa - Words Here / Greefee Wumpa - Tune Here
April 8 - Look - Words Here / Look - Tune Here
April 9 - There is a Poem - Words Here / Tune Here
April 10 - City Home - Words Here / City Home - Tune Here
April 11 - In the Harbor - Words Here / In the Harbor- Tune Here
April 12 - Ocean Writer & The Best Dog Words Here/ Both Poems Tune Here
April 13 - Painter - Words Here / Painter - Tune Here
April 14 - Librarian's Song - Words Here / Librarian's Song - Tune Here
April 15 - You and Me Words Here / You and Me - Tune Here
April 16 - Memories - Words Here / Tune Here
April 17 - Red Kite - Words Here / Tune Here 
April 18 - Small Wish - Words Here / Tune Here
April 19 - Spice Song - Words Here / Spice Song - Tune Here
April 20 - Still - Words Here / Tune Here
April 21 - Cool as You Are - Words Here / Cool as You Are - Tune Here
April 22 - Earth Day Song - Words Here / Earth Day Song - Tune Here
April 23 - I Want You To Know This Before My Party Words Here / Tune Here
April 24 - Rattlesnake, Rattlesnake Words Here / Rattlesnake, Rattlesnake - Tune Here
April 25 - Life's Door - Words Here / Life's Door - Tune Here
April 26 - In a Book - Words Here / In a Book - Tune Here
April 27 - Alone Outside - Words Here / Alone Outside / Tune Not Here Yet

Let's sing!
xo,
a.

Here it Comes!
by Amy LV


Students - Which song does this poem match?  You can look at the songs in the sidebar or on the Song Page to try to sing this one to different tunes.  I know you can figure it out.  And if not, I will sing it to you tomorrow!

You will notice that I am trying to incorporate the rhythm and rhyme patterns from well-known songs into my poems each day.  Sometimes I might change the line breaks, and I may not repeat every line and word in the exact same way that the model songs do.  However, I promise that my poems this month will be singable!  I really enjoy writing out the syllables for a known song and then counting out my poem's syllables, checking the beats and rhymes for singable-ness.

Why a baseball poem to start the month?  Well, here where I live in Western New York, the grass is starting to show after a long winter of snow.  That means that baseball season is soon.  Hooray!

If you are curious about previous Poem Farm projects during past Poetry Months, here's a little history of National Poetry Month here:

April 2010 - First month ever of The Poem Farm.  It was to be a 30 day project
April 2011 - A roundup of techniques from all of 2010 - TPF would stay online.
April 2012 - Dictionary Hike - Daily poems from A-Z from random words.
April 2013 - Drawing into Poems -A new daily drawing inspired some new poems.
April 2014 - Thrift Store Live - Daily poems grown from my own thrift store photos. 
April 2015 - Sing That Poem! - Matching song game to explore various meters.

You can learn details of all of the neat Poetry Month projects happening 'round the Kidlitosphere at Jama's Alphabet Soup. Jama has graciously rounded us all up again!  Have fun exploring, and happy April!

Please share a comment below if you wish.

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Double Play Dreams & A Double Poetry Peek

Henry's Shirt
Photo by Amy LV




Students - Today's poem was inspired by a great catch my son made in the outfield over the weekend.  Sometimes we write poems simply to celebrate something wonderful in our lives.  And watching Henry make that catch was pretty wonderful.  I decided to write today's poem in the voice of an outfielder, not my own, because out in the field is where the action is.

Did you notice that SMACK and OUT are all in capital letters?  This is because I want you to read them loudly.

And now, it's time for a double...


First Grade Poetry Journey 
by Debra Frazier

Today I am tickled to welcome teacher Debra Frazier and her first grade writers from Ohio as they share and offer a link over to their poetry journey from this spring. I am also so happy to welcome teacher Margaret Simon and her fourth and sixth graders from Louisiana with their manatee poetry. First, here is Debra.

Our class has been immersed in poetry, from reading, writing and tweeting! On our poetry journey we have learned about mask poems, line breaks, white space, creating visual images, and the art of reading poetry. Amy LV guided our journey with her Poem Farm and tweets.

We were honored when Amy graciously invited us to link to our poetry here on the Poem Farm. We are proud to be here, and we hope you enjoy our poetry and follow our poetry path on Twitter. Of course young poets LOVE comments! You can read our poems and comment right on the poets' kidblogs at Behind the Scenes in First Grade.

Here is one of the poems from one of our kidblogs.

Thank you so much to these young poets for sharing this journey with me all along and today at The Poem Farm.  I have learned a lot this spring about working with classes of young writers through Twitter, and I am grateful to Debra Frazier and her students for helping me learn.

And now, I am excited to tell you a little about what's been happening with Margaret Simon's students in Iberia Parish, Louisiana.  These students wrote poetry up until the very last day of school.


Manatee Poetry
Margaret Simon's Students Rise to Challenge

In manatee news, last Friday, I wrote a playful poem about a manatee named Manny.  I challenged students to write manatee poems of their own and promised that if any young writers researched and wrote manatee poetry, The Poem Farm would adopt a manatee.  

Well, Margaret Simon's fourth and sixth grade students at Caneview Elementary School and Jefferson Island Elementary School in Iberia Parish, Louisiana, took the challenge on their very last day of school.  You can read two of their manatee poems here at Margaret's blog, Reflections on the Teche. You can also read about how these students used Wonderopolis and included hyperlinks in their own kidblogs.  

Thanks to these students, The Poem Farm is caring for a manatee!  Meet Chessie!

Chessie
Photo by Edwin Remsberg

Chessie
Photo by Hank Curtis

You can see our official adoption certificate from the Save the Manatee Club here and read more about Chessie here.

Thank you to Margaret Simon and her students for carrying on the manatee love with manatee poetry.  It's fun to have a manatee here at The Poem Farm!

I am very pleased to share the news that my first book, FOREST HAS A SONG, has made the NCTE Children's Literature Assembly list of 2014 Notable Children's Books in the English Language Arts.  Five other poetry books were on this list too, and I congratulate these wonderful poets: Andrea Cheng for ETCHED IN CLAY: THE LIFE OF DAVE, ENSLAVED POTTER AND POET, Margarita Engle for THE LIGHTNING DREAMER: CUBA'S GREATEST ABOLITIONIST, Nikki Grimes for WORDS WITH WINGS, J. Patrick Lewis for WHEN THUNDER COMES: POEMS FOR CIVIL RIGHTS LEADERS, Holly Thompson for THE LANGUAGE INSIDE.  Congratulations!

Please share a comment below if you wish.

Friday, April 4, 2014

Poetry Friday is Here & Baseball Glove - Poem #4

IS HERE!

Happy Happy First Poetry Friday of National Poetry Month.  I am so glad you stopped by.  Today is Day #4 in my series of 30 April poems and process notes all on the theme...

LIVE!
Learn about this, my April 2014 Poetry Project, HERE!

Baseball Glove
Photo by Amy LV


Students - Yesterday I was a nervous writer.  See, writing can make me anxious.  A blank page can make me feel scared, and I can do a thousand things to avoid getting started.  Fortunately, dogs understand moods, and so a dog can truly be a writer's best friend.  Below you can see my wonderful muse dog Cali: just yesterday: telling me to get writing, napping on my notebook, cuddling the page as I think, napping as I revise.  Her warm furry body made me believe I could get started after all.

Cali Collage
Photos by Amy LV

At first I thought that today's verse might begin with the sound of the ball hitting a glove.  Then I thought it might be about how broken in the mitt in this photo is - about a child breaking in a glove.  This is when I stood up and walked to the computer to do a bit of research and when Cali decided to plop herself right on my notebook.  Shortly after, I decided not to write about breaking in a glove.

I considered using one of my favorite meters from "A Jellyfish" by Marianne Moore (you can see the hash marks in the first photo below) but abandoned that idea quickly.

Baseball Glove - Draft Page Spread #1
Photo by Amy LV

Then, just writing along, I came up with the idea of every baseball glove getting that one moment of glory.  That was the spark, the line to follow.

It takes such a spark to really get me moving.  A spark just lights.  Perhaps my fear is simply fear that a spark will never really light at all.  The fear that my mind's kindling is...well...wet.

Today's poem took about seventy-five minutes to write, not including the revision at the computer screen which involved the fun movement in stanza 4.

About the rhyme, "story"/"glory" - yup.  One of my favorite rhyme pairs.  I learned it in BLESS US ALL: A CHILD'S YEARBOOK OF BLESSINGS, by the wondrous Cynthia Rylant.

And "winterwaits" - yup.  Another wordsmush.

Baseball Glove - Draft Page Spread #2
Photo by Amy LV

One last process note.  Recording these poems really helps the writing.  You see many cross outs in my drafts, and I have told you that I read my poems aloud many times.  But in a final recording, I often hear one glitch that sends me back to the keyboard.  This happened last night.  In the second stanza, you now read the word "saves."  Originally it read "saved."  Listening to my own voice, I heard the tense switch and it made me crazy as this is number ten in the Twenty Most Common Errors in College Writing. Now it is consistent: gets, saves, has, looks.

In happy news, I am truly tickled to be part of a conversation with Stephanie Parsons and her fourth grade writers over at The Learning Laboratory. Stephanie, author of so many books I admire and co-author with Lucy Calkins and me of Poetry: Big Thoughts in Small Packages (Heinemann), is exploring poetry with her students in many beautiful ways, and I know I will learn a lot from them.

There are still two days left to leave a comment and thereby enter the Post-It Note giveaway over at Sharing Our Notebooks.  Don't miss Mary's notebook poem celebration.

And tomorrow, please return here to enter a giveaway for two books: one copy of THE POETRY FRIDAY ANTHOLOGY FOR SCIENCE compiled by Sylvia Vardell and Janet Wong and one copy of my own FOREST HAS A SONG. Each Saturday of April, I will offer this same giveaway here, for eight books in all.  Thank you to Sylvia and Janet for your generosity.

At last!  It's time for....the Poetry Friday posts!  Please leave a few words about your post along with a direct link in the comments, and I will add everyone's information all day, old school!  For those of you who are new to this community, we meet and share poetry links every Friday, and all are always welcome - to read, to link, as you wish!

It's Poetry Friday!


At On Point, Lorie Ann has her haiku "Cobalt Dreams" from her recent trip to Santorini.

Over at Life on the Deckle Edge, Robyn is in with a (slightly creepy but fun) peek into the POETRY FRIDAY ANTHOLOGY FOR SCIENCE.

Linda is celebrating and reviewing Margarita Engle's new verse novel, SILVER PEOPLE: VOICES FROM THE PANAMA CANAL at TeacherDance.

Jone offers Poetry Postcard Poems by students at Check it Out.  And at Deowriter, you can find her original poem, "Puddle Dancing."

April  and the Teaching Authors are celebrating the 5th blogiversary all this month by giving away five book bundles...and each TeachingAuthor will share a favorite poem too. April's offering is Janet Wong's "Liberty" from DECLARATION OF INTERDEPENDENCE--poems for an election year.  And April is having a metaphoraffair at her own website/blog, in this, her namesake month.

At Gathering Books, Myra's Poetry Friday contribution is Langston Hughes' The Negro Speaks of Rivers.

Greg is diving into the 30 Poets/30 Days archives all month at GottaBook.  Today he shares poems by X. J. Kennedy and Calef Brown up for a read.

At The Opposite of Indifference, Tabatha shares poems by Irene Latham and Sandra Lindow today.  And at Savvy Verse and Wit, she speaks about Poetry Friday itself.  If you are new - or old - to Poetry Friday, her words will give you the flavor of this community!

At her brand spanking beautiful new Poetrepository, Mary Lee has Day 4 in her month long poetry project -  Our Wonderful World.  Today's poem celebrates The Catacombs of Kom el Shoqafa.

Heidi Mordhorst is on Day 4 of what didn't start out as a "project" per se, but has evolved into one!  Over at My Juicy Little Universe, she's keeping a National Poetry Month Travel Journal where she'll visit all the folks who ARE doing projects and report from those destinations. Today Heidi visits Liz Steinglass's back yard.

For National Poetry Month, Laura has a series on Source Poems at Author Amok -- poems that feed the soul, or have special significance in someone's life. Guest blogging today is poet J.C. Elkin about a mysterious poem "Hannibal Clim." She remembers Hannibal, a giant dragon, from childhood, but hasn't been able to track him down again. Can you help?

At The Drift Record, Julie offers an original poem in celebration of gardens - especially knot gardens.

At Reflections on the Teche, Margaret is writing using the ABCs of styles, forms, and techniques.  Her students collaborated on a haiu using one of the tough words from the March Madness Poetry Final Round, and she also features a stolen poem from the line lifter extraodinaire and a delightful couplet by Kaylie.

Liz is writing about backyard treasures each day of National Poetry Month over at Elizabeth Steinglass.

At A Teaching Life, Tara offers a Mary Oliver poem to honor Jane Goodall, who turned 80 yesterday.

At Tapestry of Words, Becky celebrates the great Shel Silverstein, her favorite poet of all time.

Buffy stacks a couple of book spine poems and gives us a spring riddle over at Buffy's Blog.

Michelle has a "Five for Friday" celebration of poetry going on at Today's Little Ditty and welcomes all to join in!

At Live Your Poem, Irene is in with some wise words and a poem from Nikki Giovanni.

Charles shares an original poem titled "Fenced In" At Poetry Time.

Keri, at Keri Recommends, announces the winner of a copy of WATER CAN BE by Laura Purdie Salas...who could it be?

At Random Noodling, Diane has a sequence of soup haiku.  Kurious Kitty shares a poem by NH poet, Alice B. Fogel.  And at KK's Kwotes, you can read the words of Robert Pinsky.

At Karen Edmisten, Karen is in with all of the Poetry Month activities at Poets.org and also "Plans" by Stuart Dischell.

JoAnn has posted three poetry thoughts and a tercet about another springtime thrill at JoAnn Early Macken. She'll be posting on this site each Friday in April, giving away a copy of WRITE A POEM STEP BY STEP. On Wednesdays, she'll post a poetry-themed Writing Workout at TeachingAuthors.com.

Amy reviews Marilyn Singer's RUTHERFORD B., WHO WAS HE? at Hope is the Word.

At Radio, Rhythm, & Rhyme, Matt reminds us of Irene Latham's Progressive poem and #MMPoetry.

Find "The Donkey", a Lent/Easter poem by G. K. Chesterton, at Supratentorial.

Tricia is in at The Miss Rumphius Effect with a poem entitled "Quatrains for a Calling."

Anastasia shares line 4 of the 2014 Kidlitosphere Progressive Poem, a fun Poetry Month project that Irene Lantham created, at Poet! Poet!

B.j. Lee is in at Blue Window with her March Madness Poem based on the word 'incontinent,' down to the Final Four and matched up with J.J. Close.

Violet is back (welcome back, Violet!) at Violet Nesdoly/poems, sharing an original poem, "Talking with a stranger."

At Wild Rose Reader, Elaine joins us with an original mask poem about the La Brea Tar Pits.

At Dori Reads, Dori has added a new cinquain in her goal of writing one a day this month.  Today's focus is the Kalahari.

Little Willow shares a poem from within Natalie Lloyd's novel A SNICKER OF MAGIC today at Bildungsroman.

Over at There's No Such Thing as a God-Forsaken Town, Ruth got a new (written by a Poetry Friday regular!) book in the mail today, and she is excited to read it.  

At One Deep Drawer, Kortney shares her family's poetry teatime.

Holly has a post at HATBooks about using the app Notegraphy to write her poem "Lotus Wanting."

Over at her author blog, Emily offers her translation of "Moon", a poem written by Xue Tao, a woman poet who lived in China during the Tang Dynasty. She also shares how her translation of "Moon" has a unique journey, over a thousand years after the original Chinese text was conceived.

At All About the Books with Janet Squires, Janet's selection is EARTHSHAKE: POEMS FROM THE GROUND UP by Lisa Westberg Peters with pictures by Cathie Felstead.

Jennifer shares FIREFLY JULY, Paul Janeczko's new poetry collection from Candlewick, over at Teach Mentor Texts.

At Reederama, Jennifer is seeing Mary Oliver's poetry.

Laura offers one new Riddle-Ku each day of this month at Writing the World for Kids, and today's is hot!

Cathy is writing about "objects of memory" over at Merely Day By Day. These are poems about those little things you keep around because they are attached to stories planted deep inside of you.

Thank you very much for visiting The Poem Farm today...I wish you a joyful journey all around the Kidlitosphere, today and throughout the month.

Please share a comment below if you wish.